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An American destroyed the city with a bulldozer. Marvin Heemeyer

I wanted to tell you something new about a man whom everyone here knows one way or another. At first I thought of simply informing the public of some unknown or previously misreported touches. Then I realized that it was better to combine new facts with the whole story to get a more or less complete story. The result was a compilation of a large number of studied articles, memoirs, and interviews about Marvin Heemeyer, both in English and in translation.

Since the tenth year has passed since those events, many links, unfortunately, cease to be working, the information goes into paid archives. In the USA, you can obtain any information about a person in a legal way. For money. Car and telephone numbers, addresses, relatives, business ownership, speeding fines, mentions in the press and much more about any US citizen are stored in the appropriate paid archives. Just for fun, I spent $10 to find out a little more (eg social data - SSN, military - military service record, and a few other things). For 30 dollars you can find out all the addresses and telephone numbers that he had at different times, for 45 - all administrative violations.

Marvin John Heemeyer
(28.10.1951, Castlewood (SD) – 4.06.2004, Granby (Co)

Parents:

Father - John Harm Heemeyer, born July 30, 1924 in the town of Hank Tekronys, 6 miles east of Castlewood (South Dakota)
Mother - Augusta Mulder, born October 31, 1920 in Orange City, Sioux County, Iowa
married September 21, 1948 in Volga, South Dakota
The parents died shortly before the events in Granby.

Brothers, sisters:

Older brother - Donald Keith Heemeyer, born September 16, 1949 in Clear Lake, South Dakota
Younger sister - Kathy Elaine Heemeyer, born July 1, 1955 in the same place
Younger brother - Kenneth Alan Heemeyer, born June 21, 1958 in the same place

It was possible to discover the family tree of Marvin Heemeyer, starting in 1720:

http://genforum.genealogy.com/mulder/messages/160.html

Graduated from school in 1968. In 1968, received Social Security Number (SSN) No. 503–68–9471

Army

Entered military service in 1969 in the Air Force.
On March 17, 1971, he was sent to the Vietnam War.
Branch of the Armed Forces: Air Force
Military specialty: Inventory Management Specialist (storekeeper). Code: 645550A. He served at an air base.
Rank: Senior Airman (senior aviator)
He was discharged on March 16, 1975 and returned home to South Dakota.

Acquaintances describe two sides of Heemeyer. On the one hand, he’s a cheerful, friendly guy, a good goofball. On the other hand, it is unreliable and “murky”, suspicious and dangerous.

Younger brother Ken Heemeyer said he has lost track of his older brother (Marvin) since he joined the Army in 1969.

Business

Cliff Eudy had been Heemeyer's business partner since the late seventies and ran Scotty Mufflers with him until they had a falling out in 1980.

Youdy recalled that he first met Heemeyer in 1978, Marvin got a job at one of the Scotty Mufflers stores where Youdy worked, and they worked together for about seven months. He and Heemeyer eventually bought out Scotty Mufflers and became owners of four stores. Their business problems began when they fell into debt and owed money to Exhaust and Suspension Systems. Yudi said the two of them agreed to raise money to pay off their debts. Yudi had the opportunity to borrow money from his ex-wife’s family - $10,000, which he deposited in the bank.

Heemeyer, however, did not participate in the fundraiser and tried to withdraw money from the account, Youdy recalled. "I told him it wasn't fair to me," Youdy said. “We sat down and talked for three or four weeks. And I was thinking, talking to him, I thought I had an understanding that we could do things together." They couldn't, and their paths diverged. Heemeyer took over the Englewood store and renamed it the Mid-States Muffler Shop, and Eudy took control of the other store. We had to get rid of two more stores because they were making losses. Yudi said he was later forced into bankruptcy. Heemeyer sold his store and bought another in Boulder. Since then, Yudi has not seen Heemeyer or heard anything about him.

Eudy said he didn't think Heemeyer had a gentle disposition; Marvin was an unreliable businessman. “He (Marvin) was a very friendly, special kind of guy to the point where he attracted people to him. He was really endearing when he realized he could screw you. When he realized that screwing was not going to work, he could become unpleasant and repulsive.”

At some point, Marvin moved to a small town in Colorado. In Granby, Heemeyer purchased a house using a mortgage loan from a local bank, and in 1992, for approximately $42,000 (according to other sources, for $15,000), he bought 2 acres (8.1 thousand m²) of land at auction from the Resolution Trust Corporation outskirts of the city. On this plot of land, Heemeyer built a workshop for the repair and installation of car mufflers. Marvin opened a small network of workshops. After some time, he began to rent out almost all of his workshops, leaving himself one in Granby.

Hobby

Colorado records show Heemeyer also owned the Cornice Snowmobile business, which was founded in 1996 but was liquidated in 2002. This was his hobby - snowmobiles, which he used to ride around the surrounding area with local newlyweds and tourists in the winter.

Conflict

Heemeyer became involved in politics almost immediately after purchasing a house in Colorado. He was loved by his friends and neighbors. They described him as a “pleasant person” and “ready to do anything for his friends.” Some, however, were more familiar with his erratic nature. He was a strong supporter of legalized gambling and published at least two newsletters with his ideas on the matter. When a local newspaper reporter interviewed Heemeyer about gambling, Heemeyer became so furious trying to prove his point that the interview almost ended in a fight. On another occasion, for example, Heemeyer threatened to kill a client's husband when she refused to pay for muffler repairs. “If Marv were your friend, he would be the best friend in the world,” said one of Heemeyer’s closest acquaintances. “But if he decided, decided that he would be your enemy, then he would be your most dangerous enemy.”

