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Six Pipe Bombs Found in Nebraska Mailboxes; Some Leads in Bombs That Hurt 6 in Iowa, Illinois
AP ^ | May 5, 2002 | Kevin O'hanlon

Posted on 05/05/2002 4:00:32 AM PDT by TomGuy



Six Pipe Bombs Found in Nebraska Mailboxes; Some Leads in Bombs That Hurt 6 in Iowa, Illinois

Published: May 5, 2002

OHIOWA, Neb. (AP) - Six pipe bombs were found Saturday in rural Nebraska mailboxes, heightening fears among Midwesterners already on edge after similar bombs injured six people in Iowa and Illinois the day before, authorities said.

Federal officials had described the earlier bombings as an act of domestic terrorism and said anti-government propaganda and notes warning of more "attention getters" were found nearby.

It appeared that the six devices discovered Saturday also were accompanied by letters, at least one of them identical to those found in eastern Iowa and northwestern Illinois, FBI Special Agent Jim Bogner said.

Unlike the bombs found Friday, authorities said, none of the bombs in Nebraska exploded.

After Saturday's discoveries, postal inspectors in Iowa and Illinois curtailed inspections planned for thousands of mailboxes. Mail was suspended in the area and officials did not say how soon it would resume.

"We're using all of our resources for investigation and apprehension of whoever is responsible," said Rick Bowdren, inspector-in-charge of the Midwest division of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.

He urged people across the Midwest to use caution in opening their mailboxes and said anyone who sees tape, wire or anything unusual around a mailbox should report it their local post office.

"We are asking postal patrons to keep their mailboxes open. We would recommend they tape it open," Bowdren said. "That way the carrier making a delivery can look in and patrons can look in and that anxiety factor will be alleviated."

The devices found Saturday near the central Nebraska towns of Ohiowa, Columbus, Dannebrog, Davenport and Scotia had been placed in the mailboxes, not sent through the mail, said Weysan Dun, assistant special agent-in-charge of the FBI's Omaha office. He said four were found by mail carriers and one was discovered by a resident.

A sixth bomb was found in a residential area of Seward late Saturday night.

That bomb, which appeared to include a note and was similar to the other devices, was detonated by the Nebraska State Patrol shortly after midnight without injury, said Terri Teuber, a spokeswoman for the patrol.

"For the individuals or individuals who may have been responsible for this and who may be listening: You have gotten our attention," Dun said. "We are not certain we understand your message. We would like to hear from you. You do not need to send any more of these devices."

Earlier Saturday, Bogner said authorities had some leads on who may have planted pipe bombs in at least eight rural mailboxes in eastern Iowa and northwestern Illinois on Friday, but they didn't know if one person or several people were responsible.

Four postal workers and two residents in Illinois and Iowa were injured in the explosions, including one woman who remained hospitalized in fair condition Saturday.

The note that had been left with the pipe bombs said more "could be delivered to various locations around the country," and postal officials in Washington on Friday had advised mail carriers across the country to be cautious.

A map of the bombs found Friday forms a jagged circle straddling the Mississippi River and covering part of eastern Iowa and the northwest corner of Illinois.

Saturday's pipe bombs were found about 350 miles west of there, not far from Interstate 80, which runs through both regions.

"You might find a beer can in a mailbox every once in a while around here, but not a bomb. Somebody obviously is screwed up in the head," said Cathy Meyer, an Ohiowa resident and former postmaster in the area.

"This obviously is very, very troubling that someone would do this," Meyer said.

Gorlyn Nun said he wasn't aware of the explosions in Iowa and Illinois when he walked down his gravel driveway Saturday morning and opened his mailbox to find a pipe inside with a battery attached to it.

"I opened it up, my mail was there and there was a clear Ziploc bag in there. I could see it was a pipe and it had a 9-volt battery in there," he said.

The 59-year-old carpenter said he took his mail out and left the device behind, then called the local sheriff. The state patrol later arrived and detonated the pipe bomb.

Postal officials said the bombs that were found Friday were accompanied by typewritten notes in clear plastic bags that began: "Mailboxes are exploding! Why, you ask?"

Then it said, in part:

"If the government controls what you want to do they control what you can do. ... I'm obtaining your attention in the only way I can. More info is on its way. More 'attention getters' are on the way."

It was signed, "Someone Who Cares."

Officials described the bombs as three-quarter-inch steel pipes attached to a 9-volt battery, which appeared to be triggered by being touched or moved.

Jon Petersen, a special agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, said some of the bombs went off when the mailbox was opened and others went off when they were moved.

Postal officials were working with the Iowa state crime lab to devise a gadget similar to a fishing pole that would allow inspectors to open a mailbox without having to get close to it, said Ron Jensen, a postal inspector from Des Moines, Iowa.

