http://www.wtop.com/index.php?nid=251&sid=380506

U.S. Seeks Man Trying to Buy Fertilizer

Updated: Thursday, Jan. 6, 2005 - 6:11 AM

By JOHN SOLOMON

Associated Press Writer

 

WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal authorities are looking for a man using a Middle
Eastern name and possibly

bogus construction credentials to try to purchase large quantities of an
explosive ingredient used

by Timothy McVeigh in the Oklahoma City bombing.

 

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said there was no
indication that terrorism

was involved, but the agency was still checking information that came from a
company in Canada that

reported the attempted purchase as suspicious.

 

ATF was asking the fertilizer and explosives industries to help locate the
man and to report any

suspicious inquiries for the fertilizer chemical ammonium nitrate, which is
used to make so-called

fertilizer bombs.

 

"We're still running down leads. But we thought it would be prudent putting
out an advisory to the

fertilizer industry," said Tom Mangan, an ATF agent in Phoenix, where the
investigation is centered.

 

The suspect also made several e-mail inquiries to vendors, seeking to buy
between 500 to 1,000

metric tons of the explosive _ a quantity larger than McVeigh used to bomb
the Oklahoma City federal

building in April 1995 but smaller than amounts companies typically might
buy in bulk for

construction, explosives or farm work.

 

McVeigh used a combination of ammonium nitrate and fuel oil with a
detonation cord to make his bomb,

which killed more than 160 people.

 

The International Society of Explosives Engineers, based in Cleveland, sent
an e-mail Wednesday

alerting its members and asking them to call ATF in Phoenix to report any
suspicious activity.

 

"ATF has recently been made aware of a suspicious attempt by an individual
to purchase mass

quantities of ammonium nitrate, specifically between 500 to 1,000 metric
tons," the alert said.

"This individual, who uses a Middle Eastern name, purports to be a
representative of a construction

corporation. However, indications are that this is most likely false.

 

"The individual has previously made contact with other industry members via
e-mail seeking the large

amounts of 'fertilizer grade' ammonium nitrate," the alert said.

 

Ammonium nitrate has been linked to several recent terror plots.

 

Less than a year ago, Homeland Security officials put out a warning about
unsubstantiated

intelligence suggesting that al-Qaida or other terrorists might try to
smuggle ammonium nitrate

bombs aboard public transportation venues such as trains, subways or buses.

 

Jordanian authorities alleged in an indictment last summer that Iraqi
insurgency leader Abu-Musab

al-Zarqawi, backed by al-Qaida, financed a plot for suicide bombers armed
with chemicals for an

ammonium nitrate bomb to try to attack the country's intelligence agency
building.

 

And in Chicago, a disgruntled ex-con was charged with plotting to blow up
the federal courthouse in

downtown after he was arrested during a sting with a pickup truck containing
1,500 pounds of

fertilizer he thought was ammonium nitrate. Prosecutors allege he planned to
sell the chemical to

terrorists.

 

(Copyright 2004 The Associated Press.

All rights reserved.

 

 



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