OUR ENVIRONMENT NEEDS MORE LOCAL REPORTING

The Concord Monitor is launching its Environmental Reporting Lab, a long-term effort to better inform the community about the New Hampshire environment. To launch phase 1 of this effort, we need your help. The money raised will go toward hiring a full-time environmental reporter.

Please consider donating to this effort.

 

Pricey, possibly bomb-laden property no easy sell

Last modified: 11/29/2014 11:55:01 PM
It turns out there isn’t a huge market for a $250,000-plus, 100-acre property that may be booby-trapped.

The sale of the compound owned by Ed and Elaine Brown, a now-jailed pair of tax evaders who held off the police during a nine-month armed standoff, is beset by problems both procedural and perilous: High bidders would have only seven days to come up with the financing for the property they have to buy largely sight-unseen because it could be filled with hidden explosives.

No bidders showed up at an Aug. 15 auction at federal court in Concord, where Deputy Chief U.S. Marshal Brenda Mikelson went through the motions of soliciting a minimum bid of $250,000 on the Plainfield compound where the Browns were holed up in 2007.

The Browns were ultimately captured by U.S. marshals posing as two of the supporters who thronged the compound.

An auction is also being held for a commercial property owned by the Browns in Lebanon, where Elaine Brown had her dental office. The minimum bid on that property is set at $507,500.

Efforts to sell the two properties have been in the planning stages since 2013. As of last week, Lebanon is owed $286,242 in back taxes for the property; Plainfield is owed $198,908.

Plainfield town administrator Steve Halleran is frustrated by the delays, saying the taxes owed by the Browns’ property far exceed any other in town.

“We’ve been given assurances we’re getting our money,” Halleran said. “Nothing would speak to that more than an actual check.”

Mikelson said talks are under way to possibly hire a professional auctioneer and change the conditions of the sale to give high bidders more time to arrange financing.

“That time frame of seven days is really tight for average people,” she said.

Another obstacle: Concerns that booby traps and explosives may be buried on the densely wooded property mean federal officials still won’t let interested bidders tour it. Buyers who are prepared to ante up a hefty bid on the Plainfield property have to do it with little access.

During his trial in 2009, Ed Brown testified that explosives in the woods around their home were there to scare intruders, not hurt them. But in a radio interview during the standoff, he said if authorities came to kill him or arrest him, “the chief of police in this town, the sheriff, the sheriff himself will die. This is war now, folks.”

Elaine Brown is serving 35 years in prison; Ed Brown is serving 37 years.

Because the only access to the Plainfield property is a narrow right of way, it has limited development potential, Plainfield officials have said.

Halleran said he’s been willing to let the federal government sell the property, but if it takes much longer, he might invoke a state law that says cities and towns can take possession of a property if the back taxes owed exceed three years.

“We just won’t wait another year,” Halleran said.


Jobs



Support Local Journalism

Subscribe to the Concord Monitor, recently named the best paper of its size in New England.


Concord Monitor Office

1 Monitor Drive
Concord,NH 03301
603-224-5301

 

© 2021 Concord Monitor
Terms & Conditions - Privacy Policy