By: Sara Walsh
When retired U.S. Marshal Steve Monier reflects on the 266-day armed standoff that unfolded in Plainfield, New Hampshire, he still remembers the sharp tension in the air—the sense that the situation could turn deadly at any moment. What began on January 12, 2007, as a simple felony tax trial for Ed and Elaine Brown quickly spiraled into the longest armed standoff in the history of the U.S. Marshals Service. The couple’s refusal to appear in court transformed their quiet hilltop home into a fortified compound, drawing anti-government activists and militia supporters from across the country.
Monier’s book, No One Has To Die: Inside the Longest Armed Standoff in the History of the U.S. Marshals, chronicles those nine dangerous months from the inside—capturing the strategy, the fear, the surprising moments of humor, and importantly, the united goal that anchored every decision: resolve the situation without a single injury or fatality.
A Community on Edge
From the very beginning, Monier and the leadership team were deeply concerned about the safety of the people who lived near the Browns’ compound. “We were worried first about the safety of the Plainfield community, particularly those neighbors who were close by to the Browns,” he recalls. With heavily armed supporters coming and going, including some individuals with violent histories, the risk was constant.
But the safety of the officers involved weighed on him just as heavily. Local police, Deputy U.S. Marshals, and federal partners were all in harm’s way. “That worried us. It worried me,” Monier says. Yet despite the volatility of the situation, the team’s planning, collaboration, and steady communication paid off. The standoff ended precisely as the title promises—with no one having to die.
Why Tell This Story Now
It wasn’t until Monier retired from government service in 2017 that he felt the timing was right to tell the full story. He wanted to honor the teamwork and tactical discipline that led to such a rare peaceful outcome in a potentially explosive scenario. “When I finally retired… I knew that the story should be told about one of the most storied and successful cases in the history of the U.S. Marshals Service,” he explains.
The title, No One Has To Die, is both a statement of fact and a hard-won principle. The team planned meticulously, often revising strategies, anticipating threats, and weighing every decision against a single standard: avoid another Waco or Ruby Ridge.
A Lawman’s Perspective
Monier’s decades of experience in law enforcement—38 years across local and federal service—deeply shaped the way he approached the book. His writing is deliberate, clear, and historically grounded. He previously co-authored a book on the Lindbergh kidnapping, and he approached this project with the same commitment to accuracy and context.
“My writing style is straightforward in telling a story as it happened,” he says. Writing in the third person allowed him to highlight the collective effort behind the scenes: the Marshals, the local agencies, the analysts, and the undercover operatives who helped bring the Browns to justice without bloodshed. He also takes care to explain the larger landscape—militia movements, tax denier ideology, and the online networks that amplified the conflict.
Balancing Fact and Story
Telling the story required more than a timeline of events. Monier wanted readers to understand the people involved—their fears, frustrations, and strategies. “I tried to humanize the Deputy U.S. Marshals… while sticking to the facts of what took place,” he says. Even in a crisis, there were moments of unexpected humor and camaraderie, and those details make the narrative vivid and relatable.
One scene Monier says captures the essence of the operation is the Browns’ final takedown—on their front porch, while sharing pizza and beer with undercover deputies. That moment, he says, illustrates the creativity, patience, and risk tolerance required to end the standoff without violence.
A Team Effort Years in the Making
Monier also credits retired Chief Deputies Gary DiMartino and Dave Dimmitt, who contributed their recollections, edits, and institutional knowledge. Both had been deeply involved with the case during their time with the U.S. Marshals. They helped track down former team members and participated in extensive interviews to ensure the story’s accuracy. “Both were part of our leadership team… which helped devise the strategies necessary to bring this dangerous armed standoff to conclusion,” Monier explains.
A Story Meant for the Screen
Unsurprisingly, the events of 2007 have attracted interest from filmmakers and producers. Monier believes the story should be told as a limited docuseries of 4–5 episodes, allowing room for interviews with the many law enforcement and community members who lived through it. The contrast between the potential for tragedy and the ultimate peaceful resolution gives the story a cinematic arc that resonates far beyond New Hampshire.
Lessons for the Future
Above all, Monier hopes readers walk away with a renewed understanding of law enforcement’s most difficult balancing act: stopping violence without causing it. “Dangerous and potentially explosive confrontations with law enforcement need not end in tragedy,” he emphasizes. His book stands as a case study in patience, strategy, and communication—tools that proved just as important as any tactical gear.
Today, Monier is working on a new project: a series of novels inspired by historical U.S. Marshals cases, a shift from nonfiction that challenges him in new ways. But No One Has To Die remains a testament to his career—and to a moment in history where restraint and resolve overcame chaos.
To explore the full story, head to Amazon and check out No One Has To Die today.