Granby was a stone's throw from the Colorado winter resort of Aspen, where it had become fashionable for millionaires to own winter homes. A construction boom began, the demand for cement increased, and the cement plant, to which Heemeyer’s workshop was adjacent, decided to expand. In 2001, the zoning commission and city authorities approved the construction of a cement plant, and the Mountain Park cement company, by hook or by crook, began buying up land plots around the plant. All of Heemeyer's neighbors eventually sold their plots; Marvin disagreed. On average, similar land plots cost a cement company about $50,000, but Marvin asked for $270,000 for his. The cement company agreed, then Marvin increased the price to $500,000. And the cement company agreed again. But when Marvin increased the price to $1,000,000, it was decided to seek justice from Heemeyer.

According to the new approved site plan, the plant cut off the only road to Heemeyer’s workshop. Marvin tried to appeal the city authorities' decision to expand the plant in court. Lost the case. He tried to get permission to install a sewer pipe, but was refused by the land owners. Then Marvin bought a decommissioned Komatsu D355A-3 bulldozer, restored the engine on it himself, and decided to build another road to his workshop, bypassing the factory grounds. However, the city administration prohibited the construction of a new road, and at the same time fined Heemeyer $2,500 for the lack of sewerage. Marvin paid the fine, attaching a short note to the receipt when sending it: “Cowards.” Just at this time (March 31, 2004), Heemeyer’s father died, and when he went to the funeral, in his absence, his electricity and water were turned off and his workshop was sealed. To top it all off, the local bank, having found fault with the mortgage loan, threatened to take the house away. In principle, it was not difficult - in the small town of Granby, Heemeyer was a stranger, the town itself was very poor and provincial, and the cement plant was the only large enterprise there. And this means taxes, jobs, city infrastructure and dependent city government. As a result, Heemeyer sold the property to his workshop and received six months to move.

Woman

Bonnie Brown, 48 years old (at the time).

Sources indicate that Heemeyer mistakenly thought he had a fiancee, but she did not think so. It seems that in modern slang it sounds like “add to the list of friends” - like keeping a guy near you so that he can be useful in some way on occasion or just take him somewhere for free. In short, Marvin ran into an “alter ego” - a person as difficult as he himself might have been.

She introduced herself to correspondents after 06/04/04 as his best and only friend during the last year of Marvin’s life. She said Heemeyer moved to Colorado in the mid-70s. Brown met Heemeyer after she went on a date with one of his best friends. “Something didn’t work out, it didn’t work out, and so Marvin wanted to look after me,” she said. “We talked about going ice fishing and other activities, but I didn’t want to and wasn’t going to do it at the time. He just wasn't my type (not my type). I just thought he was a nice guy and that he was a friend and that he would find someone else." Brown described Heemeyer as a cautious friend, someone who was on guard with others.

During an afternoon drinking together in January 2004, Bonnie saw the dark side of a man she thought was compassionate. Heemeyer said he's angry at how the city treated him, that he feels like he got screwed. He talked about selling his business, and how he had to pay too much money for it, and how the city (city officials) got involved in cutting him off, and how he was charged exorbitant taxes and all these other fees that they didn't impose. other people. Brown said he told her she should build a bulldozer and attack the people who hurt him. “I really didn't pay attention because I really didn't think he was capable of doing something like that. He never gave any indication of anything like this."

Brown said she was shocked when she saw Heemeyer carry out what she considered futile threats. She said that when she heard second-hand reports that Heemeyer appeared to be firing a large-caliber weapon from his bulldozer, she doubted it could be true. She said she couldn't imagine the man she knew causing real harm, even to his own sworn enemies. “I know that even in these actions, he would never harm anyone's life. I don't think he intended to hurt them intentionally, but he could have gone against their business and caused them financial harm." Brown said it was difficult to reconcile the friend she considered so kind with the man who welded himself into an armored bulldozer and rampaged through Granby. “This doesn't look like him. He was carefree, happy-go-lucky, compassionate."

The shock did not stop Marvin’s friend from calling live during the broadcast of events from Granby and in a completely calm voice telling reporters that she knew who it was - this was her friend Marvin Heemeyer. Practicality must have taken over, and Bonnie didn't want to miss this chance to become famous.

Preparation

In March 2004, Heemeyer's father died. His brother Ken's wife recalled that Marvin acted at the funeral as if he had come to say goodbye to more than just his father. It seemed to her that he really didn’t want to leave.

Heemeyer began work on his new project almost immediately after he was refused permission to build a road to the workshop. Heemeyer moved the Komatsu D335A bulldozer intended for the new road into the workshop and began working on modifications. He began by installing homemade cement composite armor between sheets of steel to protect the cabin and engine. He installed front and rear cameras with images displayed on monitors in the cockpit, and installed several rifle loopholes around the control center. He carried supplies of food and water inside, and also stocked up on an air tank to ensure air circulation, acquired a gas mask and weapons (a Barrett M82 rifle, a Ruger AC556 carbine, a Magnum revolver).

During construction (according to various sources, from two months to a year and a half), Marvin was amazed that visitors to the workshop who happened to be on the premises were not at all alarmed by the sight of the armored vehicle. Heemeyer recorded several audiotapes in which he explained his motives. “You didn’t agree with me because of your anger, because of your malice, because of your hatred.” “I will give my life, my miserable future, to prove to everyone that you are wrong.” “I have always tried to be a reasonable person. However, sometimes reasonable people must do unreasonable things."

