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- From: cpbeaure@mobius04.math.uwaterloo.ca (Chris Beauregard)
- Newsgroups: rec.pyrotechnics
- Subject: Something of interest...
- Message-ID: <C17pCv.EL5@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 16:19:42 GMT
- Sender: news@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu
- Organization: University of Waterloo
- Lines: 117
-
-
-
- From Computer Underground Digest #5.05
-
- Date: Thu, 14 Jan 93 18:13:13 EST
- From: sc03281@LLWNET.LINKNET.COM(Cheshire HS)
- Subject: File 6--Keyboarding Explosive Data for Homemade Bombs
-
- Sunday, January 10, 1993
- Hartford Courant (Connecticut Newspaper)
-
- KEYBOARDING EXPLOSIVE DATA FOR HOMEMADE BOMBS
- Bomb Recipes Just a Keystroke Away
- By Tracy Gordon Fox, Courant Staff Writer
-
- They use names like Wizard and Warrior and they talk via computer
- networks. They are usually high school kids, but their keyboard
- conversations are not about girls or homework: They trade recipes for
- homemade bombs.
-
- Teenagers learning how to manufacture bombs through home or school
- computers have contributed to the nearly 50% increase in the number of
- homemade explosives discovered last year by state police, authorities
- said.
-
- "It's been a hellish year," said Sgt. Kenneth Startz of the state
- police emergency services division, based at the Colchester barracks.
- "Our technicians worked on 52 of them: a real bomb on an average of
- one per week. This is a marked increase from other years."
-
- In addition to the misguided computer hackers, local experts attribute
- the state's vast increase in improvised explosive devices to growing
- urban and suburban violence and bad economic times.
-
- "The number one reason for someone leaving a bomb is vandalism, and
- the next is revenge," Startz said. "There have been significant
- layoffs and companies going out of business and they make targets for
- revenge."
-
- Recently, state police and federal authorities confiscated 3 pipe
- bombs that were destined for members of the street gang, the Almighty
- Latin King Nation, in Meriden, Startz said.
-
- "This is a weapon of intimidation," he said, holding a foot-long,
- 2-inch-wide bomb made from household piping. "Pipe bombs will send
- out shrapnel just like a hand grenade will."
-
- And while bombs may be associated most often with terrorists, "the
- vast majority of bombings are done by the guy next door," said Det.
- Thomas M. Goodrow, who heads Hartford Police Department's bomb squad.
- The state police emergency services unit handles bomb calls in nearly
- every town in the state, except in the Hartford area, which is handled
- by Hartford's unit.
-
- Making bombs is not a new phenomenon, but the computer age has brought
- the recipes for the explosives to the fingertips of anyone with a
- little computer knowledge and a modem.
-
- University of Connecticut police say they do not know if computers
- were the source for a series of soda-bottle bombs that exploded
- outside a dormitory last February.
-
- Police have dubbed these explosives "MacGyver bombs" because they were
- apparently made popular in the television detective show, "MacGyver."
- Two-liter soda bottles are stuffed with volatile chemicals that cause
- pressure to build until the plastic bursts. The bombs explode either
- from internal pressure or on impact.
-
- "There were a number of students involved in making the soda bottle
- bombs. They knew what ingredients to mix," said Capt. Fred Silliman.
- "They were throwing them out the dorm windows and they made a very
- large boom, a loud explosion."
-
- No one was injured, but Silliman said UConn police took the pranks
- very seriously, calling in the state police bomb squad "to render a
- number of these safe for us."
-
- Several pipe bombs were discovered in a school in southeastern
- Connecticut, Startz said, and police found several more at the home of
- the student who made them.
-
- "Our increase, in part, seems to be kids experimenting with
- explosives," Startz said.
-
- As one of the first police officers in the area to discover that
- computers were being used by teenagers to find bomb-making recipes,
- Goodrow has a stereotype of these computer hackers.
-
- Typically, they are loners, who are socially dysfunctional, excel in
- mathematics and science, and are "over motivated in one area," he
- said.
-
- In a West Hartford case four years ago, the teenager had made a bomb
- factory in his basement, and had booby-trapped the door and his work
- room.
-
- "This shows the ability kids have," Goodrow said. Goodrow said he was
- at first amazed when teenage suspects showed him the information they
- could get by hooking on to computer bulletin boards.
-
- Incidents in which bombs actually exploded increased by 133% in 1992,
- according to state police statistics. Bomb technicians responded to 14
- post-blast investigations last year, compared with only 6 in 1991,
- Startz said.
-
- Hartford has also seen an increase in explosive and incendiary
- devices, Goodrow said. Their technicians responded to 85 incidents in
- 1992, compared with 73 in the prior year.
-
- The trend has been seen around the country. The 958 bombing incidents
- reported nationally to the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
- Firearms was the highest in 15 years, ATF authorities said.
-
- ------------------------------
- Chris Beauregard cpbeaure@napier.uwaterloo.ca
- A major goal in my life is to hunt down everyone associated with Star
- Trek, in any of its forms, and kill them.
-