The Sentinel-Record

Flashlight bombs puzzle Phoenix authoritie­s

- AMANDA LEE MYERS

PHOENIX — Flick the switch on these flashlight­s and they don’t light up. They blow up.

Three of these bombs have exploded within the last month in the Phoenix area, causing minor injuries to five people and raising fears of more serious ones.

Police still have no idea who is behind them and have taken the unusual step of putting up 22 billboards across the sprawling metro area to warn residents about discarded flashlight­s.

“The nature of the bombings are so random,” said Tom Mangan, a special agent at the U. S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in Phoenix.

Mangan said the agency has ruled out any connection to terrorism because the targets have been random and there have been no messages or demands.

The ATF said the bombs appear to have been made by the same person or people because their design was identical.

An explosive was placed inside the flashlight­s with a smaller battery and rigged so that turning it on would send an electrical current that triggered the blast, Mangan said. He declined to identify the explosive material.

The first bomb was spotted by a passerby on May 13 in a suburb just west of Phoenix. It was sitting behind a palm tree in a strip mall and blew up when it was clicked on.

The next day, about 10 miles away, a landscaper found a flashlight in an irrigation ditch. It, too, exploded when he flicked the switch, authoritie­s said.

The third bomb exploded on May 24 at a Salvation Army distributi­on center near downtown Phoenix and about 11 miles from the first one.

An employee detonated the device while sorting through donations, forcing 120 people in the store to evacuate. Jon Bierd, production manager at the facility, said the worker suf- fered a small abrasion to his forehead.

The Salvation Army stopped accepting donations of flashlight­s. Since the explosion, employees have not seen any flashlight­s matching the yellow one seen on the billboards.

“If we have a flashlight that’s heavy or is not empty, then I’d call the Phoenix Police Department. No matter where it is, we do not touch it,” said Bierd, who is setting aside any flashlight that is donated.

In addition to the billboards, police are offering a $ 10,000 reward for tips that lead to an arrest or conviction.

Police have received dozens of calls re- porting possible flashlight bombs that either turned out to be false alarms or hoaxes, including one from a Goodwill store.

Meanwhile, the bombings have stopped, though it is unclear whether there are more flashlight­s out there.

The attention may have scared them off or they may gain confidence and strike again as the investigat­ion stretches on without an arrest, criminal profiler Gregg McCrary said.

Details of the case lead the former FBI agent to think the culprit is either a man or two men, with one of them being a dominant leader and the other a follower.

 ??  ?? WARNING: One of twenty public service announceme­nt billboards on display across the Phoenix metro area along highways are warning citizens about picking up discarded flashlight­s is pictured Thursday in Phoenix. In three separate incidents, unsuspecti­ng...
WARNING: One of twenty public service announceme­nt billboards on display across the Phoenix metro area along highways are warning citizens about picking up discarded flashlight­s is pictured Thursday in Phoenix. In three separate incidents, unsuspecti­ng...

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