Marvin Heemeyer's War

On the morning of Friday, June 4, Heemeyer mailed the audio recordings to his brother and locked himself in the bulldozer with a list of targets. He was able to lower the armored box onto the chassis using a remote control of a homemade crane. Heemeyer used three monitors and several video cameras to control the bulldozer. In case the video cameras were blinded by dust and debris, air compressors were connected to them.

At 3:00 pm, Heemeyer's bulldozer broke through the side of a barn and crashed into the Mountain Park concrete plant. Soon after, the 911 phones started ringing nonstop. A man named Cody Dochev witnessed the destruction of the plant and tried to intervene. He tried to climb into the loader to intercept the rampaging bulldozer, but was immediately fired upon from the bulldozer's embrasures. Within minutes, two buildings and several cars were destroyed, and Heemeyer's bulldozer rumbled down the highway toward the city. Behind the slow-moving bulldozer, as if on a parade, were dozens of police cars with their sirens turned on. One police SUV was simply crushed when it had the temerity to get in the path of a bulldozer.

Deputy Glen Traynor managed to climb onto the cab of the driving bulldozer and fired his service pistol 37 times in an unsuccessful attempt to penetrate the armor.

When Heemeyer reached the city, the Granby police were already waiting for him. However, law enforcement officers were powerless against the armored vehicle. When it became clear that it was impossible to penetrate the armor with conventional cartridges, the special forces unsuccessfully tried to blow up the bulldozer with explosives. The police cleared the path for the bulldozer as much as possible and notified local residents of the impending danger. Helicopters broadcast the unfolding violence live to news channels. The bulky vehicle was difficult to control, but Heemeyer was able to find and destroy his targets. The bulldozer easily destroyed cars and buildings, including the former mayor's home, a newspaper office, city council buildings and city hall. Despite the destruction of property, no one was seriously injured.

The police brought in an industrial bulldozer, but the heavy Komatsu easily pushed the enemy to the side of the road. Within an hour, thirteen structures had been demolished and the destroyer was on its way to its next target: Gamble's Equipment. Damage from small arms fire and the extra weight of the armor affected the maneuverability of the vehicle. The radiator was leaking and the bulldozer was losing power. The car ripped open the wall of the supermarket and fell into a small basement under its own weight. The overheated engine was unable to pull the bulldozer out of the hole. As a SWAT team surrounded the stalled bulldozer, someone reported hearing a single, muffled gunshot from inside the cab. The vehicle came to a stop, ending destruction that lasted 2 hours and 7 minutes and left approximately $7 million in damage.

Police used explosives to try to get inside, but eventually had to use a cutting torch and spend 12 hours breaking through the armor. Heemeyer's body was found inside. He shot himself with a .357 caliber pistol. He was the only victim, which was repeatedly highlighted by some media outlets afterwards as Marvin's ingenuity, ambition, and seemingly heroic efforts to prevent any casualties. At the same time, there were people in many buildings immediately before the destruction. There was also evidence of shots being fired at fuel containers, which could lead to explosions and casualties. There was an attempt to bring down the wall of one of the buildings with the risk of covering two policemen who were near the wall with debris. After the cabin was opened and Heemeyer's body was taken to the morgue, police found several rifles in the cabin and a list of addresses of buildings and businesses with the names of the owners.

Consequences

All destroyed property was insured, so everything was restored in a short time. The cement plant was unable to recover from the destruction, and eventually the owners sold it.

Memory

Today, there are a number of groups of people who idolize Heemeyer and his fight against a corrupt system.

Some links (I can’t vouch for its integrity due to the age of years):
http://genforum.genealogy.com/mulder/messages/160.html
http://www.archives.com/member/
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Marvin–Heemeyer
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp–dyn/articles/A18948–2004Jun5.html
http://wn.com/Armored_Bulldozer–Rampage_Marvin_Heemeyer
http://web.archive.org/web/20041012024126/http://www.nobsnews.org/allheemeyer.html
http://news.infoshop.org/article.php?story=04/06/06/0927171
http://news.infoshop.org/article.php?story=20060613043352326&query=Marvin+heemeyer
http://articles.latimes.com/2004/jul/25/magazine/tm–bulldozer30/2
http://www.damninteresting.com/the–wrath–of–the–killdozer/
http://web.archive.org/web/20041012024126/http:/www.nobsnews.org/allheemeyer.html
http://farkleberries.blogspot.com/2004/06/was–marvin–heemeyer–terminally–ill.html

Http://www.lenta.ru/articles/2012/06/18/king/
http://collectorium.ru/2012/01/18/marvin–dzhon–himejer–i–ego–buldozer/

While fans and opponents of “Leviathan” argue about whether the author discredited Russia with his film, the fact remains in the shadows that the reason for creating the film was a story that happened in the United States.

“A friend told me a story about a man who lived in Colorado and who rebelled against a powerful company. This man first destroyed buildings and then committed suicide. This story could have happened anywhere. We moved it to Russia,” he said during a press conference at the Cannes Film Festival Andrey Zvyagintsev.

The story that formed the basis of the idea for the film “Leviathan” at one time shocked America and turned the main character into a real icon of anti-globalists.

Marvin John Heemeyer for the time being he could be considered almost a model American. A Vietnam War veteran who served in the U.S. Air Force as an airfield technician, he was a successful business owner after leaving the Army and owned a stake in a large auto repair shop in Denver, Colorado.