In Illinois' Carroll County, Sheriff Rod Herrick spent Saturday morning opening mailboxes for worried residents. He fastened a clamp to the mailbox handle, tied fishing line to the clamp, then stepped behind his car and pulled on the line.

"It's no high-tech thing. I'm not a bomb expert," Herrick said. "But I need to do something to keep the calm here."

AP-ES-05-05-02 0159EDT



TOPICS: Breaking News; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Illinois; US: Iowa; US: Nebraska
KEYWORDS: nebraska; pipebombs
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To: Cindy
"One of those injured was Delores Werling, a 70-year-old, part-time teacher of the handicapped who lives on a 200-acre farmstead northeast of Tipton, Iowa, about 37 miles southeast of Cedar Rapids. Her husband, Bryce Werling, who is a retired farmer, said Saturday in an interview that he and his wife drove up to their mailbox about 11:20 a.m. Friday. His wife, sitting on the passenger side, opened the mail box, took out some mail and, noticing an object, asked her husband if he had left something in the mailbox."

Five more bombs found in mailboxes

61 posted on 05/05/2002 11:37:08 PM PDT by Orion78
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To: Mitchell
If you have a link for that I would like to read it.
62 posted on 05/05/2002 11:38:04 PM PDT by Orion78
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To: Aliska
Bi-Weekly Bombs Worry Iowa Police (12/1/99)

DES MOINES, Iowa (APBnews.com) -- Investigators are baffled by a series of pipe bombs that were planted, apparently at random, around the Des Moines area every other Tuesday in November, police said today.

Two of the three bombs exploded, but no one was seriously injured, according to Des Moines police Lt. Kelly Willis.

Police have no suspects and no motives, and no one has contacted authorities or the news media to take credit for the bombs, he said.

"We have enough similarities and consistencies that we're looking at the same person or a group of persons," Willis told APBnews.com today. "What we're baffled about is, we don't know what the message is here. What's the perpetrator trying to tell us? What's his motive? What's her motive? We're somewhat baffled obviously by this, and that's where the community comes in. It's our belief that the eyes and the ears of the public are what's going to crack this thing."


63 posted on 05/05/2002 11:50:08 PM PDT by Orion78
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To: Orion78
If you have a link for that I would like to read it.

I was certain that I read it yesterday, but it's not in any of the articles posted at FR. I'll do a broader search and try to find it again.

64 posted on 05/06/2002 12:59:36 AM PDT by Mitchell
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To: Orion78
It was a newspaper carrier that thought it was a tractor part.

This is from a QC Times article (link goes to a different story now), but it was posted on this thread, Post 158.

The first hint that Friday was not going to be like most other days was too subtle.
Between the rural, pre-dawn darkness and the shadowy hollow of a roadside mailbox, the Quad-City Times newspaper carrier was not sure what she was seeing.
At 6 a.m., the odd-looking device inside the mailbox at 22624 130th Ave. looked to her like a tractor part that had been left there by a thoughtful neighbor. She simply slid the newspaper behind the device and closed the mailbox door.
But 49 minutes later, when Shelli Ann Engelbrecht went to retrieve her newspaper, it was apparent the device inside the mailbox was no tractor part.
Within a half-hour of the call to Scott County sheriff’s deputies, the Quad-City Bomb Squad was about to begin a very long day.

I shudder to think that it might have blown up on this poor kid.

65 posted on 05/06/2002 7:09:59 AM PDT by iowamomforfreedom
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To: Dirk McQuickly
Its my guess that this person is a lefty. Where else do you hear crap like (paraphrase)"1% of the nation controls 99% of the nations wealth". That phrase is taken straight out of college classrooms taught by red diaper doper babies.
66 posted on 05/06/2002 7:12:36 AM PDT by KC_Conspirator
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To: Orion78; Cindy
What I wanna know is if, according to the FBI, the bomber is putting the bombs in the mailbox at night, in hopes of attacking postal workers, how come the man in this article says "my mail was there.."? How did the mail get put into the mailbox if the bomb was put in at night? Did the postal worker open the box, see the bomb and put in the mail anyway?

Maybe this man didn't check his mailbox the previous day.

67 posted on 05/06/2002 7:29:20 AM PDT by Quilla
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To: Orion78
Mailboxes out here in rural Nebraska get double duty. Ag parts, eggs, baked goods get shoved into a mailbox if no one happens to be home at the time. I once returned an angle grinder I borrowed via the mailbox. No one really gives a second thought to something other than mail appearing in one's mailbox.

If the bomber's intentions were to target mail carriers he neglected a prime consideration... outgoing mail. Bills letters, etc get placed into a mailbox way before a mail carrier ever touches the box.

68 posted on 05/06/2002 6:55:38 PM PDT by VetoBill
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