The couple was lured to a patch of woods in the middle of the night and killed, according to prosecutors, to keep secret the militiaās delusional plans to overthrow the government through a terror campaign of murder and mayhem. The groupās plans included the eventual assassination of their commander-in-chief, the president of the United States.
The soldiers called their broken band of brothers Forever Enduring, Always Ready, or FEAR for short.
Dressed in a business suit, his wrists and ankles shackled, Pvt. Christopher Salmon was the first of the two confessed killers to appear before Judge Robert L. Russell in Long County Superior Court this morning and enter his plea ā guilty on two counts of murder and other charges.
Salmon, 27, who faced the death penalty, was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole as part of a negotiated plea agreement, the prosecutor, Isabel Pauley, told Hatewatch today, adding that the disgraced soldier was the second in command of FEAR, the close friend and confidant of the groupās ringleader, Pvt. Isaac Aguigui.

āThey were like brothers,ā Pauley said.
On March 27, Aguigui, 22, already serving his own life sentence for the murder of the couple, was found guilty in an Army court of murdering his wife, Sgt. Deirdre Wetzker Aguigui, and their unborn child. The sergeant was seven months pregnant when she was killed in her apartment on Fort Stewart in July 2011. The militia leader also received a life sentence in that case.
Prosecutor Pauley said Aguigui used his wifeās $500,000 military life insurance policy to bankroll FEAR. Before it was broken up, the group of about 10 men and one woman ā Salmonās wife Heather ā amassed nearly $90,000 in military-grade weapons.
FEAR was secretly based at Fort Stewart, the sprawling Army base in Georgia, a short drive from the courthouse and the knot of woods where Tiffany York, a high school junior, and her 19-year-old boyfriend, Michael Roark, a former soldier, were killed execution-style on Dec. 5, 2011.
Salmon admitted in court today to shooting Roark in the head shortly after Sgt. Anthony Peden shot and killed Roarkās girlfriend as she sat in the passenger seat of Roarkās car.
Peden also pleaded guilty today, but as part of an agreement with prosecutors his sentencing was postponed until a sentencing hearing can be held within the coming weeks or months, Pauley said. Peden, Pauley said, wants to present mitigation witnesses in an attempt to get a life sentence with the possibility of parole.
āThe families, on all sides, donāt want Peden to get anything less than the rest of them,ā Roarkās grandfather, Michael Jahr, told Hatewatch today after attending the court proceedings. āWeāre confident that the judge wonāt go along with anything less.ā
Jahr said he was satisfied with the Salmon sentence. “Life without parole is like a 50-year death sentence,” he said.
Five members of the group ā Aguigui, Salmon, Peden, Heather Salmon and Pvt. Michael Burnett ā were initially charged with murder in the case.
Burnett was the first to confess and testify about the militia and the murder. He pleaded guilty to lesser charges and is in jail in Georgia, awaiting sentencing. Heather Salmon is also in jail on murder charges but does not face the death penalty.
She has long denied knowing anything about the murders.
Peden, who wiped away tears as he sat at the defense table, did not speak at the hearing today. But Salmon addressed the court and Roarkās family, who had traveled from Florida, Arizona and Washington to watch the killer of their beloved Michael sent away for the rest of his life.
Salmon turned to the family and apologized and added, āHopefully, youāll be able to find peace.ā
At that, Roarkās father, Brett, yelled, āOh, shut up.ā
Roark served with the members of FEAR at Fort Stewart before leaving the army three days before he and York were killed. He often spent time socializing with them at the Salmonsā home, which was the militiaās on-base clubhouse and headquarters. Prosecutors said Roark was killed because FEAR was afraid he might reveal its plans. York died because she happened to be with him that night.
After Salmonās āempty apology,ā Michael Jahr, like his grandson, a military veteran, addressed the court and Salmon from the witness box. He looked directly into Salmonās face and told him that he wished he could be āa fly on the wallā of the prison visiting room when Salmonās young sons come to visit.
āI told him, Iād like to hear when he tells his two sons that he shot the young man who used to babysit them while the rest of them went out to party,ā Jahr said. āI looked at him and he looked right at me. But he had that stare on his face that you know youāre not going to get through.ā