Former Marine Brandon Raub Sentenced To Up To 30 Days In Psych Ward Over Facebook Posts
The former Marine who was detained over Facebook posts critical of the government is being held in a psychiatric ward, Peter Bacqué Richmond Times-Dispatch reports.

Raub accused the government of lying about 9/11 and spoke of "starting a Revolution."
Lawyers from The Rutherford Institute represented Brandon Raub during the three-hour hearing today at the John Randolph Medical Center and released a statement, saying Raub has been sentenced to "up to 30 days’ further confinement in a VA psych ward" after "government officials again pointed to Raub’s Facebook posts as the sole reason for their concern and for his continued incarceration."
According to Raub's mother, authorities from the FBI, Secret Service and Chesterfield County PD came to their door on Thursday evening, questioned Raub about his Facebook posts, then handcuffed him and placed him in a Chesterfield PD squad car before taking him to John Randolph Psychiatric Hospital in Hopewell, Va.
Both the FBI and Secret Service said Raub was not arrested or charged, but the Rutherford Institute statement points out that "if the police have put handcuffs on you and you’re being held against your will, that qualifies as an arrest."
When asked about why Raub was placed in a psychiatric ward, FBI Richmond spokeswoman told us that the FBI "had nothing to do with that" and that the FBI typically doesn't "make determinations such as that."
"We went out to interview him because of complaints that our office had received about people coming across his posts and perceiving them as threatening so our office along with Chesterfield County Police Department on Thursday," Rybiski told us. "When we left we had not arrested him, we had not placed our hands on him, we did not detain him and we did not charge him."
Secret Service spokesman Brian Leary said: "The Secret Service assisted the FBI with the interview. He was not arrested by the Secret Service. The Secret Service will continue to monitor the situation. We have no further comment at this time."
The Chesterfield PD – who had previously said the situation "was an FBI matter and we were just there to assist them" – released this statement (emphasis ours):
Chesterfield Police assisted federal
authorities in their efforts to interview Brandon J. Raub on Thursday,
Aug. 16. After speaking to Raub, officers believed him to be in need
of further evaluation.
Chesterfield officers at the scene
contacted Chesterfield Mental Health Crisis Intervention. Crisis
workers recommended that police take Raub into custody and bring him in
for evaluation.
Chesterfield police took Raub into custody for evaluation in accordance with Virginia State Code § 37.2-808 Emergency custody.
Raub was placed in handcuffs after he resisted officers’ attempts to take him into custody.
Raub was evaluated by a Chesterfield
mental health official, who determined that he should be held under a
temporary [detention] order and transported to John Randolph Medical
Center for additional evaluation.
Raub was not arrested and he faces no criminal charges in Chesterfield.
"I really love America, and I think that idea that you can be detained and sent somewhere without due process and a lawyer … is crazy," Raub said.
Raub said he served as a Marine in Iraq and Afghanistan
from 2005 to 2011, was a combat engineer sergeant and does not own a
gun. His mother said he returned from Afghanistan about a year ago and
does not have PTSD.
Raub wrote five articles about economics and the Richmond Liberty Movement for the website Don't Tread On Me and his Linked-In profile says he owns a small coin business through the Numis Network.
John W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute, said the following: “For
government officials to not only arrest Brandon Raub for doing nothing
more than exercising his First Amendment rights but to actually force
him to undergo psychological evaluations and detain him against his will
goes against every constitutional principle this country was founded
upon. This should be a wake-up call to Americans that the police state
is here.”