Posted on 01/12/2006 8:47:15 PM PST by bd476
BOLO Update: Stolen Explosive Mixing Truck and Trailer
Updated on 1/12/2006 - 1:13:28 PM EST
The following document is FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY. It contains information that may be exempt from public release under the Freedom of Information Act, (5 U.S.C. 552). This document is to be controlled, handled, transmitted, distributed, and disposed of in accordance with policies relating to FOUO information and is not to be released to the public or other personnel who do not have a valid need to know without prior approval.
INCIDENT #: 111805-BOLO-TN-GA
DATE/TIME:
111005 TIME UNK for the Explosives Mixing Truck
110605 110705 TIME UNK for the Drop-deck gooseneck trailer
LOCATION:
2902 Jacksboro Pike, La Follette, TN 37766 (Explosives Mixing Truck)
8906 Bright Star Road, Douglasville, GA 30134 (Drop-deck, Gooseneck Trailer)
LOOKOUT/ACTIVITY:
- Green Mack explosives emulsion truck reported stolen
- Drop-deck, gooseneck trailer reported stolen
UPDATE/ADVISORY:
On 11/18/05 The Highway ISAC distributed a BOLO that detailed the theft of an explosive mixing truck from an explosives company in Tennessee.
The truck was stolen on 11/17/05. Research and analysis conducted by the Highway ISAC with support from law enforcement and The FBI indicates that there was also theft of a trailer from a Georgia based Explosives Company on (11/6/05 -11/07/5).
While no known terrorist nexus exist, it is known that the truck stolen from the explosives company on 11/17/05 is an unregistered truck that is not typically driven on the Highway.
This type of truck is reportedly geared low so as to reach a top speed of 35 miles per hour. Generally a trailer is used to transport this type of truck from job site to job site where it is then used to mix, transport and deposit an explosive mixture of ammonium nitrate and diesel fuel for strip mining operations.
The Highway ISAC is updating the BOLO for the purpose of alerting the Highway Community to the occurrence of two separate thefts from explosive operations within a two-week timeframe that are within the same geographical region.
The ISAC stresses that there is no known terrorism nexus associated with the distribution of the initial BOLO and the subsequent update.
The description of the trailer stolen is as follows; A drop-deck, gooseneck trailer was reported stolen from a Georgia explosive company in Douglasville, Georgia on or about 11/06/05 Douglasville police report # 05-138-97 (770-920-3010).
- Serial # 4LF4S442443510446,
- GA license plate # TL854H8
Please note: The two thefts have not been reported as being related and there is no know terrorism nexus reported at this time
The truck serial # 1M2B192C2KW002152 and the rear portion serial number is TREADBED 2042.
POC; if you have any information regarding this incident please contact Highway Watch ® 1-877-USA-SAFE or FBI agent Haley at 865-560-5958, or email at TSOD.HighwayISAC@dhs.gov if you have any further information or questions concerning this incident.
Ping.
Found this current piece of good news while searching for more info on the BOLO Person of Special Interest Alert.
It appears that they might be updating the "Be On the Lookout" Alert as a reissue more than providing new information.
Also, look at the small print warning at the top. I found this on a publicly accessible site. Perhaps it is the first official publicized alert.
bttt
And sent out on email lists.
ping
Seems legit ping .. and BTT
Is this related to the purchase of thousands of pay-as-you-go cell phones?
I don't know.
Green Mack Explosives Emulsion
Truck Reported Stolen
An explosives company representative reported that a green 1989 Mack truck with a white body was stolen from their facility on 11-10-2005.
The truck is geared very low so it cannot travel at a high rate of speed (30-35 max). It is believed that the truck was taken away on either a low-boy tractor trailer rig or towed away.
This truck was designed and made for the specific purpose of mixing explosives material on site, so it is not a licensed or registered vehicle. The truck serial #1M2B192C2KW002152 and the rear portion serial number is TREADBED 2042.
PLEASE NOTE: These pictures are of a similar type and model however; the actual cab color of the missing truck is green.
Link to photo
Highway ISAC Statement: This particular vehicle is designed for mixing and delivering explosives while on a job site. In general, trucks of this nature do not drive on the highway and are either towed or have a tractor-trailer low-boy rig deliver it to a job site.
Once on the site, the trucks are used to mix and prepare explosives. There is no known terrorism nexus associated with this truck.
However, because of its use in the preparation of explosives the Highway Community is asked to use its considerable Road Smarts and support in locating this vehicle.
The approximate value of this particular type of rig is $150, 000 - $230,000, dependent upon the use of either aboveground or below-ground operations. This particular vehicle was set-up for above ground open-pit mining operations.
It is equipped with two tanks; an emulsion tank of 7,400 capacity (wet) tank and a secondary 18,000 lbs capacity (dry) tank. This vehicle is a regular key-start vehicle
If you have any information regarding this incident please contact
Highway Watch 1-877-USA-SAFE or FBI agent Haley at 865-560-5958, or email at TSOD.HighwayISAC@dhs.gov if you have any further information or questions concerning this incident.
Gears, Guts and Glory
Pass it on BTT
Do you think this is related to this press release?
....In three separate incidents truck drivers reported an individual asking several questions about tank truck deliveries and operations. The individual in question is also reported to have video taped tank truck operations and deliveries as well as taken photographs of tanker equipment...
http://www.highwaywatch.com/press_room/release_011006.html
There's also a photo of the suspect on CNN. Please forgive me for posting a link to PNN (propaganda news network)
http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/01/12/trucker.lookout/index.html
That's always possible of course, but probably not.
There's also more on that particular story over on the thread:
Alert: Man photographed trucks...
Ping...
LOL
bolo bump
From August 8, 2004 Washington Post:
THE WORLD AFTER 9/11 : The Truck Bomb Threat
Impervious Shield Elusive Against Drive-By Terrorists
By Spencer S. Hsu and Sari Horwitz
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, August 8, 2004; Page A01
Government bomb technicians have packed Chevrolet sedans, Dodge vans and Ryder trucks with 10 tons of explosives and have blown them up in the desolate New Mexico desert hoping to analyze the flight of debris over the sand.
Federal agents in Front Royal, Va., have trained more than 400 Labrador retrievers to sniff out the chemical compounds used in 19,000 separate explosives formulas.
A D.C. police officer finishes inspecting a truck near the IMF building in Northwest Washington. Last week's orange alert bulletin noted that "there is no standard type of vehicle associated with" a car bomb and urged special attention to limousines as well, which often get close access to buildings. (Sarah L. Voisin -- The Washington Post)
Law enforcement officers have left thousands of calling cards across the country -- from a farmer's co-op store in McPherson, Kan., to a chemical company in West Haven, Conn. -- asking sales managers to report unusual interest in fertilizer or other components of homemade bombs.
The United States has spent more than $1 billion on these and other efforts to stop a single threat: the explosion of a car or truck bomb at a government installation or other structure. But 11 years after Muslim extremists used an explosives-laden van to attack the World Trade Center and nearly three years after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, even senior federal agents acknowledge that the country has virtually no defense against a terrorist barreling down the street with a truck bomb.
"If a person doesn't care about dying, they can pull right up to a building, push a button and the building would go," said Michael E. Bouchard, assistant director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. "That's why we have checkpoints and try to keep large vehicles away from buildings..."
The rest of the story: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A48677-2004Aug7?language=printer
Suspect looks Arabic or Pakistani.
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