According to this local news article, one Norm Olsen, a Michigan-based wingnut paramilitary minister, organized a 2000-man militia assault on the Schiavo hospice to "rescue" Terri Schiavo:
http://www.petoskeynews.com/articles/2005/03/30/news/local_regional/news01.txt
He offered his Trailer Park Army's services to the Schindlers' attorney who turned the info over to the FBI.
"We the people are the final judges, not the black-robed demons. I do not believe that 70 percent of the American people thought it was wrong for government to get involved. They turned around when they believed Terri Schiavo's was a lost cause and wanted to be on the winning side."
Fcuking nuts.
Some info on the wingnut in question from the Southern Poverty Law Center:
http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?pid=364
Norm Olsen, 53
From the very beginning, Norman E. Olson was a radical among radicals. After starting the Michigan Militia in April 1994 as one of the first major militia groups, Olson helped make his home state one of the leading spots for Patriot activity.
He drew widespread attention after reporting Oklahoma City conspirator Terry Nichols had attended one of the meetings of the Michigan Militia, which he claimed counted 12,000 members.
But Olson, a Baptist preacher who spends time in his Alanson gun store wearing a camouflage military outfit, alienated his colleagues after Oklahoma by offering reporters an incredible theory: The Japanese government had bombed the federal building there as a return favor for the sarin gas subway attack that he said the U.S. government carried out in Tokyo.
Unceremoniously booted out by his comrades-in-arms, Olson started another group, the Northern Michigan Regional Militia, while attacking his former friends as "too moderate." In the run-up to the millennial date change, Olson predicted government collapse and worse as a result of the "y2k" computer bug — a collapse he welcomed.
"We're itching for a standoff someplace," he told The Washington Post in late 1999. "Any movement needs a good and noble rallying point, an Alamo or a 'Remember the Maine,' and this could be it."