Mr. Heemeyer's personal life did not work out. As his friends said, in his youth he experienced an unhappy love and made no new attempts to start a family.

Land conflict

In the early 1990s, Heemeyer, who was in his early 40s at the time, sold his interest in the auto repair shop and purchased 2 acres of land in the town of Granby. Having moved to a town located 140 kilometers from Denver, Marvin Heemeyer opened a workshop with a store on his land.

For several years, Heemeyer faithfully repaired and sold automobile mufflers. The man had an undoubted talent as an engineer - as a hobby, he assembled snowmobiles, which he used to ride newlyweds at weddings in the winter.

By the end of the 1990s, the population of the town of Granby did not exceed 2,200 people, and the Mountain Park cement plant was a kind of “town-forming enterprise” in it.

Docheff family, which owned the plant, decided to build a new production line, received approval from the city administration and began to buy the necessary plots of land from private owners. Among those whose land Mountain Park needed was Marvin Heemeyer.

As the plant's owners later claimed, Heemeyer was offered $250,000 for the plot—a more than decent price, considering that he bought the land for $42,000. Heemeyer, again, according to the Docheff family, first agreed, but then demanded 375 thousand, and then completely increased the amount of compensation to a million.

It is impossible to find out Heemeyer’s own version today, but his friends assured that the owners of the plant were telling lies and did not offer any large sums to Heemeyer, and he himself did not demand them. On the contrary, they claim that the greedy Docheff family decided to take over the plot for almost a nominal fee.

Marvin John Heemeyer. Frame youtube.com

How they are “pressed” in America

What we can say with confidence is that the parties have not reached a compromise. And Heemeyer got into trouble.

For the city authorities, whose well-being rested solely on the generosity of the owners of the cement plant, the stubborn owner of the workshop became a bone in the throat.

And they put pressure on Heemeyer. Since all the lands around already belonged to the owners of the plant, the obstinate was blocked from entering his own territory. Heemeyer did not despair and decided to build another road to his site, for which he purchased a decommissioned heavy Komatsu D355A-3 bulldozer. However, the Granby administration imposed a ban on road construction.

Heemeyer appealed the permit to build a new plant line in court, but lost the case. The bank confronted him with claims for improper registration of a mortgage loan and threatened to take away his house. This was followed by numerous claims from firefighters, tax authorities, and sanitary inspection - city services issued Heemeyer fine after fine.

The longer the confrontation continued, the more actively they put pressure on Heemeyer. According to the owners of the plant and local authorities, the man had two options - either go bankrupt or sell the land.

Frame youtube.com

Engineer's Revenge

Heemeyer found the third. He realized long ago that he would not be able to defeat the system. Investigators later found his diaries, which included the following phrase: “I wonder how I haven’t been caught yet. The project occupied part of my time for more than a year and a half."

The talented engineer hatched a plan for revenge, for which he took on the complete re-equipment of the bulldozer, which was originally purchased for peaceful purposes. Heemeyer covered it with twelve-millimeter steel sheets, laid with a centimeter layer of cement. Equipped with television cameras that display images on monitors inside the cabin. Equipped cameras with lens cleaning systems. There was even a refrigerator with a small supply of food, water and beer inside the cabin.

On June 4, 2004, 52-year-old Marvin Heemeyer decided his time for redemption had come. Armed with a rifle, carbine, revolver, and grabbing a gas mask, the man climbed into the cabin of his armored monster. Then, using a remote control, he lowered another armored box onto the chassis, finally locking himself inside.

At 2:30 p.m. local time, the vehicle, which was later given the name “Killdozer,” entered the streets of Granby.

Heemeyer did not act in a fit of anger, but according to a clearly developed plan. His list included the houses and offices of everyone who managed to poison his life during the conflict with Mountain Park.

Having entered the territory of the hated plant, he demolished the plant management building, and then the production premises. Then the facades of the houses of members of the city council were demolished, the building of the same bank that threatened to take away Heemeyer’s house, the local administration building, the office of the local newspaper, the house of the widow of a former judge... In short, the avenger went through the homes and offices of absolutely everyone who was involved in his problems.

The local sheriff and his assistants fired at the “iron monster” with revolvers and shotguns, but, naturally, they did not succeed. The special forces squad also failed to stop Heemeyer. “Killdozer” took 200 hits from different types of weapons, but never stopped.

In order to curb the ardor of law enforcement officers, the avenger fired his weapon through the loopholes left for this purpose, so the police chose to retreat to a safe distance. Attempts to smoke out Heemeyer with gas also failed - anticipating this, the man used a gas mask.

Ultimately, the police evacuated the town and waited for the Killdozer to stop on its own.

It happened at 16:30. During the demolition of a small wholesale store, the bulldozer was covered with debris from the roof, it got stuck and stalled.

Frame youtube.com

Consigned to oblivion

The police did not dare approach the Killdozer for another two hours. Then, for several hours, law enforcement officers penetrated the armor to get to the “tractor driver.” This was only possible the next morning.

Marvin Heemeyer was dead. After completing the raid on Granby, he committed suicide. The creator of "Killdozer" was the only victim of what the media called "Marvin Heemeyer's War" - not a single person was injured.

The total damage caused to the city was $5 million, and the Mountain Park plant was $2 million.

The state governor, who arrived at the scene, said that the city looked as if a tornado had passed through it.

