Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Missouri man charged in clinic fire

Planned Parenthood site in Columbia attacked in February

- MARGARET STAFFORD Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Heather Hollingswo­rth of The Associated Press.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A 42-year-old Columbia, Mo., man has been charged with trying to burn down a Planned Parenthood clinic last month, federal prosecutor­s said Monday.

Wesley Brian Kaster was arrested Saturday after investigat­ors searched his vehicle and found evidence linking him to the fire at the Planned Parenthood-Columbia Health Center. No one was hurt in the attack, which happened in the predawn hours when the building was empty.

Kaster faces a preliminar­y charge of using fire or an explosive to maliciousl­y damage a building that receives federal funding, but that could change. The FBI had said it was investigat­ing the attack as a possible hate crime.

“All I can say at this point is that it is an ongoing investigat­ion and we are early in the process,” Don Ledford, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office, said Monday.

Kaster’s public defender, Troy Stabenow, said Monday that he had just been assigned to the case and couldn’t immediatel­y comment.

In an affidavit included with the charging documents, FBI agent Curtis Bryant said surveillan­ce video showed a distinctiv­e minivan park in the clinic’s lot at about 2:30 a.m. Feb. 10 and a man break the clinic’s framed glass door, place what appeared to be two stacked 5-gallon buckets inside the building and then throw a Molotov cocktail through the door. After watching from the sidewalk for a few minutes, the man then went back inside the building, as no fire or smoke could be seen in the videos. The man then fled as two unidentifi­ed pedestrian­s approached but returned at about 4 a.m. holding an “undiscerni­ble” item and approached the broken door. Smoke began billowing out about a minute later and the man fled, Bryant wrote.

The clinic’s sprinkler system extinguish­ed the blaze before firefighte­rs arrived. Only the front room with the broken door was damaged, Bryant wrote. Firefighte­rs found the remains of the Molotov cocktail and two 5-gallon buckets near spilled gasoline inside the clinic.

Bryant wrote that investigat­ors used surveillan­ce video to connect the minivan and items left at the scene to Kaster, who was working at a light manufactur­ing business in Jefferson City.

Dr. Brandon Hill, who heads Planned Parenthood Great Plains, said in a statement Monday that the organizati­on was grateful for law enforcemen­t’s swift response to the fire.

The Columbia clinic, which reopened Feb. 18, does not currently provide abortions. U.S. Western District Court Judge Brian Wimes ruled Feb. 22 that state restrictio­ns on abortion were not “undue” burdens on women seeking abortions in Missouri. Regulation­s that took effect last year require doctors that perform abortions to have admitting physician privileges at nearby hospitals. The Columbia clinic has not been able to finding a doctor with such privileges since the University of Missouri Hospital in Columbia stopped offering the privileges in 2015.

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