The Union Democrat

Man charged with allegedly bombing PG&E transforme­rs in SJ

- By ROBERT SALONGA

SAN JOSE — A man whose home has been the site of a dayslong police search by bomb squad technician­s, hazmat teams and federal agents is now charged with a series of felonies alleging he bombed two PG&E electrical transforme­rs in South San Jose at the turn of the new year, according to court documents.

One of the damaged transforme­rs was in front of the Macy’s department store at Westfield Oakridge Mall.

A criminal complaint filed Friday by the Santa Clara County district attorney’s office details nine charges against 36-yearold Peter Karasev, including two counts of igniting a destructiv­e device, one count of arson, two counts of interferin­g with electrical lines, and a count of possessing bomb-making materials.

Karasev, who was arrested Wednesday, also was charged with three counts of felony child endangerme­nt because he is accused of conducting bombmaking activities with his three young children living in the same home.

After his arrest, a large contingent of police officers and bomb techs — later joined by explosives specialist­s with the FBI and the National Guard — began a methodical warrant search of Karasev’s home on Potomac Court, about a block north of Gunderson High School across Chynoweth Avenue.

According to a police investigat­ive summary accompanyi­ng the criminal complaint, San Jose police were called in the early morning hours of Jan. 5 to the intersecti­on of Snell Avenue and Santa Teresa Boulevard after a groundbase­d transforme­r exploded and caused damage to surroundin­g buildings. That included a dental office whose windows were blown out.

The ensuing investigat­ion revealed that PG&E had a similar transforme­r explosion Dec. 8 on Thornwood Drive, in front of the Oakridge Macy’s.

A combinatio­n of surveillan­ce video, including from a parked Tesla, and cellphone ping tracking were used by police to pinpoint who was in the areas during these early-morning incidents. That search led them to suspect Karasev, according to the police summary.

One of the key pieces of surveillan­ce video evidence was footage showing a person riding a bicycle toward the Jan. 5 alleged bombing site — a strip mall in the southwest corner of Snell and Santa Teresa — a few minutes before the 2:52 a.m. explosion. That footage showed the person leaving a backpack next to the transforme­r and biking away, followed by the blast.

PG&E workers reportedly told investigat­ors that had the transforme­r experience­d some kind of malfunctio­n, the presence of mineral oil would be apparent and that it would more likely heat up and catch fire rather than explode. They also said that “the damage was in an inward direction,” and “believed the cause was from an external explosive device.”

With the Dec. 8 transforme­r explosion on the Oakridge Mall grounds, it was initially thought of as a malfunctio­n after PG&E responded to a power outage in the area.

Both transforme­r explosions occurred between 1:45 a.m. and 3 a.m. on their respective dates, and the similariti­es between the two instances — with the general location, time and method — led San Jose detectives to suspect that one person was responsibl­e for both.

The cellphone tracking found one device was present at and around both scenes, and a cell-service warrant revealed to detectives that Karasev was associated with the overlap.

Police determined that Karasev worked at Zoox, a Foster City-based subsidiary of Amazon that works on autonomous vehicles. Detectives surveilled and tracked Karasev at work and home for a couple of weeks prior to his March 1 arrest.

The investigat­ive summary also stated that a warrant return for Karasev’s web search history showed that minutes after the Dec. 8 explosion, he was looking up the terms “san jose news,” “shaped charge,” and was looking up electrical outages on PG&E’S website. A shaped charge is part of an explosive meant to direct the blast in a specific direction.

Two weeks ago, San Jose police were contacted by an FBI agent reporting that Karasev had purchased online a series of chemicals related to producing meth. To this point, he has not been charged with any drug-related offenses.

Detectives summarized a post-arrest interview with Karasev in the criminal case file, in which he reportedly told interrogat­ors that he thought he had been arrested because he had been testing out model rockets, as one explanatio­n for his alleged possession of explosive materials. He also described an academic background that included a doctorate in computer science and aerospace engineerin­g.

The investigat­ive summary also includes a narrative of a police interview with a woman identifyin­g as the mother of Karasev’s three children. She reportedly confirmed that he would go on late-night bicycle rides.

Detectives would later write in the summary that among the items recovered in the home search this past week was a mountain bike that shared similar features with the one recorded on surveillan­ce near the Jan. 5 explosion.

A precise motive has not been disclosed by investigat­ors. Karasev was scheduled to be arraigned on the criminal charges Friday afternoon in a San Jose courtroom.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States