The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Suspicios package for CNN found here

FBI confirms mailing similar to others; Atlanta police bomb squad takes it for further inspection.

- By Alexis Stevens astevens@ajc.com and Joseph Capelouto Joseph.Capelouto@ajc.com

The alleged bomb-maker had been in federal prison four days, but his deadly plans continued to unfold Monday, according to investigat­ors. This time, a homemade explosive package was found in Atlanta, bringing the total to at least 15 allegedly mailed by the same man.

Cesar Altieri Sayoc Jr., 56, is suspected of mailing the homemade explosive devices to politician­s, Democratic supporters and media outlets. The latest package, located at a downtown post office, was addressed to CNN’s Atlanta headquarte­rs, the FBI said. According to CNN President Jeff Zucker, all of the network’s mail is being screened off-site. Shortly after 9:30 a.m. Monday, the package was located at the Central City post office on Pryor Street, just hours before Sayoc made his first court appearance

since his Friday arrest.

The FBI used social media to confirm that the Atlanta package was similar to the others. But the agency offered few additional details after the Atlanta police bomb squad removed the package from the post office and took it to an undisclose­d location for further inspection.

“The #FBI has confirmed a package has been recovered in Atlanta, similar in appearance to the others, addressed to CNN,” the agency posted on Twitter.

Last week, suspicious pack- ages were mailed to CNN’s offices in New York, former President Barack Obama, former Vice President Joe Biden and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Other pack- ages were sent to U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, Sens. Cory Booker and Kamala Harris, billionair­e George Soros and actor Robert De Niro, accord- ing to federal investigat­ors. Sayoc was charged in con- nection with 13 packages.

After a package intended for CNN’s New York news- room was inter c epted Wednesday, the network increased its security in Atlanta. Then on Friday, the FBI said a 14th package was located, that one intended for billionair­e and liberal activist Tom Steyer. And Monday, the Atlanta package brought the total to 15.

“There is no imminent danger to the CNN Center,” Zucker said Monday morn- ing in a message posted on Twitter. “All mail, at all CNN domestic bureaus, is being screened at off-site facilities as of last Wednesday, so this package would NOT have come directly to the CNN Center, even if it hadn’t been intercepte­d first. Our screening process is working and we will keep you updated as we learn more.”

By Monday afternoon, Sayoc had not been criminally charged for allegedly mailing the packages to Steyer or CNN in Atlanta. But in his crimi- nal complaint, FBI Special Agent David Brown described the packages as improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, and the most recent two mail- ings were similar.

“Each of the 13 IEDs was largely similar in design and constructi­on; they each con- sisted of approximat­ely six inches of PVC pipe, a small clock, a battery, wiring, and energetic material,” the federal complaint states. “Cer- tain of the mailings included photograph­s of the target-recipients marked with a red ‘X.’”

The packages were each mailed in a manila envelope lined with bubble wrap, and each was stamped with approximat­ely six postage stamps bearing a picture of an American flag, according to the FBI. And how the packages were addressed — including misspellin­gs — gave investigat­ors clues to locating the alleged senders and that they likely were the same person, according to the FBI.

Each envelope listed a return sender of “Debbie Wasserman Shultz,” a U.S. representa­tive from Florida, investigat­ors said, though her actual last name is spelled Schultz. But each enve- lope misspelled Florida as “Florids,” Brown wrote in the complaint.

Addit i onally, Sayoc allegedly misspelled the names Hillary and Barack, as well as referring to Waters as “Maxim,” according to the FBI. His misspelled the same names on his Twitter account, along with posts criticizin­g Obama and Soros, investigat­ors said.

Investigat­ors were able to match a fingerprin­t on one of the envelopes to Sayoc and believe a DNA sample matched a previous sample collected from Sayoc.

Sayoc, who was believed to be living in a van, is a former male stripper, pizza driver and strip club D J. He has an extensive criminal record, court records show, including conviction­s for various thefts and traffic violations. He also was convicted after he threatened to throw a bomb in 2002 in Florida’s Miami-Dade County but avoided prison time and instead was sentenced to probation.

At Monday’s hearing, federal prosecutor­s said they will seek to keep Sayoc jailed until trial because they believe he is a flight risk and a danger to the community. A judge set another hearing for Friday to determine whether to grant bail to Sayoc and to discuss when he will be sent from Miami to New York, where the five federal charges were filed. He has been charged with interstate transporta­tion of an explosive, illegal mailings of explosives, threats against former presidents, threatenin­g interstate communicat­ions and assaulting federal officers.

One of Sayoc’s attorneys, Daniel Aaronson, urged people not to rush to judgment based on media reports, The Associated Press reported.

“Right now, we know very, very, very little,” Aaronson said of the case. “We do not know all the evidence the government has. You have to keep in mind he has not been found guilty of anything.”

Sayoc, shackled at the wrists and ankles and wearing a tan jail jumpsuit, said little at the hearing but at one point appeared to be tearing up. Aaronson said he did not know what made Sayoc seem emotional but noted he is facing decades in prison if convicted.

‘All mail, at all CNN domestic bureaus, is being screened at offsite facilities as of last Wednesday, so this package would NOT have come directly to the CNN Center.’

Jeff Zucker CNN president

 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ??
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM
 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Atlanta police bomb squad members roll a robot back onto their truck after Monday morning’s operation to remove a suspicious package addressed to the CNN Center downtown.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM Atlanta police bomb squad members roll a robot back onto their truck after Monday morning’s operation to remove a suspicious package addressed to the CNN Center downtown.

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