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Showing posts with label pipe bomb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pipe bomb. Show all posts

Bomb suspect was cash-strapped ex-stripper devoted to Trump

Cesar Sayoc is an amateur body builder and former stripper, a loner with a long arrest record who showed little interest in politics until Donald Trump came along.

On Friday, he was identified by authorities as the Florida man who put pipe bombs in small manila envelopes, affixed six stamps and sent them to some of Trump's most prominent critics.



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His arrest capped a week in which the bombs aimed at some of America's biggest names — Obama, Clinton, De Niro — dominated the news and invited speculation about who might be responsible for them. The answer, authorities said, was Sayoc, a 56-year-old man from Aventura, Florida, who was devoted to Trump, had a history of financial problems and an extensive arrest record, including a stint on probation for making a bomb threat.

His attorney in that 2002 case, Ronald Lowy, described Sayoc as "a confused man who had trouble controlling his emotions."

A cousin of Sayoc, Lenny Altieri, used stronger terms.

"I know the guy is a lunatic," Altieri told The Associated Press. "He has been a loner."

Altieri confirmed that Sayoc had been a stripper. On an online resume, Sayoc described himself as a booker and promoter for burlesque shows.

Stacy Saccal, the general manager of the Ultra Gentlemen's Club in West Palm Beach, said Sayoc had worked there for about two months, first as a floor bouncer and for the past month as a disc jockey — most recently on Thursday night, hours before his arrest Friday morning.

"I didn't know this guy was mad crazy like this," she said Friday. "Never once did he speak politics. This is a bar. We don't talk politics or religion in a bar, you know?"

Florida voter records show Sayoc first registered in March 2016 as a Republican and cast a ballot in that November's presidential election.

He has been an active Trump supporter, tweeting and posting Facebook videos that appear to show him at the president's rallies.

Sayoc's social media accounts are peppered with memes supporting Trump, and denigrating Democrats.

Sayoc lived in a white 2002 Dodge Ram van, which was plastered with stickers supporting Trump and criticizing media outlets that included CNN, which was also targeted by mail bombs.

The van was often parked outside an LA Fitness in Aventura, backed up in a parking space under the trees for shade. Patrons say they frequently saw him in the locker room.

"He'd just be walking straight to the shower and be in the shower forever," said Edgar Lopez, who often exercises at the gym. "I never saw him working out."

Other times, the van was seen parked at the beach in nearby Hollywood before dawn, with Sayoc stripping down to skin-tight shorts for an outdoor shower.

"I've seen the guy maybe 80 times and I never said a word to him because I had a feeling he was a little off," said Marc Weiss, the superintendent of a building near where Sayoc frequently parked. "I assumed because he was showering at the beach that he was homeless."

In 2015, he reported to police that his van was broken into outside of a gym in Oakland Park, Florida. He claimed that more than $40,000 worth of items were stolen, including $7,150 worth of Donald Trump-brand suits.

But often, Sayoc was on the other side of legal complaints.

In the 2002 bomb threat case, he had lashed out at a Florida utility representative because his electricity service was about to be cut off. The arrest report said Sayoc threatened in a phone call to blow up the utility's offices and said that "It would be worse than September 11th."

Sayoc was also convicted in 2014 for grand theft and in 2013 for battery. In 2004, he faced several felony charges for unlawful possession of a synthetic anabolic steroid often used to help build muscles. He also had several arrests going back to the 1990s for theft, obtaining fraudulent refunds and tampering with evidence.

Lowy said he recalled that Sayoc also had a run-in with authorities where he was charged with possessing a fake driver's license after altering his birthdate to make him appear younger.

Sayoc displayed no political leanings at the time of the bombing charge, Lowy said, except for plastering his vehicle with Native American emblems. Sayoc told his lawyer his father was Native American.

More recently, Sayoc described himself on social media as being affiliated with the Seminole Warriors boxing club and being a member of the "Unconquered Seminole Tribe."

Gary Bitner, a spokesman for the Seminole Tribe of Florida, said there is no evidence to show that Sayoc worked for the tribe or was a tribal member.

Altieri, his cousin, said Sayoc's only connection to Native Americans was that he once dated a member of a tribe.

Sayoc was born in New York City. His mother was Italian and his biological father was Filipino, and his parents separated when he was a young boy, Altieri said. After his parents separated, Sayoc was "kind of rejected" by his family.

"When you get no love as a young kid, you get kind of out of whack," he said.