They tried to quickly forget about the “enemy of the state” in the United States. The country's central media paid minimal attention to the story of Marvin Heemeyer, without going into the details of what happened. The city began to be actively restored.

However, its population continues to decline, as in many other small towns in America.

And “Marvin Heemeyer’s War” is today the only reason why Granby is still remembered in the rest of the world.

STORIES

Marvin Heemeyer - America's Last Hero

This story has a sad ending. The inconspicuous town of Granby, Colorado, became known as the final resting place of the last American hero - Marvin Heemeyer (October 28, 1951 - June 4, 2004).

In general, 52-year-old welder Marvin Heemeyer lived in Granby, repaired car mufflers and did not bother anyone. Until the local Mountain Park cement plant decided to expand. Marvin's small workshop was closely adjacent to a cement plant, which began to force Heemeyer and other neighbors to sell their plots of land.

People are small and weak, and corporations are large and strong, so soon, in an unequal struggle, all the plant’s neighbors surrendered and ceded their land to it. But not Heemeyer. He officially bought his plot for a workshop and store at an auction several years ago for quite decent money. To do this, he sold his share in a large auto repair shop in Denver and therefore did not intend to part with his rightful property. The manufacturers were never able to acquire his land, although they tried to do so by hook or by crook.

Desperate to resolve the issue amicably, they began to persecute Marvin. Since all the land around Heemeyer’s workshop already belonged to the plant, all communications and access to the house were blocked. Marvin decided to pave a different road, and even bought a decommissioned Komatsu D355A-3 bulldozer for this purpose, restoring the engine on it in his workshop.

The city administration refused permission to build a new road. The bank found fault with the mortgage loan and threatened to take away the house. Heemeyer tried to restore justice by suing Mountain Park, but lost the lawsuit.

He was visited several times by the retail tax office, the fire inspectorate and the sanitary epidemiological inspection, which issued a fine of $2,500 for the fact that in his workshop “there was a tank that did not meet sanitary standards.” Marvin could not connect to the sewer system to drain the sewage from the tank, since the land on which the ditch had to be dug also belonged to the plant, and the plant was not going to give him such permission. Marvin paid the fine, attaching a short note to the receipt upon mailing: “Cowards.”

After some time, his father died (March 31, 2004). Marvin went to bury him, and while he was away, his electricity and water were turned off and his workshop was sealed. After that, he locked himself in the workshop for several months and practically no one saw him.

All this time, Heemeyer, disillusioned with the vaunted American justice, completed the creation of a weapon of retaliation - an armored bulldozer. He sheathed his Komatsu with 12mm steel sheets, laid with a centimeter layer of cement. Equipped with television cameras that display images on monitors inside the cabin. I equipped the cameras with lens cleaning systems in case they were blinded by dust and debris. Prudent Marvin stocked up on food, water, a gas mask and weapons (Barrett M82 rifle, Ruger AC556 carbine, Magnum revolver with cartridges). Using remote control, he lowered the armored box onto the chassis, locking himself inside. To lower this armor shell onto the bulldozer cabin, Heemeyer used a homemade crane. “By lowering it, Heemeyer understood that after that he would no longer be able to get out of the car,” police experts said.

Marvin made a list of targets in advance - objects belonging to those whom he considered necessary to take revenge on. To begin with, he drove through the territory of the plant, carefully demolishing the plant's management building, production workshops and, in general, everything down to the last barn. Then he moved around the town. He removed the facades from the houses of city council members. He demolished the bank building, which tried to put pressure on him through early repayment of the mortgage loan. He destroyed the buildings of the gas company, which refused to refill his kitchen gas cylinders after a fine, the city hall, the offices of the city council, the fire department, a warehouse, and several residential buildings that belonged to the mayor of the city. He tore down the local newspaper office and public library. In short, Marvin demolished everything that had anything to do with the local authorities, including their private homes. Moreover, he showed good knowledge of who owns what. Marvin did not touch the houses of other residents of the town.

Of course, they tried to stop Heemeyer. First, the local sheriff and his assistants. Then the local police, using revolvers and shotguns. The local SWAT team was alerted. Then the forest rangers. SWAT found grenades, and the rangers had assault rifles. Some particularly dashing sergeant jumped from the roof onto the hood of the bulldozer and tried to throw a flash-bang grenade into the exhaust pipe, but the son of a bitch Heemeyer, as it turned out, welded the grille there, so the only thing the bulldozer lost as a result was the pipe itself. The driver did not take tear gases - the monitors were visible even in the gas mask. All attempts to stop the bulldozer were in vain.

Heemeyer actively fired back through the embrasures cut into the armor. Not a single person was harmed by his fire, because he shot significantly above their heads, in other words, into the sky, because he did not want innocent victims, but simply wanted to scare the security forces so that they would not bother him too much. He succeeded: the police no longer dared to approach him. In total, counting the rangers, by that time there were about 40 people gathered. The bulldozer took more than 200 hits from everything the policemen had - from service revolvers to M-16s and grenades. They also tried to stop him with a huge scraper (earthing and transport machine). However, Komatsu had no trouble fitting the scraper into the front of the store. A car full of explosives in Heemeyer’s path also did not give the desired result. The only achievement of the police in their attempts to counteract Marvin was the bulldozer’s radiator being punctured by a ricochet - however, as experience in quarry work shows, such bulldozers do not immediately pay attention to even a complete failure of the cooling system.

All that the police could really do in the end was to evacuate 1.5 thousand residents and block all roads, including Federal Highway No. 40 leading to Denver (the blocking of the federal highway especially shocked everyone).

