MONTEVIDEO, MINN. – The Black Snake Militia's home base is the Rogers family trailer on the north end of town, where the group's initials are spray-painted on a repurposed Farm Bureau sign and passerby are greeted by a handmade warning about the dangers of government tracking devices.
"We are not slaves," the cardboard placard says.
The Rogerses say it's merely a meeting place for a group of family, friends "and whoever wants to join" their self-made militia, which preaches against government intrusion into citizens' lives.
But according to the FBI, the trailer was a storage site for potentially deadly explosives plotted for use in a terrorist attack against the police department in this western Minnesota town. The FBI arrested Buford "Bucky" Rogers here Friday after authorities seized a Romanian assault rifle and other guns, suspected pipe bombs and Molotov cocktails from the modest trailer where Rogers' parents and younger brother live.
All Bucky Rogers is guilty of, his parents said Tuesday, is being outspoken about their group's anti-government beliefs.
"He speaks his piece," his father Jeffrey Rogers said. "And the government don't like people that speak their piece."
As to what Bucky Rogers, 24, said or did to trigger the raid remains unknown to his parents, and authorities aren't saying yet.
Rogers, who is charged with a single count of being a felon in possession of a firearm, will make his next court appearance Wednesday afternoon before federal Magistrate Judge Jeanne Graham.