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Breaking News Explosive Devices Sent To Obamas & Clintons. Update:The domestic MAGA terrorist has been arrested…

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/muckraker/cesar-sayoc-criminal-complaint-new-info

What The Criminal Complaint Revealed About Mail Bomb Suspect Cesar Sayoc

A criminal complaint filed in the Southern District of New York Friday shed new light on the motivations and techniques of suspected serial mail bomber Cesar Sayoc.


Sayoc is alleged to have sent 13 improvised explosive devices to high-profile Democratic politicians and critics of President Trump this week. He was charged with one count of interstate transportation of an explosive, one count of illegal mailing of explosives, one count of threats against former presidents and others, one count of threatening interstate communications, and one count of assaulting federal officers.

The 11-page complaint, which included only the information the FBI needed to obtain a warrant for Sayoc’s arrest, confirms that the 56-year-old Florida resident shared conspiratorial memes against his targets on social media. An affidavit provided by FBI special agent David Brown also confirms basic biographical info about Sayoc, who is currently in federal custody in Florida.

  • Sayoc’s middle name is Altieri. Sayoc used the name in several of his social media accounts, including a now-deleted Facebook page under the name Cesar Altieri and a Twitter account under the same name.
  • The white van papered with inflammatory material that was captured by local media outlets during Sayoc’s arrest did in fact belong to him. Images of the van—which is covered in pro-Trump paraphernalia, photos of Hillary Clinton and progressive filmmaker Michael Moore with their face obscured by rifle sights, an image of former president Barack Obama in a diaper, and a sticker reading “CNN sucks”—circulated on Twitter on Friday morning before Sayoc’s identity was confirmed. The complaint mentions that he was arrested “in the vicinity of his white van,” which had windows “covered with images including images critical of CNN.” CNN reported Sayoc has been living in the van.
  • Some of the bombs were sent along with photos of the “target-recipient marked with a red ‘X.’” Billionaire George Soros, Obama, former CIA Director John Brennan, and Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) were among the individuals sent these images.
  • The FBI considered the package mailed to Brennan, which was addressed care of CNN, a threat to him rather than the news network. Brennan actually serves as a contributor to MSNBC and NBC, not CNN. Both the former CIA director and various CNN personalities have clashed publicly with Trump.
  • All of the bombs were made the same way and sent in identical packaging. They consisted of “approximately six inches of PVC pipe, a small clock, a battery, wiring, and energetic material,” which “gives off heat and energy” when initiated by “heat, shock or friction.” They were sent in manila envelopes with the mailing and return addresses typed in black font on white paper. Each was posted with six American flag stamps.
  • Sayoc’s poor spelling helped law enforcement catch him. The complaint confirmed that Sayoc maintained the Cesar Altieri Twitter account, and that the page featured “various posts with misspellings consistent with the Packages, including ‘Hilary, rather than ‘Hillary,’ ‘Shultz rather than ‘Schultz.’”
  • The FBI also used that Twitter account to help confirm Sayoc’s alleged antipathy towards the targets in the mail bombings. A post dated Oct. 24, “after the recovery of the Soros package” is critical of both President Barack Obama and George Soros.
  • FBI agents found a “latent fingerprint” on the envelope containing the explosive that he sent to Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters that they identified as Sayoc’s. Sayoc has a decades-long criminal history in Florida for charges ranging from battery to making a bomb threat against a Florida utility company.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/how-the-feds-nabbed-mail-bomb-suspect-cesar-sayoc

How The Feds Nabbed Mail Bomb Suspect Cesar Sayoc

WASHINGTON (AP) — A Florida man with a criminal history and a fervor for President Donald Trump sent at least 13 mail bombs to prominent Democrats, Justice Department officials said, crediting DNA, a fingerprint match and misspellings for the key break in a case that spread fear of election-season violence with little precedent in the U.S.

Cesar Sayoc, 56, of Aventura, Florida, faces five federal charges in connection with a mail bomb plot that spurred a weeklong, coast-to-coast investigation that continued even after he was taken into custody Friday as investigators scrutinized additional suspicious packages intended for Democrats.

Sayoc will make his first court appearance next week, where additional details may be revealed about a motive. In the meantime, Attorney General Jeff Sessions suggested that politics may have played a role and noted that Sayoc appeared to be a “partisan.”

Those who saw him in the Florida neighborhood, unmistakable in a white van plastered with Trump’s image and political stickers, described him as unsettling and troubled.

Sayoc’s social media profiles portray a deeply disaffected conservative who trafficked in online conspiracy theories, parody accounts and name-calling. He called a Florida school shooting survivor a “fake phony,” peddled theories about George Soros, the billionaire political donor targeted this week by a package bomb, and denigrated other Democrats who were later the intended recipients of explosive packages.

An amateur body builder and former stripper who once spent time on probation for a bomb threat charge, Sayoc first registered as a Republican voter just ahead of the March 2016 Republican primary and quickly identified himself as a proud Trump supporter, tweeting and posting on Facebook videos that appear to show him at Trump rallies.

He appeared to be living in his van, showering on the beach or at a local fitness center.

Sayoc’s arrest Friday was a major breakthrough in the nationwide manhunt following the discovery of the explosive devices — none of which detonated — addressed to prominent Democrats and other frequent targets of conservative ire, including former President Barack Obama, former Vice President Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton and the cable network CNN. On Friday, new packages addressed to New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker and former National Intelligence Director James Clapper were intercepted — both similar to those containing pipe bombs discovered earlier in the week. Investigators in California scrutinized a package sent to Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris, her office said, and one sent to Tom Steyer, a billionaire businessman who has campaigned for months for Trump’s impeachment.

