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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, October 25, 2018
Homemade bombs sent to Obama, Clinton, CNN offices and Holder, officials say
Authorities are investigating
suspicious packages sent to former president Barack Obama, former
secretary of state Hillary Clinton and other political figures. (Joyce Koh /The Washington Post)

This image obtained by CNN shows a suspected explosive device received at the CNN bureau in New York City on Oct. 24, 2018. (Courtesy of CNN/AFP/Getty Images) (-/AFP/Getty Images)

New York Police stand outside the Time Warner Center at Columbus Circle, Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018 in New York. A police bomb squad was sent to CNN's offices at the center, and the newsroom was evacuated because of a suspicious package. (AP Photo/Kevin Hagen)
By Devlin Barrett ,Mark Berman andCleve R. Wootson Jr.-October 24 at 5:08 PM
The discovery of five pipe bombs mailed to prominent Democrats, CNN and a liberal billionaire put the country on edge Wednesday and sent law enforcement officials scrambling to prevent any more packages from reaching their targets.
The discovery of five pipe bombs mailed to prominent Democrats, CNN and a liberal billionaire put the country on edge Wednesday and sent law enforcement officials scrambling to prevent any more packages from reaching their targets.
The hunt for a serial mail bomber began late Tuesday night when Secret
Service personnel conducting standard mail screenings found a pipe bomb
inside a plain manila envelope with a bubble-wrapped interior addressed
to former secretary of state Hillary Clinton. A similarly packaged bomb
was found hours later in mail addressed to former president Barack
Obama.
Neither bomb got close to its intended target, and neither contained a
written message, according to law enforcement officials, but the twin
discoveries led to other undetonated devices being found elsewhere,
including in the mailroom at CNN’s New York headquarters and a district office of Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.).
James P. O’Neill, commissioner of the New York Police Department, said
police found what “appeared to be a live explosive device” at CNN
addressed to former Obama administration CIA director John Brennan,
though officials did not immediately say how effective that or the other
devices might have been at causing damage.
As more devices were discovered, a disturbing pattern emerged — the
bomber or bombers appeared to be targeting prominent figures on the
political left.
The first such package was discovered Monday at the New York home of George Soros, a billionaire activist known to fund pro-democracy and liberal political groups.
Officials described the devices as attempted acts of terrorism and
cautioned that the number of bombs — and intended victims — could grow.
FBI Director Christopher A. Wray issued an appeal for the public’s help
to catch the bomber and warned people not to touch suspicious packages.
“This investigation is of the highest priority for the FBI,” Wray said
in a statement. “We ask anyone who may have information to contact the
FBI. Do not hesitate to call; no piece of information is too small to
help us in this investigation.”
Officials said the packages used as a return address the office of
Wasserman Schultz, who chaired the Democratic National Committee during
part of the 2016 campaign. One such package used an incorrect address
for former attorney general Eric H. Holder Jr., and it was “returned” to
her office in Sunrise, Fla., where it was intercepted, according to
officials. Authorities do not believe she had anything to do with the
packages and think she was a potential victim. A spokesman for Holder
declined to comment.
The pipe bomb addressed to Brennan was found in the mail at CNN’s
headquarters in New York. Since leaving the government, Brennan has been
an outspoken critic of President Trump; he is an on-air analyst for NBC
News and MSNBC, rather than CNN.
At a congressional mail-sorting facility, investigators intercepted a
similar-looking package addressed to Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), but
FBI officials did not list that package among those it was examining.
In a statement, Waters said she had been told by police that her office
“was the target of a suspicious package that has been referred to the
FBI. I am appreciative of the law enforcement entities who intercepted
the package and are investigating this matter. I unequivocally condemn
any and all acts of violence and terror.”
ATF officials said a package similar to the five devices cited by the FBI had been found by postal inspectors in Los Angeles.
The packages came with computer-printed address labels, six Forever
stamps and return addresses with Wasserman Schultz’s name misspelled,
officials said.
