Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Search widens for others who may have helped Florida mail-bomb suspect

- Miami Herald (TNS)

MIAMI – The quick arrest of a homeless man living in his van on charges of sending more than a dozen mail bombs to notable Democrats around the country may have signaled the climax of a massive federal investigat­ion during the past week – but it’s far from over.

Federal agents are still searching for other possible suspects in South Florida who may have helped Cesar Sayoc, the former stripper and selfdescri­bed entertainm­ent promoter who was arrested Friday at an auto parts store in Plantation.

Friday night, FBI agents questioned a person at a Broward County residence with a potential connection to Sayoc, but nothing came of the interview, according to law enforcemen­t sources familiar with the probe.

Investigat­ors are also analyzing Sayoc’s impounded van in which he lived and allegedly built the pipe bombs because it contains a trove of valuable evidence, from explosive-device materials to credit-card receipts.

They say the vehicle, covered with attacks on critics of President Donald Trump, directly links the 56-year-old Aventura man to the crime of mailing explosive devices from South Florida to the Democratic targets. Among them: former President Barack Obama, former Democratic presidenti­al Hillary Clinton, actor Robert De Niro and billionair­e financier and political megadonor George Soros.

According to sources, Sayoc told FBI agents and other authoritie­s during a brief interview at the bureau’s South Florida field office in Miramar that he never meant to hurt any of the intended targets _ though the FBI’S director later said the pipe bombs were not “hoax devices.” Sayoc eventually clammed up, invoking his Miranda rights and asking to speak with a lawyer.

Despite allegedly committing practicall­y the entire mail-bombing campaign from South Florida, Sayoc will be whisked away to New York after appearing in federal court in Miami for a removal hearing on Monday. He will be prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of New York, based on evidence that at least five of the 14 packages were sent to that area, including CNN’S offices in Manhattan.

Many criminal and legal experts in South Florida called the New York U.S. Attorney Office’s takeover of the case a classic “power grab” of a national case that really belongs in South Florida. One former federal prosecutor said Miami’s new U.S. attorney, Ariana Fajardo Orshan, got a “dose of the SDNY.”

Wray credited the “phenomenal work” of federal agents and FBI lab experts along with state and local police in New York, the Washington, D.C., area, Delaware, Florida and California, where authoritie­s say the bomb-filled manila envelopes were sent by Sayoc since Oct. 18. All of the packages, which had the return address of the congressio­nal office of U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, were routed through a U.S. Postal Service mail sorting facility in Opa-locka.

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