Bomb parts carried by
Jamaican could have
exploded, says FBI
April
4, 2008
Caribbean Net News
ORLANDO, USA(Reuters):
The liquid packed in an
Air Jamaica passenger's
suitcase could have
caused a disastrous
explosion if it had
ignited in mid-air, an
FBI agent said on
Thursday at a hearing
for a man charged with
trying to take bomb
parts on a plane.
"If the appropriate heat
source was introduced,
absolutely" the
nitromethane could have
ignited, FBI agent Kelly
Boaz testified at a
hearing for Kevin Brown.
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 |
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Kevin Brown in a
photo released
by the Seminole
County Sheriff's
Office |
The 32-year-old Jamaican
man was arrested at
Orlando International
Airport on Tuesday as he
prepared to check his
luggage for a flight to
Montego Bay, Jamaica.
The FBI said the
suitcase contained two
galvanized pipes, end
caps with holes drilled
in them, two
prescription bottles
containing air gun
pellets, a model rocket
igniter, batteries,
lighters, lighter fluid
and two plastic vodka
bottles of nitromethane,
a liquid used as an
industrial solvent and
race car fuel.
Assistant US Public
Defender Clarence Counts
argued that the liquid
and other bomb
components, which Boaz
acknowledged were
unassembled and packaged
separately, did not
endanger the flight.
"None of these items,
your honor, were
packaged in such a way
that they would
explode," Counts argued.
"We did not have a
bomb."
US Magistrate Karla
Spaulding sided with
prosecutors and let
stand the charge against
Brown of attempting to
put an explosive or
incendiary device on an
aircraft.
Brown was returned to
the Seminole County Jail
where he is being held
without bond because
Counts, without
explanation, waived the
scheduled bond hearing.
Afterward, Counts would
only say he would
reschedule a bond
hearing for Brown "if
circumstances change."
Brown was stopped at the
airport by officers who
said he acted
suspiciously while
preparing to check his
bag. He variously told
Boaz that he planned to
explode a tree stump on
his cousin's land in
Jamaica, and that he
wanted to show his
friends the kind of
improvised explosive
device he had seen while
serving in Iraq.
Newspaper reports said
Brown was a US Army
veteran who had worked
for a military
contractor in Iraq last
year and who had
struggled with
depression since the
murder of his mother in
2005. His lawyer
declined to comment on
that.