Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Flurry over two more US packages

Domestic terrorism, says ex- intelligen­ce boss

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AUTHORITIE­S found two more suspicious packages yesterday. They were addressed to US Senator Cory Booker and James Clapper, the former US director of national intelligen­ce, amid a manhunt for the person who sent bombs to prominent Democrats and critics of US President Donald Trump.

The 11th package was found at a mail-sorting facility in Florida and was addressed to Booker, the Democratic senator from New Jersey, the FBI said on Twitter.

A 12th package was addressed to James Clapper, the former director of national intelligen­ce, and sent to CNN, the cable network reported.

“This is definitely domestic terrorism, no question about it in my mind,” Clapper said on CNN.

Meanwhile, a local police bomb squad and canine units joined federal investigat­ors on Thursday to examine a sprawling US mail distributi­on centre at Opa-Locka, north-west of Miami, Miami-Dade County police said.

US Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said that Florida appeared to be the starting point for at least some of the bomb shipments.

“Some of the packages went through the mail. They originated, some of them, from Florida,” she said during an interview with Fox News Channel on Thursday. “I am confident that this person or people will be brought to justice.”

Authoritie­s called the parcel bombs an act of terrorism. They were sent less than two weeks before national elections that could alter the balance of power in Washington.

No one has claimed responsibi­lity for the bombs, and the public was asked to report any tips.

All the people targeted have often been maligned by right- wing critics. They included Democratic Party donor George Soros, former president Barack Obama, former vice-president Joe Biden, and former secretary of state and presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion has said that at least five of the packages bore a return address from the Florida office of US Representa­tive Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a former chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee.

Authoritie­s believe the packages, which were intercepte­d before reaching their intended recipients, all went through the US Postal Service at some point, a source said. None detonated and no one has been hurt.

The devices were thought to have been fashioned from bomb-making designs widely available on the internet, a federal law enforcemen­t source told Reuters.

Still, investigat­ors are treating the devices as “live” explosives, not a hoax, said James O’Neill, the New York City police commission­er. Two of the parcels surfaced there.

“It does remain possible that further packages have been or could be mailed,” William Sweeney, assistant director of the FBI, told a news conference in New York. Investigat­ors have declined to say whether the devices were built to be functional. Bomb experts and security analysts say that based on their rudimentar­y constructi­on it appeared they were more likely designed to sow fear than to kill.

The parcels each consisted of a manila envelope with a bubble-wrap interior containing “potentiall­y destructiv­e devices”, the FBI said. Each was affixed with a computer-printed address label and six US “Forever” postage stamps, the agency said.

Others who received the bombs were former attorney- general Eric Holder, former CIA director John Brennan, US Representa­tive Maxine Waters of California, and actor Robert De Niro. Two packages were sent both to Waters and Biden.

The episode sparked an outcry from Trump’s critics, who charged that his inflammato­ry rhetoric against Democrats and the press has created a climate for politicall­y motivated violence.

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