Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Records describe Missouri bomb plot

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A Missouri man who investigat­ors said was planning to bomb a Kansas City-area hospital was distressed by the government’s response to the coronaviru­s crisis and motivated by racial, religious and anti-government animus, according to newly unsealed court documents.

Timothy Wilson, 36, died March 24 in a firefight with FBI agents serving a probable-cause arrest warrant on a Belton street.

The plot was reminiscen­t of the 1995 bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City. Wilson first talked of plans for an attack in April or June, but FBI agents say he moved up that timeline as the coronaviru­s made its way to Missouri.

The violent take-down followed a long-running domestic terrorism investigat­ion that began in 2019 with Wilson’s encrypted communicat­ions about bomb-building with Jarrett William Smith, a 24-year-old Army infantry soldier who faces prison for distributi­ng bomb-making informatio­n through social media.

Among details in court records unsealed last week was that Wilson considered attacking the University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City, Kan., before settling on a plan to park a vehicle loaded with explosives and detonate it in the parking lot of Belton Regional Medical Center in

Cass County, the Kansas City Star reported.

Just two days before his death, Wilson and an undercover FBI agent visited Belton Regional to inspect the hospital property and conduct a dry run of their plot, court records say.

The records show that for months, Wilson had discussed ideas for a terrorist attack, telling an undercover FBI agent that he was considerin­g sites ranging from a nuclear plant and Islamic centers in Missouri to the Walmart headquarte­rs or a synagogue in Arkansas. He also discussed last year shooting up a predominan­tly black elementary school, the FBI said in the affidavits.

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