Marvin decided to tear down the Gambles small wholesale store. The bulldozer was ironing the ruins of a department store and stopped. In the sudden silence, the steam escaping from the broken radiator whistled furiously. The bulldozer was covered with debris from the roof, it got stuck and stalled.

At first, the police were afraid for a long time to approach Heemeyer’s bulldozer, and then they spent a long time making a hole in the armor, trying to get the welder out of his tracked fortress (three plastic charges did not give the desired effect). They were afraid of the last trap that Marvin could set for them. When the armor was finally pierced with an autogen gun, Marvin was already dead. Marvin kept the last cartridge for himself. He was not going to fall into the clutches of his enemies alive.

The consequences of Marvin's war were accurately described by the governor of Colorado: “the city looks as if a tornado had passed through it.” The city actually suffered damage worth $5,000,000, and the plant - $2,000,000. Given the small scale of the town, this meant almost complete destruction. The plant never recovered from the attack and sold the territory along with the ruins.

Then the investigation began. It turned out that Heemeyer’s creation was so reliable that it could withstand not only the explosion of grenades, but also an artillery shell. At first they wanted to put the Bulldozer on a pedestal and make it a local landmark, but the majority insisted on melting it down.

This incident evokes extremely mixed emotions among people. On the one hand, antisocial actions aimed at destruction usually cause condemnation. But on the other hand, Heemeyer’s action was approved by many residents of the United States and around the world. Marvin Heemeyer began to be called “the last American hero,” challenging the social injustice that drowns little people in their unequal struggle with large corporations and the government machine. Many consider Marvin Heemeyer's action worthy of admiration, because he fought justly for his rights: in his little war, only the property of his offenders was damaged and not a single person was killed.

There was a guy with a capital M named Marvin John Heemeyer.

He worked as a welder, repairing car mufflers in the town of Granby, Colorado. The town is microscopic, 2200 inhabitants. He had a workshop there, with a store. As I understand it, he officially bought the land plot under this workshop for quite a lot of money at an auction (something like $15,000, for this he sold his share in a large car service center in Denver).
He also built snowmobiles as a hobby and used them to ride newlyweds around Granby in the winter. Like in a limousine. He even had the appropriate license (I never suspected that such activities could be licensed at all). In my opinion, the guy was quite good-natured and extremely funny. However, “While many people described Heemeyer as a likeable guy, others said he was not someone to cross.” At one time he served in the Air Force as an airfield technician, and since then he has worked steadily in the engineering and technical field.He lived to be fifty-two years old, unmarried (he had some kind of sad love story at one time).

Heemeyer, a fifty-two-year-old welder, lived in Granby for several years repairing car mufflers. His small workshop was closely adjacent to the Mountain Park cement plant. To the dismay of Heemeyer and other neighbors of the plant, Mountain Park decided to expand, forcing them to sell their land.

Sooner or later, all the plant's neighbors surrendered, but not Heemeyer.

The manufacturers were never able to acquire his land, although they tried to do so by hook or by crook. In general, despairing of resolving the issue culturally, they began to persecute the man. Since all the land around the workshop already belonged to the plant, all communications and access to the house were blocked. Marvin decided to pave a different road, and even bought a decommissioned Komatsu D355A-3 bulldozer for this purpose and restored the engine on it in his workshop.

The city administration refused permission to build a new road. The bank found fault with the mortgage loan and threatened to take away the house.

Heemeyer tried to restore justice by suing Mountain Park, but lost the lawsuit.

The tax office for taxes on retail trade, the fire inspectorate, the sanitary epidemiological inspection came several times, the latter issued a fine of $ 2,500 for the enchanting “junk cars on the property and not being hooked up to the sewer line” (in general, in his workshop “there was a tank, not meeting sanitary standards.”) Let me remind you that we were talking about an auto repair shop. Marvin could not connect to the sewer system, since the land on which the ditch should be dug also belonged to the plant and the plant was in no hurry to give him such permission. Marvin paid. Attaching a short note to the receipt when sending - “Cowards”. After some time, his father died (Mar. 31, 2004), Marvin went to bury him, and while he was away, his electricity and water were turned off and his workshop was sealed. After that, he locked himself in the workshop. Almost no one saw him.

The creation of the Armored Bulldozer took about two months, according to some reports, and about a year and a half, according to others... She covered it with twelve-millimeter steel sheets, laid with a centimeter layer of cement. Equipped with television cameras that display images on monitors inside the cabin. I equipped the cameras with lens cleaning systems in case they were blinded by dust and debris. Prudent Marvin stocked up on food, water, ammunition and a gas mask. (Two Ruger 223s and one Remington 306 with ammunition.) Using remote control, he lowered the armored box onto the chassis, locking himself inside. To lower this shell onto the bulldozer cabin, Heemeyer used a homemade crane. “By lowering it, Heemeyer understood that after that he would no longer be able to get out of the car,” police experts said. And at 14:30 I left the garage.

Marvin made a list of goals in advance. Everyone whom he considered necessary to take revenge on.
“Sometimes, as he put it in his notes, reasonable men must do unreasonable things.”
To begin with, he drove through the territory of the plant, carefully demolishing the plant's management building, production workshops and, in general, everything down to the last barn.

