[LeArc] Pipe Bombs Planted in Midwest Mailboxes

Duane Whittingham [email protected]
Sat, 04 May 2002 07:12:35 -0500


Friday, May 03, 2002
Foxnews.com

WASHINGTON  � Pipe bombs accompanied by anti-government propaganda 
exploded Friday in six mailboxes in rural parts of Illinois and Iowa, 
injuring six people in an attack authorities called domestic 
terrorism. 


Two other bombs were found but did not detonate, and a note found 
with them said more "attention getters" were on the way. It was 
signed "someone who cares." 

Authorities did not immediately announce any suspects. The Postal 
Service suspended deliveries through Saturday in the agricultural 
region that straddles the Mississippi River, and urged residents not 
to remove any devices they might find in their mailboxes. 

"We are reviewing this as a domestic terrorism incident," said James 
Bogner, an FBI spokesman. "We don't know if all the devices have been 
found or there are devices remaining ... We probably won't know for a 
while." 

In all, eight devices were found and six exploded. The bombs were not 
sent by mail but were instead placed in the mailboxes and set to 
detonate when the boxes were opened, investigators said. 

John Peterson of the ATF said late Friday that the investigation was 
progressing well and officials from an FBI multi-agency terrorism 
task force and the U.S. attorney's office in Iowa's northern district 
had a number of leads. 

"We are working with our profilers," he said. 

Postal Service Inspector Linda Jensen said consistencies in placement 
suggested the bombs were linked, but that did not mean just one 
person was involved. 

Peterson said it appears one person could drive to all the 
communities in a night, and it was safest to assume more devices have 
not been found. 

"If you see anything unusual, wire, tape, string, anything of that 
nature, contact your local law enforcement. At the very least, be 
very careful," he said. 

None of the injuries was considered life threatening, but Carroll 
County, Ill., Sheriff Rod Herrick warned residents against opening 
their mailboxes. "Don't touch your mailbox until further notice," he 
said. 

Marjorie Zuidema said she and her husband, Robert, heard something 
that sounded "like a bird hitting a window, but a lot louder," when 
her mailbox in rural Morrison, Ill., exploded Friday afternoon. 

By the time she discovered what had happened, "the police and FBI, 
postal inspectors, just about everybody" was at the end of her 
driveway. 

Mail carrier Marilyn Dolieslager's face and left arm were injured and 
part of her thumb was blown off in the blast, according to her 
daughter, Jodi Camper. 

Judy Temple, a neighbor of Zuidema, said she looked out her living 
room window just Dolieslager was pulling up. 

"As soon as I saw her lean over in the mailbox, all of a 
sudden, 'Boom!' and everything when straight up in the air like a 
mushroom," Temple said. "I yelled for my husband, 'Something's wrong 
with Marilyn!"' 

Temple and her husband called 911 and helped Dolieslager to their 
yard. 

Also injured were three postal workers in Mount Carroll and 
Elizabeth, Ill., and Asbury, and two postal customers in Anamosa and 
Tipton. Only the Tipton resident remained in the hospital late 
Friday, officials said. 

Other devices were found in Farley and a farm outside Davenport in 
Iowa. 

Steve Ertmer was delivering mail near the town of Elizabeth when a 
pipe bomb detonated around 2:30 p.m. He suffered cuts to his hands, 
which required stitches, and his vehicle's door was damaged. But he 
said he probably was saved from more serious injuries because he was 
driving a four-door Blazer and sitting up high. 

"I'm OK. I got lucky," he said Friday night. "I thank God it was me 
who opened it up and not my customer standing in front of it." 

In Asbury, a bomb went off when a letter carrier opened a mailbox 
from the passenger side of a vehicle, leaving a small hole in the 
door, witnesses said. The carrier had surgery to remove shrapnel from 
his arm and suffered damage to his hearing, said Ken Runde, chief 
deputy in Dubuque County. 

Runde said local law enforcement agencies could not check every 
mailbox in the area for a possible bomb. 

"We probably have 30,000 mailboxes," he said. "If they notice 
something suspicious or foreign, then we will respond." 

Postal Service vice president Azeezaly Jaffer said the bombs were 
accompanied by a typewritten note 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." 

The letter also said: "If I could, I would change only one person, 
unfortunately the resources are not accessible. It seems killing a 
single famous person would get the same media attention as killing 
numerous un-famous humans." 

The bombs appeared to be triggered by being touched or moved. Jensen 
described the devices as three-quarter inch steel pipes with a 9-volt 
battery attached. Accompanying the bomb was a clear plastic bag 
containing the note. 

Postal Service spokeswoman Joleen Baxa said mail delivery was 
suspended through Saturday in all rural areas east of Cedar Rapids 
and in northern Illinois. 

Steve Rangel, a bartender near Morrison, said the quiet town is 
surrounded by farmland, which made Friday's explosions that much more 
surprising. 

"I think everyone is angry that anybody would do something so 
ignorant," Rangel said. "It's got to be a sick individual. The whole 
thing is really sad." 


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