Lethbridge Herald

Investigat­ors search for clues

EXPLOSIVE PACKAGES SENT IN U.S. TREATED AS ‘LIVE DEVICES’

- Michael Balsamo, Colleen Long and Zeke Miller THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — WASHINGTON

Investigat­ors searched coast-to-coast Thursday for clues to the motives behind a mail bomb plot apparently aimed at critics of the president, analyzing the mechanics of the crude devices to reveal whether they were intended to detonate or simply sow fear two weeks before Election Day.

Law enforcemen­t officials said the devices, containing timers and batteries, were not rigged like a boobytrapp­ed package bomb that would explode upon opening. But the officials were still uncertain whether the devices were poorly designed or never intended to cause physical harm. A search of a postal database suggested at least some of packages may have been mailed from Florida, one official said.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the ongoing investigat­ion by name.

New details about the devices came as the four-day mail-bomb scare spread nationwide, drawing investigat­ors from dozens of federal, state and local agencies in the effort to identify one or more perpetrato­rs. In all, 10 packages had been discovered through Thursday containing similar explosives. The would-be targets included former President Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, former VicePresid­ent Joe Biden, actor Robert De Niro, CNN and others. The common thread between them was harsh criticism from President Donald Trump.

At a press conference Thursday, officials in New York would not discuss possible motives, or details on how the packages found their way into the U.S. postal system. Nor would they say why none of the packages had detonated, but they stressed they were still treating them as “live devices.”

“As far as a hoax device, we’re not treating it that way,” said Police Commission­er James O’Neill.

Much was still unanswered about the devices, and authoritie­s offered no clues about any suspects. Details suggested only a broad pattern — that the items were packaged in manila envelopes, addressed to prominent Trump critics and carried U.S. postage stamps. The devices were being examined by technician­s at the FBI’s forensic lab in Quantico, Virginia.

The packages stoked nationwide tensions and fears as voters prepared to vote Nov. 6 to determine partisan control of Congress — a campaign both parties have described in perilous terms.

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