Florida Man Accused Of Making ‘Highly Volatile’ Explosive Popular With ISIS

Jared Coburn, 37, “tried to explain to us that he was making his own version of a firework,” Lake Helen Police Chief Mike Walker said.

Volusia County Corrections


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Volusia County Corrections

Jared Coburn, 37, “tried to explain to us that he was making his own version of a firework,” Lake Helen Police Chief Mike Walker said.

Volusia County Corrections

A tip about explosives in a Lake Helen, Fla., house led police to discover jars of highly volatile triacetone triperoxide, or TATP — the same material used in terrorist bombing attacks mounted by ISIS and al-Qaida. Jared E. Coburn, 37, was arrested after police were told he had a bomb under his bed.

“The white crystal powder [TATP] has been referred to as ‘Mother of Satan’ by terrorist organizations who have used it in deadly attacks around the world,” the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office said.

The TATP was found in Coburn’s room he had been renting from a relative. Police went there intending to look for a bomb — but the officer who entered the house reported seeing what resembles a makeshift lab, with jugs of powder scattered around the room, and bottles of peroxide, alcohol and other liquids. Two vials of crystalline powder sat on the desk; underneath it sat a “large amount of Tannerite” — an explosive that contains ammonium nitrate and aluminum powder.

“What’s in there now … it’s enough to blow half the house up,” Volusia Sheriff Mike Chitwood said. He added that investigators believe Coburn made the material in the house.

“He tried to explain to us that he was making his own version of a firework,” Lake Helen Police Chief Mike Walker said.

Coburn is now facing two charges of manufacturing a destructive device, along with a third charge of making, possessing or transporting explosives. Additional charges are possible, police say.

Walker said Coburn had not been on police radar as a potentially suspicious person, and that while the authorities had dealt with Coburn in the past, it had only been for simple matters such as a ticket. Walker said police don’t think Coburn’s relatives who live in the house — he identified them as an uncle or cousin and his daughter — knew about the explosives.

TATP was recently used in high-profile attacks, including the 2017 bombing at a Manchester concert and the 2016 airport bombing in Brussels, which together killed more than 50 people. It was also used to a lesser degree in the 2015 attacks in Paris.

“TATP has very much become the signature explosive that ISIS’s external operations branch seems to be using in Europe,” New York Times correspondent Rukmini Callimachi told NPR after the Brussels attack.

“It was a shock, it was definitely a shock” to find the explosive in his small town in Florida, Walker said. With tree-lined roads and a population under 3,000, Lake Helen is tucked along Interstate 4 between Orlando and Daytona Beach.

When police entered Coburn’s room, they saw “a couple of devices in plain view,” said Lt. Lou Marino of the Volusia County bomb squad, adding that Coburn acknowledged making them.

“They are explosive devices, comprised of black powder” and TATP, Marino said.

TATP is made from commonly available materials, but it is notoriously unstable, Sheriff Chitwood said: “You don’t normally survive unless you know what you’re doing, from what the FBI was telling us …. When you produce this TATP stuff, most people blow themselves up or blow up something else in the process.”

Of Coburn, Chitwood said, “this guy is also highly intelligent. We’re not talking about Joe Schmo who got online and decided to do this.”

Coburn told police he had become interested in explosives after developing a model rocket hobby. According to the police report, Coburn told them “he knew the TATP powder was unstable so he would rotate it to keep it ‘fresh.’ “

The TATP was deemed too volatile to put in police trucks, Chitwood said. To dispose of the material, a bomb squad robot was used to carry it to holes that police in a nearby field, where it was blown up.

Hours later, the sheriff’s department issued a tweet telling nearby residents, “If you heard a boom in Lake Helen, that was us detonating one of the items. All good. There will be more booms, so don’t be alarmed!”

A search of the home found “large amounts of Tannerite, both mixed and pre-mixed, several firearms, large amounts of ammunition and a few suspect items that could be portrayed as hoax destructive devices or easily converted to be one,” according to the police report.

Leaders of the two local police agencies said the FBI’s offices in Orlando, Jacksonville, and Washington, D.C., are also involved in the case, along with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

“Everybody’s here because everybody understands how volatile this stuff is,” and the importance of defusing the situation without anyone being harmed, Chitwood said.

The sheriff said investigators do not yet know whether Coburn might have been “a frustrated chemist” who was simply experimenting, or if he had “more sinister plans” — but he added that the materials posed a dangerous risk to anyone in the house and its immediate vicinity.

Article source: https://www.npr.org/2018/11/14/667745335/florida-man-accused-of-making-highly-volatile-explosive-popular-with-isis?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news

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