On April 27, 1997, Richard Lance McLaren and his followers in the
so-called "Republic of Texas (ROT)" militia held Joe and Margaret Ann
Rowe hostage inside their own home at the Davis Mountain Resort, near
Fort Davis, Texas, and demanded the release of jailed ROT members Jo Ann
Turner and Robert Jonathan Scheidt. McLaren's demand initiated a
seven-day standoff with local law enforcement and the Texas Rangers that
came to be called the "Republic of Texas War."
Opening with a foreword by the FBI negotiator who served as an on-site
consultant throughout the crisis, author Donna Marie Miller presents the
first full-length book treatment of the events leading up to McLaren's
"declaration of war" and its aftermath. The result is an absorbing
account of manipulation by a leader as charismatic as he was deluded; of
misinformed individuals motivated by desperation who aligned themselves
with an extremist; and of law enforcement officials caught in the
tension between their duty to protect the public and their desire to
avoid a repeat of disasters like those at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and the
Branch Davidian compound outside Waco, Texas.
Central to the story is Jo Ann Turner, a frantic woman drowning in debt
who was drawn into the false ideology espoused by McLaren, which
eventually led to her personal undoing. Based on archival research and
interviews with persons involved--including McLaren, who has been
incarcerated since 1998--this riveting account provides a multifaceted
perspective of the historical incident and a detailed chronicle of a
modern American anti-government militia, its victims, and the events
that led to its eventual downfall.