Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Man who died in explosion had white supremacis­t items

Officials also found bomb lab, guns in Beaver Dam apartment

- John Diedrich and Taima Kern

BEAVER DAM – The man who died in an explosion in his Beaver Dam apartment last month had white supremacis­t material along with an array of explosive chemicals, guns and ammunition, according to search warrants unsealed in Dodge County.

Benjamin D. Morrow, 28, of Beaver Dam, was killed when his unit in Village Glen Apartments’ building 109 exploded on March 5. There were no other deaths or injuries.

In search warrants released Thursday, investigat­ors found that Morrow had a “homemade explosives laboratory” in the apartment. They found his body in the kitchen by the stove, which had a burner on.

Morrow, who had a background in chemistry, had jars and bottles of chemicals used to make bombs, as well as what appeared to be finished explosives in the apartment. There also were instructio­ns on how to make bombs as well as timers and gunpowder, the warrant said.

Agents also recovered at least three long guns, two handguns, more than 2,000 rounds of ammunition, a ballistic helmet and vest, and masks from his apartment, the warrant says.

Among the items recovered in a search of Morrow’s apartment was literature concerning white supremacis­t groups. The warrant does not provide details about the groups or other specifics. Officials declined to provide more details than what was in the warrants.

The discovery of the white supremacis­t material, in part, prompted agents to search computers and other electronic­s to see if Morrow was acting alone or in concert with others.

Department of Justice Special Agent Kevin Heimerl said in the warrant that someone with the kind of material found in Morrow’s apartment may be acting alone to “commit some type of attacks with those explosives.”

But people also may work with others to conduct surveillan­ce and carry out attacks in concert with accomplice­s, Heimerl said.

Beaver Dam Lt. of Detectives Terrence Gebhardt said investigat­ors are not seeking other individual­s but the investigat­ion remains open to follow leads. He did not elaborate.

Dodge County District Attorney Kurt Klomberg said no one has been referred to his office for prosecutio­n.

Officials also searched a storage locker rented by Morrow but found nothing of importance to the investigat­ion.

Morrow saw the owner of the storage company the day of the explosion and told her he would be moving his items out by the end of March.

A native of Black Creek, Morrow had worked at Richelieu Foods in Beaver Dam for 10 months before his death. His co-workers reported that Morrow often came to work smelling like mothballs, which investigat­ors said could have been an attempt to disguise the odor of working with explosive material.

Morrow previously worked as a scientist at PPD Inc. in Madison, a research company specializi­ng in drug developmen­t, from 2014 until last year.

Morrow went to Pensacola Christian College in Florida, graduating in 2013 with a degree in pre-pharmacy and minors in chemistry and math.

After the explosion that killed Morrow, a controlled detonation was conducted March 7 in an effort to eliminate remaining chemicals, and a smaller explosion occurred the following day.

When the controlled detonation failed to eliminate the threat, authoritie­s took the unusual step of burning the 16-unit apartment building on March 15. Officials said the presence of dangerous chemicals on-site made it unsafe to try to salvage the building, citing the risk of another explosion or chemical exposure to workers.

As part of the preparatio­n for the burn, bomb techs from the FBI removed ammunition and hazardous materials from the building.

During that sweep, bomb techs also retrieved some property in other units, including important papers, jewelry, money and other family heirlooms. That was a change from an earlier position taken by authoritie­s, which called for no one to retrieve personal items for the roughly 30 other residents from the building prior to its burn.

Klomberg, the district attorney, said the decision to burn the building was correct but it was very difficult to see residents have “much of their lives burned up.”

“It was one of the most heartwrenc­hing things that I have been involved in,” he said.

 ?? DOUG RAFLIK/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Apartment building 109 of the Village Glen Apartments in Beaver Dam burns under supervisio­n from fire department­s March 15.
DOUG RAFLIK/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Apartment building 109 of the Village Glen Apartments in Beaver Dam burns under supervisio­n from fire department­s March 15.

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