He enrolled at Brevard College in North Carolina in 1980 and attended for three semesters, said Christie Cauble, the school's interim director of communications. He then transferred to the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, enrolling for the 1983-84 academic year. Buffie Stephens, director of media relations for the school, said Sayoc didn't declare a major. He played a few games as a walk-on player for the university's men's soccer team. There is no indication he ever completed a degree.

He moved to the Miami suburbs in the late 1980s. He had serious financial problems in recent years, including losing his home in foreclosure in 2009 and filling for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection in 2012.

In court records, Sayoc was described as having $4,175 in personal property and more than $21,000 in debts, mostly from unpaid credit cards. His monthly income at the time was $1,070.

"Debtor lives with mother, owns no furniture," Sayoc's lawyer indicated in a property list. Sayoc's mother, Madeline, also filed for bankruptcy around the same time. She was not immediately available to respond to phone messages left with her by the AP.

Sayoc's media diet appears to have consisted of a toxic mixture of conspiracy theory, parody accounts and right-wing news sites. One of Sayoc's most favored recent sources was a Twitter account that spread hoaxes about the Parkland High School shooting in Florida earlier this year.

He tweeted at least 40 times a screenshot of a meme featuring the transparently false claim that Parkland mass-shooting survivor David Hogg never went to Stoneman Douglas High School, occasionally including hostile captions such as "He is a George Soros paid protester." Soros, the billionaire progressive political donor, was targeted this week by a package bomb.

Sayoc even seems to have stumbled across a Polish conspiracy news site, tweeting out a wildly false claim that Angela Merkel had been conceived using Adolf Hitler's frozen sperm.

In June, he praised Trump in a birthday message saying, "Happy Birthday President Donald J. Trump the greatest result President ever."

This version of the story corrects to Sayoc, not Altieri, in the 4th and 2nd paragraphs from end.

Male strippers, body building and trolling: What we know about bomb suspect Cesar Sayoc

Male strippers, body building, big-busted women and star-spangled trousers make up many of the social media photos of the man arrested in connection with the pipe bombs.

Cesar Sayoc, 56, from Aventura, Florida, has been charged with five federal crimes after being captured in Miami.

Police linked his fingerprints to the 13 suspicious packages sent to prominent critics of US President Donald Trump.

Records show this is not Sayoc's first run-in with the law, according to reports.






Image:Sayoc shared images of his younger self astride a motorbike. Pic: Cesar Sayoc

Image:Sayoc showed his patriotism in his clothing. Pic: Cesar Sayoc

He was arrested in 2002 by Miami police for an offence described as a "threat to bomb" and "threaten to discharge a destructive device".

Sayoc was a prolific social media user, holding multiple profiles on the same platforms and using different usernames.

At least one of his Facebook accounts paint a picture of a man who wanted to seen as stereotypically masculine as could be, while his Twitter shows someone who spent hours sharing pro-Republican and anti-Democrat images and messages.

Video:The man suspected of sending 13 pipe bombs in America filmed himself chanting at a Trump rally. Credit: Cesar Sayoc

Image:Here Sayoc holds up a sign saying CNN sucks. One of the pipe bombs was sent to CNN. Pic: Cesar Sayoc

Images on his personal Facebook indicate he spent hours in the gym working out, as well as partying and watching soccer.

Pictures of nearly naked women and men - including a semi-nude black and white image of footballer Cristiano Ronaldo - are dotted throughout.

Photos on his page show him in a small pair of black briefs posing to show off his well-oiled muscles.

These images - which include one of him doing the splits - are mixed in with pictures of Sayoc cuddling up with attractive women in skimpy bikinis.

Image:On his LinkedIn, Sayoc said he worked in the male stripper industry. His van is pictured alongside this advert. Pic: Cesar Sayoc

Image:Sayoc shared a number of photos of himself with attractive women. Pic: Cesar Sayoc

In a photo posted in April 2015, Sayoc is pictured gurning and sweaty mid-weight lift while wearing trousers made out of the American flag pattern - one leg stars, the other stripes.

Another Americana photo shows him straddling an enormous motorbike, giving the person behind the camera a hearty thumbs up.

It's not all parties and muscles on his Facebook. It also features photos of him in the grounds of a North Carolina university he says he attended.

Image:Cesar Sayoc has been arrested in connection with the suspicious packages

The university has not responded yet to Sky News' attempt to verify whether he attended there.


His LinkedIn says he is a promoter. booking agent, owner and choreographer of a number of enterprises, including Chippendales male strippers.

Another photo shows a large advert for unofficial 'Real Magic Mike' experiences, complete with images of naked male torsos and flaming guitars, attached to the van US authorities towed away as part of their investigation.

