US Army Soldier Arrested for Sharing Bomb Instructions | Inquirer
 
 
 
 
 
 

US Army Soldier Arrested for Sharing Bomb Instructions

, / 07:32 AM September 25, 2019

Federal authorities said Monday they arrested an Army soldier who they accused of discussing with an FBI informant a possible bomb attack within the United States as well as the targeting of left-leaning activists and a media organization.

Jarrett William Smith, a 24-year-old private first class infantry soldier from South Carolina stationed at Fort Riley, Kansas, was arrested Saturday and later charged with one count of sharing bomb-making instructions online.

During his first court appearance on Monday, the magistrate ordered that he remain in custody pending a detention hearing on Thursday.

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His defense attorney, Thomas Bartee, did not immediately respond to a phone message seeking comment.

A criminal complaint alleges that Smith discussed his plan to kill far-left-leaning “Antifa” activists and described how to build a bomb that could be triggered by calling a cellphone.

They accuse him of posting on Facebook that he was interested in traveling to Ukraine to fight with a paramilitary group known as Azov Batallion.

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FILE – In this Feb. 9, 2015 file photo, an honor guard stands at the entrance before ribbon-cutting ceremonies for the new 1st Infantry Division Headquarters at Fort Riley, Kan. Prosecutors say a U.S. Army infantry soldier stationed at Fort Riley shared bomb-making instructions online and also discussed killing activists and bombing a news network. The Justice Department says Monday, Sept. 23, 2019, that private first-class Jarrett William Smith was charged with distributing information related to explosives and weapons of mass destruction. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner File)

Court papers say Smith also suggested targeting a major news network with a car bomb.
The news network was not identified.

In an online chat group, Smith allegedly discussed with a confidential source in August a plan to conduct an attack within the United States and said he was looking for more “radicals” like himself, the complaint alleges.

He talked about destroying nearby cell towers or a local news station.

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In an interview before his arrest, Smith told investigators he knows how to make improvised explosives devices and that he routinely provides instruction on building them.

He stated he did this to cause “chaos.”

He said if chaos results in the death of people as a result of the information he provided, it would not affect him, according to the complaint.

Lt. Col. Terry Kelley, with the 1st Infantry Division Public Affairs at Fort Riley, said in a statement that Smith has been assigned to Fort Riley since June 2019.

He previously served at Fort Bliss, Texas, from November 2017 to June 2019.

He entered the Army from Conway, South Carolina, as an infantryman and completed training at Fort Benning, Georgia.
He has not deployed.

FILE – In this Feb. 9, 2015, file photo, vehicles park around a water tower at Fort Riley, Kan. Prosecutors say a U.S. Army soldier shared bomb-making instructions online and also discussed killing activists and bombing a news network. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner, File)

In one exchange Friday with an FBI undercover agent on the encrypted messaging service Telegram, Smith discussed using various household chemicals and commonly available equipment to make a bomb.

“That’s the best way to fight people,” Smith is quoted in the complaint as writing.

“Making AK-47s out of expensive parts is cool, but imagine if you will if you were going to Walmart instead of the gun store to buy weapons.”

During that same exchange, Smith allegedly sent the agent instructions for building a “Middle East style bomb” that if big enough could destroy U.S. military vehicles.

FBI Investigation

An FBI bomb technician later determined the specific instructions could have constructed a viable device.

When the undercover agent asked Smith if there was anyone in Texas who would be a good fit for “fire, destruction, and death,” Smith reportedly replied, “Outside of Beto?

I don’t know enough people that would be relevant enough to cause a change if they died” an apparent reference to former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke, who is running for the Democratic presidential nomination.

O’Rourke’s campaign spokeswoman Aleigha Cavalier said they are grateful to the FBI for their diligence in handling this case and for their work to keep the country safe in the face of domestic terror threats.

“We take any threat like this very seriously, and our team is in direct contact with the FBI regarding this case,” Cavalier said.”

This isn’t about any one person or one campaign, and we won’t let this scare us or cause us to back down in fighting for what’s right.

If convicted of the charge, Smith could face up to 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

Smith is the latest of a string of people charged with the activity that federal authorities said could lead to domestic terrorism, including several current or former members of the military.

In April, an Army combat veteran in Southern California was arrested after receiving what he thought was an improvised explosive device from an undercover law enforcement agent.

Authorities say Mark Steven Domingo plotted to bomb a white supremacist rally that didn’t take place but also discussed other attacks on Jews, churches, and police.

Authorities in February arrested a Maryland man, Coast Guard Lt. Christopher Paul Hasson, on gun and drug charges, with prosecutors describing him as a domestic terrorist and white nationalist seeking to use “focused violence” to establish a “white homeland.”

They also said he compiled a list of targets that included prominent Democratic politicians and media figures.

In 2015, authorities arrested John T. Booker Jr., a 20-year-old Topeka, Kansas, resident as he tried to arm what he thought was a bomb outside Fort Riley.

ARMY Soldier Booker had expressed support for the terrorist group al-Qaida and said on Facebook that he wanted to die in a jihad.

He was sentenced to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty in federal court to attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and attempting to destroy government property with an explosive.

The most notorious domestic terrorism in U.S. history, Timothy McVeigh, was stationed at Fort Riley for a time before he left the Army and eventually staged the Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people in 1995.

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TAGS: FBI, politics, terrorism
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