Pa. man accused in terror sting
By Alfred Lubrano and John Shiffman
Philadelphia INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS
Feb 11, 2006
http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/13849323.htm 
<http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/13849323.htm>
Michael Curtis Reynolds says he's a patriot. Federal authorities say he's a 
terrorist.

The FBI believes that the unemployed Wilkes-Barre man tried to conspire with 
al-Qaeda to wreck the American economy. Agents say Reynolds plotted to blow up 
the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, a Pennsylvania pipeline, and a New Jersey refinery.

The sensational allegations, disclosed in a federal transcript obtained by The 
Inquirer on Friday, reveal a convoluted plot that includes cyberspace intrigue, 
an elaborate FBI sting, and a clandestine money-drop on a deserted Idaho road.

The case also involves a municipal judge from Montana who has devoted the last 
four years to snaring would-be terrorists online.

Reynolds, 47, has not been publicly charged with terrorism. But a federal 
prosecutor leveled that accusation during a December court hearing, saying that 
Reynolds attempted to "provide material aid to al-Qaeda" and that the case 
"involves a federal offense of terrorism."

"He was doing it as a plan to disrupt governmental function, to change the 
government's actions in foreign countries, and to impact on the national debate 
about the war," Assistant U.S. Attorney John C. Gurganus Jr. said at the 
hearing in Wilkes-Barre.

Reynolds has been held without bail since Dec. 5 on unrelated weapons charges. 
A U.S. citizen, he is being detained in the Lackawanna County jail.

Reynolds' lawyer, Philip Gelso, declined to comment. U.S. Attorney's Office 
spokeswoman Heidi Havens said her office "does not comment on active 
investigations."

Described by his former father-in-law as a "John Wayne wanna-be," Reynolds has 
a string of bad debts and criminal convictions - including one for attempted 
arson.

His last known address was Room 205 at the Thunderbird Hotel in Pocatello, 
Idaho.

In the FBI sting two months ago, Reynolds was drawn to a meeting with a 
purported al-Qaeda operative about 25 miles from the hotel, where he expected 
to receive $40,000 to finance the alleged plot.

The al-Qaeda contact was actually Shannen Rossmiller, a 36-year-old judge who 
lives in Conrad, Mont.

She was working for the FBI.

"Yes, that was me in communication with Reynolds," Rossmiller acknowledged in a 
telephone interview Friday night. "But I can't comment further."

This is not Rossmiller's first sting. She regularly monitors extremist Muslim 
Web sites, searching for potential terrorists. In 2004, she helped win a 
conviction against a National Guardsman in Tacoma, Wash., whom she met online.

Rossmiller met Reynolds online last fall.

Expose al-Qaeda cell

According to the government, Reynolds tried to disavow any intent to conspire 
with al-Qaeda when he was questioned by FBI agents.

In fact, authorities say Reynolds told them that he, too, was a patriot and 
intended to expose an al-Qaeda cell inside the United States.

"He claimed he was trying to lure this terrorist group in," prosecutor Gurganus 
said in court.

But, Gurganus said, that doesn't jibe with Reynolds' e-mails, in which he said 
he needed to leave the country after the planned attacks, or why he said he 
needed a fraudulent passport.

Reynolds was serious about the plot, Gurganus argued, because in his e-mails, 
he said that he realized he could be sentenced to death as a traitor.

Since his arrest in December, FBI agents in Idaho, Montana, Utah and 
Pennsylvania have scrambled to piece together Reynolds' background and gauge 
the credibility of the threat he posed.

"We certainly took it seriously," said one federal official who is familiar 
with the deliberations regarding whether or when terrorism charges will be 
brought against Reynolds.

Credible tips

The FBI's Philadelphia division, which includes much of eastern Pennsylvania 
and South Jersey, receives two or three tips or leads of possible threats each 
day, according to an agent here who is involved in terrorism work. Only a 
handful a month - such as the Reynolds case - turn out to be credible enough to 
launch full-scale investigations, the agent said.

Authorities said Reynolds' letters, computer drawings and e-mails spelled out 
his plot to detonate trucks filled with propane along the Alaskan pipeline. 
This included "information on explosive devices, site plans and placement of 
explosive devices." He also allegedly planned to blow up sections of the 
Transcontinental Pipeline, a natural-gas pipeline that runs from the Gulf 
Coast, through Pennsylvania, to New Jersey and New York City.

Further, the government alleges, he targeted Standard Oil Co. in Perth Amboy, 
N.J., as well as the Williams Refinery in Opal, Wyo. He was arrested not far 
from there.

According to Gurganus, Reynolds hoped that the attacks on the oil industry 
would "disrupt governmental function," provoke opposition to the Iraq war, 
drive up fuel prices, and "lend to the efforts by al-Qaeda to terrorize this 
nation."

He needed $40,000 to carry out his alleged plot.

The day he was arrested, Reynolds' net worth was $24.85.

Reynolds was shipped back to Pennsylvania to face a single charge: possession 
of a grenade. The FBI then obtained search warrants for his desktop computer 
and his laptop and, later, search warrants for his Yahoo, AOL and Hotmail 
e-mail accounts.