Law enforcement officials described the devices as pipes stuffed with
explosive material and wrapped in electrical wire and tape, but they
provided no detail on how they would have been detonated. The FBI, the
Secret Service, the NYPD and other agencies kicked into high gear
Wednesday morning trying to determine who was behind the bombs — and how
many more may be en route to intended victims. At least two of the
devices appeared to have been hand-delivered, according to law
enforcement officials.
“We will not rest until we stop these hazardous devices from being
mailed and bring the individual or individuals to justice,” said C.
Bryan Paarmann, an FBI counterterrorism official. The devices have been
sent to the FBI’s lab in Quantico, Va., for further analysis.
Malcolm Brady, a former Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives official who spent decades investigating bomb suspects, said
federal agents are carefully poring over the packages for any clues they
may hold as to the identity or location of the sender.
“You have to be extremely careful when you examine this stuff, because a
piece of tape could have a fingerprint on it,” said Brady.
Most mail-bombing suspects are “loner types,” said Brady, who added he
doubts this bomber made a mistake when he used a bad address for Holder.
“That looks like an intentional manipulation of the system, to try to
get it to go to the congresswoman. I strongly suspect he wanted that
package to go to her. That suggests he’s really focused on her,” said
Brady.
Wasserman Schultz issued a defiant statement.
“We will not be intimidated by this attempted act of violence. This
appalling attack on our democracy must be vigorously prosecuted, and I
am deeply disturbed by the way my name was used,” she said. “Today, my
staff and I will hug each other and our loved ones tightly, and tomorrow
get back to work serving the people I was elected to represent.”
New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo
(D) and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) spoke about the
suspicious package found at CNN offices in New York on Oct. 23. (Reuters)
Amid the frenetic pace of the investigation, some alarms turned out to
be false. A suspicious package sent to New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D)
was in fact a thumb drive, according to the NYPD.
Authorities also searched an office building in San Diego that houses a
newspaper before concluding there was nothing dangerous there.
The known recipients of the bombs are all frequent targets of
conservative politicians, including Trump. Speaking at the White House,
the president decried the bombs and pledged that the federal government
would bring those responsible to justice.
“In these times, we have to unify,” he said. “We have to come together
and send one very clear, strong and unmistakable message that acts or
threats of political violence of any kind have no place in the United
States of America.”
Those words did not satisfy CNN President Jeff Zucker, who issued a
statement sharply critical of the administration’s posture toward the
news media.
“There is a total and complete lack of understanding at the White House
about the seriousness of their continued attacks on the media,” Zucker
said. “The president, and especially the White House press secretary,
should understand their words matter. Thus far, they have shown no
comprehension of that.”
An Obama representative referred questions to the Secret Service.
Speaking in Florida on Wednesday, Clinton said her family was “fine,
thanks to the men and women of the Secret Service who intercepted the
package addressed to us long before it made its way to our home.”
She also spoke to the anger pulsing through American politics: “It is a
troubling time, isn’t it? It is a time of deep divisions, and we have to
do everything we can to bring our country together.”
Politicians of both parties condemned the mail bombs. Senate Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) called them “attempted acts of domestic
terrorism.” New York Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) used similar language.
“This clearly is an act of terror, attempting to undermine our free
press and leaders of this country through acts of violence,” de Blasio
said.
As news of the homemade bombs spread, authorities vowed to ramp up
security measures. The NYPD increased patrols in areas linked to public
figures and at media offices.
The Senate sergeant at arms sent a message to senators and their
staffers advising them to be cautious when handling mail and reminding
people not to bring unopened mail or packages from outside into their
Senate offices.
About 30 offices associated with the political work of Tom Steyer, a
major Democratic donor, have stepped up security significantly in the
past 48 hours in light of the threats to Soros and others, said Erik
Olvera, spokesman for Steyer’s group Need to Impeach. They have also
increased security measures for Steyer, the biggest donor to super PACs
supporting liberal causes and candidates this election cycle.



This image obtained by CNN shows a suspected explosive device received at the CNN bureau in New York City on Oct. 24, 2018. (Courtesy of CNN/AFP/Getty Images) (-/AFP/Getty Images)
Top Republicans, including Trump and McConnell, have sought for weeks
now to cast the rising tide of public anger as actual acts of violence
and a phenomenon to be laid at the feet of Democrats.
