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Why the low-key White House, media response to pipe-bomb terrorism?
By Patrick Martin
9 May 2002
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Luke John Helder, a 21-year-old college student, was arrested
Monday outside Reno, Nevada after a four-day spree in which he
planted 18 pipe bombs, all but one in rural mailboxes. He began
in Illinois, a few hours drive from his apartment in Menomenie,
Wisconsin, and proceeded through Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado, with
an apparent side trip to Amarillo, Texas, before crossing Utah
and Nevada.
The arrest was more the product of Helders own brazenness
than of any special police effort. His father, Cameron Helder,
a construction worker in Pine Island, Minnesota, became alarmed
by a letter from his son that he received after the bombings began,
and called the police. Helders college roommate also called
to report finding black powder and pieces of pipe in the room
they shared near the University of Wisconsin-Stout, a branch campus
of the state university.
Helder sent a signed six-page letter to the Badger Herald,
the daily newspaper for the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the
main campus, outlining his motivation for the attacks and promising
more of them. Six people were injured in the explosions, four
of them rural letter carriers who picked up the bombs from mailboxes
thinking they were collecting packages for mailing.
On Monday evening Helder made a cell phone call from Utah that
revealed his location to the authorities. (The phone call raises
questions about whether the Amarillo bombing was a copycat attack,
since it would have been difficult for Helder to drive from Utah
to Texas and then back to Nevada in the time available.)
On Tuesday morning, the FBI identified Helder in connection
with the case and broadcast an appeal for him to turn himself
in. Shortly afterwards, a passing motorist reportedly spotted
a car answering the FBIs description and notified the agency.
FBI and Nevada state police pursued Helder at high speed, while
contacting him on his cell phone through his father. The youth
initially threatened to kill himself, but eventually surrendered.
According to an affidavit filed the next day with the US District
Court in Reno, Helder has admitted to making eight pipe bombs
in his Wisconsin apartment, and 16 more at a motel outside Omaha,
Nebraska, and planting all 18 that were found in a five-state
area.
Remarkably, Helder was stopped three times by police during
his four-day, 3,000-mile trek, twice for speeding and once for
not wearing a seatbelt. Each time he was released without incident
to continue planting bombs.
On the second day, May 4, Helder was stopped 12 miles outside
of Albion, Nebraska, where a pipe bomb had been found in a mailbox.
When police approached the car, Helder told them I didnt
mean to hurt anybody. The police told him he had been stopped
for speeding, ticketed him, and allowed him to proceed.
As expressed in his letter to the Badger Herald, Helders
confused views somewhat resemble those of Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber,
who espoused a fascistic outlook centered on opposition to modern
technology and economic development. Helder denounced the government
from the standpoint of individual rebellion, asking, When
1 percent of the nation controls 99 percent of the nations
total wealth, is it a wonder why there are control problems?
The college student combined hostility to technology and greed
with a mélange of mystical and New Age viewshe described
death as an illusion and expressed interest in astral
projection, for instance. All his letters included threats
of suicide. Helder now faces criminal charges in five states that
could put him in prison for the rest of his life.
A fan of Nirvana lead singer Kurt Cobain, who died a suicide
in 1994, Helder was once a member of a local grunge-metal band.
He used the e-mail screen name dirdjew on the groups
web site, suggesting he shared the anti-Semitism that is a hallmark
of right-wing militia groups in the US Midwest and Northwest.
One can only imagine the media firestorm and menacing pronouncements
from Washington if Helder had been an Arab immigrant instead of
a 21-year-old from small-town Minnesota, espousing anti-government
rhetoric very similar to that of the right wing of the Republican
Party.
The media reaction has been extremely mild, especially given
the sensational nature of the crimes being committed. Once Helder
was identified and arrested, the Washington Post described
him as a troubled 21-year-old art student (no such
characterization was made of any of the September 11 hijackers).
The New York Times reported that no one was seriously injured
in the explosions, although at least one letter carrier lost his
hearing, and others had serious lacerations to the arms or face.
There were no nationally televised White House press conferences
or nationwide alerts from the Office of Homeland Security. Tom
Ridge, who heads the Bush administrations domestic anti-terrorism
campaign, did not even issue a statement on the case.
If Luke John Helder had been Iraqi, American warplanes would
likely be on their way to Baghdad. But Helder did not fit with
the Bush administrations political agenda. Like Timothy
McVeigh and Ted Kaczyinski, he is a homegrown product of the social
and political crisis in the United States.
See Also:
Once again: government,
media silent on right-wing role in US anthrax attacks
[28 November 2001]
FBI knows anthrax mailer but
wont make an arrest, US scientist charges
25 February 2002]
Oklahoma City bomber
Timothy McVeigh: the making of a mass murderer
[19 April 2001]
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