•

Richard Danise has bitter memories of Reynolds, his former son-in-law, who, he 
said, eloped with his daughter, Tammy, in December 1982.

"Stupidity" compelled her to marry Reynolds, said Danise, an ex-Marine who 
lives in Kunkletown, Monroe County.

Although he had misgivings about the marriage, Danise said, he tried to help 
the couple get started. He arranged for them to acquire an acre of land in 
Tannersville, Pa., to build a house.

Reynolds had big, fanciful plans, Danise said.

"I got the mortgage for him," Danise recalled. "He literally wanted to build a 
castle, with turrets and everything else. But he had no credit, and he never 
broke ground."

The couple later divorced, although Danise said he didn't remember when.

Danise said the couple had three children, who live with their mother.

Though the two have been apart for a while, Reynolds has remained in touch with 
Tammy, Danise said. "He's never been out of the picture."

Describing his former son-in-law, Danise said tersely: "He tried to be 
blood-and-guts." He had an AR-15 rifle, Danise said.

Reynolds also liked to play paintball at a facility called Skirmish in Jim 
Thorpe, Pa., Danise said. He even worked as a referee there for a few months 
last summer. The manager, Megan Mack, said he was a good employee. "He's a 
stand-up guy, very polite," Mack said.

Said Danise, who has been out of touch with Reynolds for years: "I just washed 
my hands of him. I don't know where he went. I have bitterness. You have no 
idea."

•

Michael Curtis Reynolds was born in Mount Kisco, a well-to-do Westchester, 
N.Y., suburb. His father, Millard, now deceased, was employed in the business 
department of Reader's Digest. A family member said that Reynolds' mother, 
Joyce, worked there, too.

But his rootlessness in recent years belies his conventional upbringing.

He has lived throughout the United States, including Kokomo, Ind.; New 
Hartford, Conn.; Simi Valley, Calif.; Phoenix, Ariz.; Framingham, Mass.; and 
various places in New York and Pennsylvania. Reynolds also told authorities 
that he had taught English and math in Thailand and that he had traveled to 
Austria.

>From July 2004 until last spring, he lived on Scott Street in Wilkes-Barre. 
>The house Reynolds rented is a white, two-story frame with a small porch, a 
>black wrought-iron fence, and a tiny, 9-square-foot patch of lawn in a crowded 
>working-class section of the city.

Neighbors said he lived there with his mother, whom they described as an 
elderly woman who had lost a leg to diabetes.

About 6-foot-3 with broad shoulders and dark hair, and a self-professed 
computer expert, Reynolds was known on the block for working on electronic 
equipment in a rusted black-and-blue van that he parked outside his house.

Neighbor Tony Maslousky said Reynolds had strung nests of 70 or 80 wires 
throughout the van. He spent many evenings inside the vehicle, and had run an 
extension cord trailing from it to the house.

Sometimes, Reynolds would carry boxes of equipment containing electronic tubes 
from the van into the house, Maslousky said. In the back window of the van was 
an illuminated Tasmanian devil.

Soon after moving in, Reynolds accidentally slammed the van into Maslousky's 
parked car, he and other neighbors said. At first, Reynolds said he'd make good 
on the damages.

'Flipped out'

When he didn't, Maslousky asked Reynolds whether he'd be compensated. "The guy 
flipped out and started screaming," Maslousky said. "We had to call the cops. 
He had no insurance. We never got the money."

Neighbors said that Reynolds told them he had worked at a nearby factory making 
metal hooks.

Some time in early spring, Reynolds disappeared, leaving his mother to fend for 
herself, neighbors said.

His sister came to care for their mother, and she was the one who discovered a 
grenade inside the house, neighbors said.

The sister, who described Reynolds as a "mercenary" to neighbors, called the 
police. They showed up with the bomb squad on April 23, records show.

Neighbors who said they saw the grenade said it looked as though it had holes 
drilled into its sides and wires running from it.

Reynolds' current troubles aren't his first brush with the law.

Grenade charges

Along with his conviction for attempted arson in 1978, Reynolds was convicted 
that same year of menacing, officials said. He also has unrelated convictions 
for disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, and breach of the peace - the latter 
a fight with his eldest son in Ansonia, Conn., where he lived from 1999 until 
mid-2003.

The grenade charges, however, carry greater penalties than the months-long 
sentences he has received in the past. Reynolds now faces three to seven years 
in federal prison.

Government officials believe that his crimes are much more serious than that, 
no matter how outlandish they might seem.

A former federal antiterrorism coordinator in Philadelphia said authorities 
could not afford to take such cases lightly.

"Before 9/11, flying airplanes into a building might have seemed like something 
out of a Tom Clancy novel, but now you have to take these kinds of threats 
seriously," said Joseph Poluka, who is now a lawyer at the firm Blank Rome. 
"You can't treat these things as fiction unless something sounds plainly 
unbelievable."

Contact staff writer John Shiffman at 215-854-2658 or [EMAIL PROTECTED] 



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