The van today is covered in pro-Trump, anti-Democrat stickers but in the images posted in 2015 the windows are bare.

If his Facebook is his party-persona, his multiple Twitter accounts are his political stomping ground.

Image:Sayoc shared a picture of himself wearing a 'MAGA' hat. Pic: Cesar Sayoc

Image:His Twitter account posted a number of conspiracies about Democrats. Pic: Twitter

His most recent activity was a retweet of his own post of photo-shopped images attacking a Democrat midterm candidate and accusing him of being a George Soros puppet.

One of the 12 suspicious packages were sent to billionaire philanthropist Mr Soros.

Sayoc also posted a number of images urging people to vote Republican, including one which stated "Had Enough? Vote Republican" alongside an image of an American Bald Eagle.

Image:Sayoc uploaded photos from different times of him working out in the gym. Pic: Cesar Sayoc

Image:Sayoc posted regularly on social media. Pic: Cesar Sayoc

Interspersed between repeated posts of images praising Republicans and criticising Democrats, he also wrote threatening messages to American tabloid news site TMZ alongside pictures of the Tarot death card.

"You biggest piece c**p media TMZ , that were complete silent Obama separating kids . Shut your hole TMZ before u end like media slime Saudi Arabia. No one deserves it better than fake fraud Washington Amazon owned post . We Unconquered Seminole Tribe agree," he wrote, in a reference to the death of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi who was a contributor to Washington Post.

In another post, he calls David Hoggs, one of the students who survived the Stoneman Douglas high school shooting in Parkland, Florida, a "fake phony" and accuses him of never attending the school and of being an actor paid by George Soros.

Image:On his LinkedIn, Sayoc says he loves animals

Although the Facebook account examined and verified by News shows mostly older photos of Sayoc, other photos allegedly taken from another of Sayoc's Facebook accounts show him attending Donald Trump rallies and wearing a Make America Great Again - known as MAGA - hats.

In a rambling description on his LinkedIn, Sayoc says he initially trained to become "a horse doctor" because he has "a love for animals".

He says he has "respect for all living things".

He continues to make a number of claims about his family history, including that his grandfather was a medical pioneer.

He writes that his family spent time in the Philippines, although some of the stickers on his van suggest he has Native American heritage.

Pipe bomb suspect arrested in Florida drove van plastered with pro-Trump stickers

US investigators have arrested a suspect in Florida in connection with 12 suspicious packages and pipe bombs sent to critics of Donald Trump in a days-long spree that has inflamed the United States ahead of key midterm elections.





The Republican commander-in-chief congratulated law enforcement Friday for what he called an "incredible, incredible job" as US media identified the suspect as Cesar Sayoc, a 56-year-old man with a criminal history.
"These terrorizing acts are despicable and have no place in our country," Trump told an event at the White House, confirming a suspect had been apprehended following an FBI-led nationwide manhunt mobilizing hundreds of agents. 
"But the bottom line is Americans must unify and we must show the world that we are united together in peace and love and harmony as fellow American citizens," the president added.

The keen bodybuilder, who is of Native American origin, posted photos of himself wearing a “Make America Great Again” hat (Broward Sheriff)
The keen bodybuilder, who is of Native American origin, posted photos of himself wearing a “Make America Great Again” hat (Broward Sheriff)
Photographs have emerged of Sayoc at a 2016 rally for Mr Trump, with the alleged bomber's Facebook page plastered with right-wing memes, according to media reports.
The keen bodybuilder, who is of Native American origin, posted photos of himself wearing a “Make America Great Again” hat. Other memes attack Mrs Clinton, with one branding her a hypocrite. There are also images insulting Muslims as "paedophiles and rapists".




I would like to begin today’s remarks by providing an update on the packages and devices that have been mailed to high-profile figures throughout our Country, and a media org. I am pleased to inform you that law enforcement has apprehended the suspect and taken him into custody.

The Department of Justice was to hold a news conference on the case at 2:30 pm (1830 GMT). 
In southern Florida, FBI agents and police swarmed the area around a strip mall in Plantation, where an AFP photographer saw a van covered in blue tarpaulin loaded onto a truck by authorities and being driven away.
Pictures broadcast on television showed the van plastered with pro-Trump stickers. 
Much of the investigation had homed in on Florida in the last 24 hours, where officials reportedly believed that at least some of the packages had been sent. Media described Sayoc as living in Aventura, Florida while also having ties to New York.
Since Monday homemade bombs and other suspected explosive devices have been addressed to Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Hollywood megastar Robert De Niro and a litany of figures loathed by the US president's supporters.


