PORTLAND, Ore. – Tre Arrow, a
radical environmentalist who was once one of the FBI's most-wanted
fugitives, has announced on his Web site he has accepted a plea deal
on federal arson and conspiracy charges.
Arrow had entered a not guilty plea. His attorney, Paul T. Loney,
confirmed on Wednesday Arrow “is changing his plea” and a hearing
date has been set for next Tuesday.
The U.S. Attorney's office in
Portland did not immediately return a call seeking comment.
Arrow, 34, who has legally changed his name from Michael
Scarpitti, is charged in a 14-count federal indictment with helping
to destroy concrete-mixing trucks in Portland in April 2001 and of
firebombing logging trucks near Oregon's Mount Hood in June 2001.
Arrow became a fugitive after he was indicted, and was arrested
in British Columbia in March 2004 on local shoplifting charges. He
was extradited to the United States in February.
He said on his Web site he accepted a plea deal because he didn't
want to take the risk of “spending the rest of my life in prison.”
His decision to accept a deal comes as federal officials have
been scoring high-profile victories against radical
environmentalists who have carried out arson attacks around the
West.
Earlier this month in Sacramento, environmental activist Eric
McDavid was sentenced to nearly 20 years in federal prison for
conspiring to destroy a Northern California dam, a genetics lab and
other targets. McDavid was convicted in March for masterminding what
FBI agents described as an eco-terrorist plot in the name of the
Earth Liberation Front.
In Seattle, Briana Waters is awaiting a May 30 sentencing after
she was convicted of arson in a 2001 attack on a plant research
center.
Last year in Oregon 10 other radicals were given prison sentences
of up to 13 years for arson and other crimes claimed by the Earth
Liberation Front and by the Animal Liberation Front from 1996 to
2001.
On his Web site, Arrow insisted that in accepting a plea
agreement “I am in no way selling my soul just to receive a sweet
deal from the prosecution. By this I mean I am not giving them any
information about anyone or any thing which could lead to others
being prosecuted.”
Arrow said he was offered “a deal I couldn't refuse, which takes
into account the time I served in Canada.”