The mail bombs, coming shortly before major midterm elections, sparked a heated national conversation about the hard-edged political climate and Trump’s role in fanning the flames. The president has branded the media the “enemy of the people” and hurled harsh, personal insults at others targeted in the plot.

Shortly after Sayoc was detained, Trump declared that “we must never allow political violence to take root in America” and that Americans “must unify.”

Speaking later to reporters Friday evening before leaving for a political rally in North Carolina, Trump said he knows Sayoc supported him but that he himself “bears no blame.” Hours earlier Trump had complained via tweet that “this ‘bomb’ stuff” was taking attention away from the upcoming election and that critics were wrongly blaming him.

FBI and police officials worked swiftly to untangle clues this week as the packages mounted, sometimes several in the same day.

The big break came when a fingerprint found on one of the packages, intended for California Rep. Maxine Waters, matched a fingerprint of Sayoc’s on file with Florida authorities. A DNA sample from a device intended for Obama similarly matched the suspect’s DNA, the FBI said.

An additional clue: Misspellings from his online posts matched mistakes found on the packages, according to an 11-page criminal complaint that included the formal charges of threatening former presidents and transporting explosives across state lines.

Some packages included photographs of the intended recipients marked with a red “x,” the FBI said. The packages contained timers and batteries, but were not rigged to explode upon opening. Officials were uncertain whether the devices were poorly designed or never intended to cause physical harm.

Authorities noted that they included “energetic material.” A footnote to the charging document said such explosive material “gives off heat and energy through a rapid exothermic reaction when initiated by heat, shock or friction.”

“These are not hoax devices,” FBI Director Chris Wray said.

Sayoc was arrested near an auto parts store in Plantation, Florida, north of Miami. Across the street, Thomas Fiori, a former federal law enforcement officer, said he saw about 50 armed officers swarm a man standing outside a white van. They ordered him to the ground, Fiori said, and he did not resist.

“He had that look of, ‘I’m done, I surrender,'” Fiori said.

Sayoc appears to have been living on the margins, regularly running into trouble with the law and struggling to make ends meet. He was repeatedly arrested for theft in the 1990s, faced felony charges of possession of anabolic steroids in 2004 and was convicted of grand theft in 2014. In 2002, he served a year of probation for a felony charge of threatening to throw or place a bomb.

His lawyer in that case said the charge stemmed from a heated conversation with a Florida utility representative.

Ronald Lowy, a Miami attorney, said Sayoc showed no ability at the time to back up his threat with any bomb-making expertise.

Sayoc had $4,175 in personal property and more than $21,000 in debts when filed for bankruptcy in 2012. “Debtor lives with mother, owns no furniture,” his lawyer indicated in a property list.

He had been an amateur body builder. More recently he was seen at an LA Fitness in Aventura, regularly showering at the gym but not working out, said Edgar Lopez, 48, a therapist who works out at the gym.

Marc Weiss saw Sayoc nearly every morning at 6 a.m. for the last four or five months.

“I’ve seen the guy maybe 80 times and I never said a word to him because I had a feeling he was a little off,” said Weiss, a 56-year-old building superintendent who has lived in the neighborhood for eight years. “This guy had an air about him that was unsettling.”

Sayoc’s political awakening appears to have coincided with Trump’s rise. He registered to vote in Florida in March 2016 and has voted early since, records show.

Documents released Friday by the Broward County Sheriff’s Office show Sayoc reported in May 2015 that more than $40,000 in goods were stolen from his van and an attached trailer, including 11 pieces of Donald Trump-brand clothing valued at $7,150. Specifics are not included, but Trump has a line of suits, shirts, ties and accessories.

The report shows detectives were never able to confirm whether the theft actually happened, and no arrests were made.

Most of those targeted this week were past or present U.S. officials, but packages also were sent to actor Robert De Niro and Soros. The bombs have been sent across the country — from New York, Delaware and Washington, D.C., to Florida and California, where Waters was targeted. They bore the return address of Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the former chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/trump-scolds-media-at-rally-where-crowd-chants-cnn-sucks

Trump Scolds Media At Rally Where Crowd Chants ‘CNN Sucks!’

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — President Donald Trump lectured the media at length on Friday evening, accusing reporters of trying “to use the sinister actions of one individual to score political points” against him hours after police apprehended a staunch supporter of his in connection with the mail-bomb scare targeting Democrats and CNN.

Trump was campaigning in Charlotte, North Carolina, to support two GOP candidates facing close races in the state.

Trump has been on a rally blitz, hoping to help vulnerable Republicans ahead of the Nov. 6 elections that will determine which party controls Congress. He’s planning at least 10 rallies over the five-day stretch before Election Day.

Trump, who held back some of his usual name-calling at a rally in Wisconsin earlier this week, was back to his usual attack lines Friday evening even as he called for an end to the “politics of personal destruction.”

Not long after, he referred to his 2016 opponent as “Crooked Hillary Clinton,” prompting a round of “Lock her up!” chants.

Clinton was among the frequent Trump targets sent pipe bombs this week.

“Oh boy, they’re going to be reporting about you tonight,” Trump joked in response. The crowd also broke into frequent chants of “CNN sucks!”

Also earning a mention: California Rep. Maxine Waters, another frequent Trump target who was sent a package.

Trump had told reporters as he left Washington that he had no plans to tone down his rhetoric, adding: “I could really tone it up. Because, as you know, the media has been extremely unfair to me and to the Republican Party.”
 
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