Then he moved around the town. He removed the facades from the houses of city council members. Demolished the bank building, which tried to press him through early repayment of the mortgage loan. He destroyed the buildings of the gas company Ixel Energy, which refused to refill his kitchen gas cylinders after a fine, the city hall, the city council office, the fire department, a warehouse, and several residential buildings that belonged to the mayor of the city. He tore down the editorial office of the local newspaper and the public library. In short, he demolished everything that had anything to do with the local authorities, including their private houses. Moreover, he showed good knowledge of who owns what.

They tried to stop Heemeyer. First, the local sheriff and his assistants. Let me remind you that the bulldozer was equipped with centimeter spaced armor. Local police used nine-point revolvers and shotguns. With a clear result. From zero. The local SWAT team was alerted. Then the forest rangers. SWAT found grenades, and the rangers had assault rifles. A particularly dashing sergeant jumped from the roof onto the hood of a bulldozer and tried to throw a flashbang grenade into the exhaust pipe. It’s hard to say what he wanted to achieve - the son of a bitch Heemeyer, as it turned out, welded a grate there, so the only thing the bulldozer lost as a result was the pipes themselves. The sergeant, of course, also survived. The driver's tear tracker didn't take it - the monitors were visible even in the gas mask.

Heemeyer actively fired back through the embrasures cut into the armor. Not a single person was harmed by its fire. Because he shot significantly higher than his head. In other words, into the sky. However, the police no longer dared to approach him. In total, counting the rangers, about 40 people had gathered by that time. The bulldozer took more than 200 hits from everything from service revolvers to M-16s and grenades. They tried to stop him with a huge scraper. The Komatsu D355A easily pushed the scraper backwards into the front of the store and left it there. A car full of explosives in Heemeyer’s path also did not give the desired result. The only achievement was a radiator punctured by a ricochet - however, as experience in quarry work shows, such bulldozers do not immediately pay attention to even a complete failure of the cooling system.

All that the police could really do in the end was to evacuate 1.5 thousand residents and block all roads, including Federal Highway No. 40 leading to Denver (the blocking of the federal highway especially shocked everyone).

"Heemeyer's War" ended at 16:23.

Marvin decided to tear down the Gambles small wholesale store. In my opinion, there was simply nothing left to demolish there; there was still a liquefied gas filling station, but its explosion would have destroyed half the town without distinguishing where the mayor’s house was and where the garbage man’s.

The bulldozer stood, ironing the ruins of Gambles department store. In the sudden deathly silence, the steam escaping from the broken radiator whistled furiously; it was covered with debris from the roof, it got stuck and stalled.

At first, the police were afraid for a long time to approach Heemeyer’s bulldozer, and then they spent a long time making a hole in the armor, trying to get the welder out of his tracked fortress (three plastic charges did not give the desired effect). They were afraid of the last trap that Marvin could set for them. When the armor was finally penetrated with an autogen gun, he had already been dead for half a day. Marvin kept the last cartridge for himself. He was not going to fall into the clutches of his enemies alive. Heemeyer was not one to give up!

As the governor of Colorado so aptly put it, “the city looks like a tornado went through it.” The city actually suffered damage worth $5,000,000, and the plant - $2,000,000. Considering the scale of the town, this meant almost complete destruction. The plant never recovered from the attack and sold the territory along with the ruins.

Some smart people wanted to put the bulldozer on a pedestal and make it a landmark, but the majority insisted on melting it down. For the residents of the town, this incident evokes, as you might guess, extremely mixed emotions.

Then the investigation began. It turned out that “Heemeyer’s creation was so reliable that it could withstand not only the explosion of grenades, but also a not very powerful artillery shell: it was completely covered with armored plates, each of which consisted of two sheets of half-inch (about 1.3 cm) steel, fastened together with a cement pad.” He was nicknamed Killdozer

“He was a nice guy,” recall people who knew Himeyer closely.

- “You shouldn’t have made him angry.” “If he was your friend, then he was your best friend. Well, if the enemy is the most dangerous,” say Marvin’s comrades.

This act was admired by many people in the US and around the world. Marvin Heemeyer began to be called "the last American hero." Now this incident is assessed as a spontaneous anti-globalist action.
Marvin John Heemeyer

This story has a sad ending. The inconspicuous town of Granby, Colorado, became known as the final resting place of the last American hero - Marvin Heemeyer (October 28, 1951 - June 4, 2004).

In general, 52-year-old welder Marvin Heemeyer lived in Granby, repaired car mufflers and did not bother anyone. Until the local Mountain Park cement plant decided to expand. Marvin's small workshop was closely adjacent to a cement plant, which began to force Heemeyer and other neighbors to sell their plots of land.

People are small and weak, and corporations are large and strong, so soon, in an unequal struggle, all the plant’s neighbors surrendered and ceded their land to it. But not Heemeyer. He officially bought his plot for a workshop and store at an auction several years ago for quite decent money. To do this, he sold his share in a large auto repair shop in Denver and therefore did not intend to part with his rightful property. The manufacturers were never able to acquire his land, although they tried to do so by hook or by crook.

Desperate to resolve the issue amicably, they began to persecute Marvin. Since all the land around Heemeyer’s workshop already belonged to the plant, all communications and access to the house were blocked. Marvin decided to pave a different road, and even bought a decommissioned Komatsu D355A-3 bulldozer for this purpose, restoring the engine on it in his workshop.

The city administration refused permission to build a new road. The bank found fault with the mortgage loan and threatened to take away the house. Heemeyer tried to restore justice by suing Mountain Park, but lost the lawsuit.