“I think we know who the culprits are here when it comes to the quality
of discourse in the country, and it’s not coming from the Republican
side of the aisle,” McConnell said in an Associated Press interview this
month.
The contentious confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh
prompted fierce and occasionally personal protests targeting Republican
on Capitol Hill. GOP leaders chided Democratic leaders, including
Clinton and Holder, for delivering remarks that they claimed encourage
incivility and potential acts of violence.
But law enforcement has made arrests in recent incidents targeting
members of both parties. A New York man was arrested in August for
threatening two House Republican leaders; another New York man was
arrested last week for threatening GOP senators over Kavanaugh’s
nomination. In April, a California man pleaded guilty to threatening to
kill Waters. And a Florida man was arrested this month for posting
threats on Facebook against Democrats and Republicans who opposed
Kavanaugh. Earlier this month, a far-right group called the Proud Boys
attacked left-wing protesters outside an Oct. 12 Republican Party event
in Manhattan. New York police have since arrested several members of the
group.
The devices sent to Clinton, Obama and Soros this week were all pipe
bombs placed inside plain manila brown envelopes with the addresses
typed on stickers, according to a law enforcement official. The official
said those three devices appeared to be capable of exploding and
causing injuries.
Authorities urge anyone who receives a suspicious package to contact law enforcement, the official said.
The devices were sent out just months after a 23-year-old in the Austin, Tex., suburbs set off a string of package explosives in that region,
killing two people and wounding several others. That bomber delivered
some in person and sent others through the FedEx system, which enabled
authorities to track him down.

New York Police stand outside the Time Warner Center at Columbus Circle, Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2018 in New York. A police bomb squad was sent to CNN's offices at the center, and the newsroom was evacuated because of a suspicious package. (AP Photo/Kevin Hagen)
Unlike the packages intercepted before reaching Obama and Clinton, the
device sent to CNN was found while its building was teeming with
employees. CNN’s headquarters at the Time Warner Center in New York evacuated suddenly Wednesday morning after the suspicious package was discovered there.
The network broadcast footage of its staffers and others from the
building flooding the Manhattan streets below, where anchor Jim Sciutto
could be seen on a cellphone calling in on the air. Zucker wrote in a
letter to employees that the center was “evacuated out of an abundance
of caution” after the package was found in the mailroom. He also told
employees that CNN had checked on its other bureaus but found no other
devices.
Chi Li, 28, who works at a technology company near CNN’s building, left
to run an errand and came back to find the area closed off.
“I always think it’s so cool to be so close to CNN," she said. “Maybe
now everyone will stop calling them enemy of the people. ‘Fake news.’ ”
As investigators continued to explore the devices and their origins,
White House officials and others in Washington decried the string of
packages.
“We condemn the attempted violent attacks recently made against
President Obama, President Clinton, Secretary Clinton, and other public
figures," Sarah Sanders, the White House press secretary, said in a
statement Wednesday morning. “These terrorizing acts are despicable, and
anyone responsible will be held accountable to the fullest extent of
the law.”
Vice President Pence posted a similar statement, calling the devices
“despicable” and saying that anyone “responsible will be brought to
justice.” Trump chimed in after, writing: “I agree wholeheartedly!”
Suspicious letters and packages have been sent to numerous public
figures, including President Trump’s children. Donald Trump Jr., the
president’s eldest son, tweeted:
“As someone whose family has directly been the victim of these mail
threats I condemn whoever did this regardless of party or ideology. This
crap has to stop and I hope they end up in jail for a long time.”
A letter was sent to Trump Jr.'s home earlier this year that resulted in his wife going to the hospital. A man later pleaded guilty to sending threatening letters with white powder to Trump’s sons and other public figures.
Mike DeBonis, Carol Leonnig, Philip Rucker, John Wagner, Souad
Mekhennet and Michelle Ye Hee Lee in Washington and Renae Merle in New
York contributed to this story, which will be updated.