View image on TwitterView image on TwitterView image on Twitter

@CBSMiami I have some pictures of this van I saw him at a stoplight one day and thought is was very strange.
Trump under fire
On Friday, an 11th package addressed to Cory Booker, a New Jersey senator often touted as a Democratic presidential hope, was intercepted in Florida, the FBI confirmed.
A 12th package, identified by police as a pipe bomb, was found at a US Post Office in Manhattan and removed by the bomb squad, New York police said.
James Clapper, among a string of former intelligence chiefs critical of Trump, was the addressee of the 12th package, sent care of CNN. 
On Wednesday, the news network evacuated its New York bureau after a similar package was found in the mail room addressed to another frequent CNN guest, former CIA director John Brennan.
Trump earlier came under fire for his response to the spree, which politicians on all sides have branded domestic terrorism with devices intercepted in New York, Maryland, Florida, Delaware and Los Angeles.
On Friday, shortly before news of the arrest broke, he complained that the packages were slowing momentum for his Republican Party ahead of the November 6 elections, remarks bound to enrage his opponents.
"Republicans are doing so well in early voting, and at the polls, and now this 'Bomb' stuff happens and the momentum greatly slows -- news not talking politics," Trump tweeted.
"Very unfortunate, what is going on. Republicans, go out and vote!"
Trump was also criticized for tempering calls for unity in the wake of the attacks, by lashing out at the press for stirring up "anger."
He recently endorsed the body-slamming of a reporter, routinely denounces the press as "fake news" and has leveled toxic remarks in the past against the pipe bomb targets.
'They were dangerous'
Despite little information on whether the man in custody is suspected of working in cahoots with others, New York's state Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo disputed speculation that the devices were not rigged to explode.
"No one can say there were fake bombs, they were dangerous," he told CNN. "There may be questions about the levels of sophistication."
Double Oscar winner and biting Trump critic De Niro on Friday urged people to vote the midterms, one day after a device was discovered at the Manhattan offices of his production company.
"I thank God no one's been hurt, and I thank the brave and resourceful security and law enforcement people for protecting us," he said. "There's something more powerful than bombs, and that's your vote. People MUST vote!"
"This is definitely domestic terrorism," Clapper told CNN Friday, hitting out at Trump saying he bore "some responsibility of civility in this country. He needs to remember that his words count."
The packages were sent in manila envelopes with bubble wrap, marked with computer-printed address labels. Each listed Debbie Wasserman Schultz, former chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, as the sender, including misspellings of her last name, the FBI said.
Wasserman Schultz told reporters in southern Florida that it had "devastating" and "deeply disturbing" to have had her name used.
"I've been told by the FBI that this is their highest priority and they're on top of it," she said.

-With AFP inputs

More Explosive Devices Have Been Sent to Robert De Niro and Joe Biden as the Pipe Bomb Investigation Intensifies

The wave of suspicious packages sent to prominent Democrats (and news organizations that have been critical of President Trump) continues. On Wednesday, explosive devices were mailed to the Obamas, the Clintons, and CNN, a day after George Soros also received a crude pipe bomb in the mail. Former AG Eric Holder, ex-CIA Director John Brennan, and Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) were also targeted, and Thursday resumes the trend with both Robert De Niro and Joe Biden being sent suspicious packages with telling similarities to the devices lurking within previous packages.




NBC News reports that the package en route to De Niro, a vocal Trump critic who recently hurled F-bombs at the president during an awards speech, was discovered at his Manhattan office building. Over in Delaware, two packages addressed to former VP Biden surfaced at separate postal facilities. A law enforcement official who spoke with the New York Times stated that the device sent to De Niro “appears to be from the same sender” as the other packages. The publication also notes that a number of additional suspicious packages (addressed to unidentified recipients) were detected overnight amid an intense investigation:
The United States Postal Service records images of mail that comes into its system. Officials searched those images overnight and found several other suspicious packages, a law enforcement official said. It was not immediately clear how many they discovered.
A wide swath of investigators from New York to California to D.C. to Florida are devoted to the case, which (miraculously) has not yet injured anyone, although as CNN’s Jake Tapper noted on Twitter, the devices within these packages “were rudimentary but functional … Meaning the intent here was mass murder.” Authorities are urging the public to stay vigilant as the manhunt for the perpetrator(s) responsible for the deliveries persists.
(Via NBC News, New York TimesChicago Tribune & CNN)

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