With time already served since his arrest in September 2012, Steven Matthew Fernandes could be free by March.
Fernandes declined to speak before US District Judge Andrew Gordon sentenced him.
Fernandes had described himself as commander of a Nevada urban survivalist militia unit with six or seven members, according to court documents. He was accused of telling an FBI informant that he could attack the Las Vegas Strip and kill more than the 12 people who died in a July 2012 shooting in a theatre in Aurora, Colorado.
Gordon said he believed Fernandes endangered himself, his mother and his younger half-sisters at a home where investigators found gunpowder, homemade napalm and a cache of ammunition and weapons. Fernandes was accused of assembling explosive devices that he detonated in the Arizona desert.
Fernandes nodded when Gordon told him he won't be able to possess weapons or explosives, can't use drugs or alcohol, and has to undergo mental health treatment.
Fernandes, who once wanted to join the US Marines, could have faced up to 10 years in prison. A federal presentence report set a range of 18 to 24 months.
Dead-On Accuracy Tactical owner Brent Roberts called the blame unfair.
"We don't do any type of brainwashing. We do not teach anything that is illegal," said Roberts, who said he has been in business for about 10 years and teaches National Rifle Association instructors.
"Anything that Steven was doing with bomb making had nothing to do with us," he said.
Prosecutor Nicholas Dickinson pointed in court to a psychologist's determination that Fernandes didn't actually plan to carry out a plan to attack the Las Vegas Strip.
Dickinson called the decision to accept a plea before trial difficult, but said the government was satisfied if Fernandes is required to get strict mental health monitoring.
He was arrested September 13, 2012, as he drove to work at a RadioShack with a loaded shotgun and ammunition in his car.
Those charges were dropped as part of the plea agreement.
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