Baltimore Sun

Ohio man pleads guilty to driving a bomb to Carroll County to target romantic rival

- By Cassidy Jensen

An Ohio man told investigat­ors he made a bomb and drove it to the Manchester home of the boyfriend of a woman he wanted to date.

Clayton Alexander McCoy, 32, of Chesterfie­ld, Ohio, pleaded guilty Wednesday to transporti­ng explosives with intent to injure and possession of an unregister­ed firearm/ explosive device, according to a news release from United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Erek L. Barron.

McCoy made a pipe bomb in Ohio then drove it to Carroll County in an attempt to harm his romantic rival, according to prosecutor­s. He had known the victim’s girlfriend for years through the live-action role-playing game Dagorhir, charging documents said. In October 2020, he confessed his romantic feelings to the woman, who did not return them, prosecutor­s said.

On Oct. 30, 2020, McCoy drove his bomb, which included homemade shrapnel and BB’s inserted into a metal pipe, and delivered it to a Manchester home inside a giftwrappe­d box designed to detonate when opened, prosecutor­s said. Investigat­ors said

McCoy had taken steps to evade police by buying materials from different stores in cash. When the 28-year-old man opened the box, the bomb exploded, seriously injuring him.

After spending weeks in the hospital, the victim required a walker for two weeks and needed multiple surgeries to remove shrapnel from his body, according to the release. The home where the victim and his grandparen­ts lived sustained more than $46,000 worth of damage and was uninhabita­ble for five months, prosecutor­s said.

Investigat­ors seized materials McCoy used to make a bomb from his Chesterfie­ld home in March 2021, while executing a search warrant. Although McCoy initially named another member of the role-playing group as the source of the bomb, he later told law enforcemen­t that he had constructe­d the bomb and delivered it to the Carroll County home, prosecutor­s said.

McCoy faces up to 30 years in prison. U.S. District Judge Catherine C. Blake has not yet scheduled sentencing.

An attorney representi­ng McCoy could not be reached for comment.

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