He was visited several times by the retail tax office, the fire inspectorate and the sanitary epidemiological inspection, which issued a fine of $2,500 for the fact that in his workshop “there was a tank that did not meet sanitary standards.” Marvin could not connect to the sewer system to drain the sewage from the tank, since the land on which the ditch had to be dug also belonged to the plant, and the plant was not going to give him such permission. Marvin paid the fine, attaching a short note to the receipt upon mailing: “Cowards.”

After some time, his father died (March 31, 2004). Marvin went to bury him, and while he was away, his electricity and water were turned off and his workshop was sealed. After that, he locked himself in the workshop for several months and practically no one saw him.

All this time, Heemeyer, disillusioned with the vaunted American justice, completed the creation of a weapon of retaliation - an armored bulldozer. He sheathed his Komatsu with 12mm steel sheets, laid with a centimeter layer of cement. Equipped with television cameras that display images on monitors inside the cabin. I equipped the cameras with lens cleaning systems in case they were blinded by dust and debris. Prudent Marvin stocked up on food, water, a gas mask and weapons (Barrett M82 rifle, Ruger AC556 carbine, Magnum revolver with cartridges). Using remote control, he lowered the armored box onto the chassis, locking himself inside. To lower this armor shell onto the bulldozer cabin, Heemeyer used a homemade crane. “By lowering it, Heemeyer understood that after this he would no longer be able to get out of the car,” police experts said.

Marvin made a list of targets in advance - objects belonging to those whom he considered necessary to take revenge on. To begin with, he drove through the territory of the plant, carefully demolishing the plant's management building, production workshops and, in general, everything down to the last barn. Then he moved around the town. He removed the facades from the houses of city council members. He demolished the bank building, which tried to put pressure on him through early repayment of the mortgage loan. He destroyed the buildings of the gas company, which refused to refill his kitchen gas cylinders after a fine, the city hall, the offices of the city council, the fire department, a warehouse, and several residential buildings that belonged to the mayor of the city. He tore down the local newspaper office and public library. In short, Marvin demolished everything that had anything to do with the local authorities, including their private homes. Moreover, he showed good knowledge of who owns what. Marvin did not touch the houses of other residents of the town.

Of course, they tried to stop Heemeyer. First, the local sheriff and his assistants. Then the local police, using revolvers and shotguns. The local SWAT team was alerted. Then the forest rangers. SWAT found grenades, and the rangers had assault rifles. Some particularly dashing sergeant jumped from the roof onto the hood of the bulldozer and tried to throw a flash-bang grenade into the exhaust pipe, but the son of a bitch Heemeyer, as it turned out, welded the grille there, so the only thing the bulldozer lost as a result was the pipe itself. The driver did not take tear gases - the monitors were visible even in the gas mask. All attempts to stop the bulldozer were in vain.

Heemeyer actively fired back through the embrasures cut into the armor. Not a single person was harmed by his fire, because he shot significantly above their heads, in other words, into the sky, because he did not want innocent victims, but simply wanted to scare the security forces so that they would not bother him too much. He succeeded: the police no longer dared to approach him. In total, counting the rangers, by that time there were about 40 people gathered. The bulldozer took more than 200 hits from everything the policemen had - from service revolvers to M-16s and grenades. They also tried to stop him with a huge scraper (earthing and transport machine). However, Komatsu had no trouble fitting the scraper into the front of the store. A car full of explosives in Heemeyer’s path also did not give the desired result. The only achievement of the police in their attempts to counteract Marvin was the bulldozer’s radiator being punctured by a ricochet - however, as experience in quarry work shows, such bulldozers do not immediately pay attention to even a complete failure of the cooling system.

All that the police could really do in the end was to evacuate 1.5 thousand residents and block all roads, including Federal Highway No. 40 leading to Denver (the blocking of the federal highway especially shocked everyone).

Marvin decided to tear down the Gambles small wholesale store. The bulldozer was ironing the ruins of a department store and stopped. In the sudden silence, the steam escaping from the broken radiator whistled furiously. The bulldozer was covered with debris from the roof, it got stuck and stalled.

At first, the police were afraid for a long time to approach Heemeyer’s bulldozer, and then they spent a long time making a hole in the armor, trying to get the welder out of his tracked fortress (three plastic charges did not give the desired effect). They were afraid of the last trap that Marvin could set for them. When the armor was finally pierced with an autogen gun, Marvin was already dead. Marvin kept the last cartridge for himself. He was not going to fall into the clutches of his enemies alive.

The consequences of Marvin's war were accurately described by the governor of Colorado: “the city looks as if a tornado had passed through it.” The city actually suffered damage worth $5,000,000, and the plant - $2,000,000. Given the small scale of the town, this meant almost complete destruction. The plant never recovered from the attack and sold the territory along with the ruins.

Then the investigation began. It turned out that Heemeyer’s creation was so reliable that it could withstand not only the explosion of grenades, but also an artillery shell. At first they wanted to put the Bulldozer on a pedestal and make it a local landmark, but the majority insisted on melting it down.

This incident evokes extremely mixed emotions among people. On the one hand, antisocial actions aimed at destruction usually cause condemnation. But on the other hand, Heemeyer’s action was approved by many residents of the United States and around the world. Marvin Heemeyer began to be called “the last American hero,” challenging the social injustice that drowns little people in their unequal struggle with large corporations and the government machine. Many consider Marvin Heemeyer's action worthy of admiration, because he fought justly for his rights: in his little war, only the property of his offenders was damaged and not a single person was killed.