U.S.
Attorney’s Office
Cleveland
Man Found Guilty of
Trying to Use Explosives to Destroy a Bridge in Northeast Ohio
June 14, 2013
CLEVELAND—A
Cleveland man was found
guilty of trying to use explosives to destroy a bridge in Northeast
Ohio,
announced Steven M. Dettelbach, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District
of
Ohio, and Stephen D. Anthony, Special Agent in Charge of the Cleveland
Division
of the FBI.
Joshua
Stafford, 24, was found
guilty of conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction, attempted use
of
weapons of mass destruction, and malicious use of an explosive device
to
destroy property used in interstate commerce following a three-day
trial before
U.S. District Judge David Dowd. Stafford is scheduled to be sentenced
on
September 11 at noon.
“We
all need to thank the FBI and
its law enforcement partners,” U.S. Attorney Dettelbach said. “The
evidence in
this trial made clear that their actions saved innocent lives. By being
diligent, smart, and responsible, law enforcement agents were able to
not only
literally defuse a dangerous situation, but they also were able to
catch a
dangerous group of violent men before they were able to harm anyone
else.”
“This
defendant took it upon
himself to operate the cell phone he believed to be the device that
would
detonate two IED devices and cause potentially significant damage to
the Route
82 Brecksville-Northfield High Level Bridge,” Speical Agent in Charge
Anthony
said. “This defendant’s callous disregard for our community, all in the
name of
making his own ideological views known, reinforces the need for law
enforcement
to work diligently to confront and stop terrorists from committing
violent acts
against our fellow citizens.”
Stafford
is the last of five men to
be found guilty for their roles in a conspiracy to destroy the Route 82
Brecksville-Northfield High Level Bridge. Cars travel over the bridge,
which
crosses from Brecksville, Ohio to Sagamore Hills, Ohio over the
Cuyahoga Valley
National Park.
Douglas
L. Wright, of Indianapolis,
was sentenced to 11 1⁄2 years in prison, followed by a lifetime of
supervised
release.
Brandon
L. Baxter, of Lakewood,
Ohio, was sentenced to nine years and nine months in prison, followed
by a
lifetime of supervised release.
Connor
C. Stevens, of Berea, Ohio,
was sentenced to eight years and one month in prison, followed by a
lifetime of
supervised release.
Anthony
M. Hayne, 35, of Cleveland,
was sentenced to six years in prison, followed by a lifetime of
supervised
release.
Those
four men pleaded guilty last
year to conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction, attempted use of
weapons
of mass destruction, and malicious use of an explosive device to
destroy
property used in interstate commerce.
Hayne,
Wright, Baxter, Stevens and
Stafford were arrested on April 30.
According
to court documents,
Wright, Baxter, Hayne, Stevens, and Stafford were self-proclaimed
anarchists
who formed into a small group and considered a series of evolving plots
over
several months.
The
initial plot involved the use
of smoke grenades to distract law enforcement in order for the
co-conspirators
to topple financial institution signs atop high rise buildings in
downtown
Cleveland, according to the complaint.
The
plot later developed to the
utilization of explosive materials. The defendants conspired to obtain
C-4
explosives contained in two improvised explosive devices to be placed
and
remotely detonated, according to the complaint.
The
defendants discussed various
bridges and physical targets in and around the Cleveland, Ohio
metropolitan
area over the course of several months. The final plan resulted in the
Route 82
Brecksville-Northfield High Level Bridge being the designated target.
The
public was never in danger from
the explosive devices, which were controlled by an undercover FBI
employee. The
defendants were closely monitored by law enforcement. The explosives
that the
defendants allegedly purchased and attempted to use were inoperable and
posed
no threat to the public.
This
case is being prosecuted by
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Duncan T. Brown, Justin E. Herdman and Thomas
E. Getz
following an investigation by the FBI and the FBI’s Joint Terrorism
Task Force.
Agencies
represented on the FBI’s
Joint Terrorism Task Force include: Cuyahoga County Sheriff’s Office;
Federal
Air Marshal Service; Cleveland Police Department; Cleveland Heights
Police
Department; U.S. Secret Service; U.S. Coast Guard Investigative
Service; Ohio
Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Intelligence; Westlake Police
Department;
U.S. Diplomatic Security Service; Immigration and Customs Enforcement;
Customs
and Border Protection; RTA Police; Ohio State Highway Patrol;
Transportation
Security Administration; Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms;
Shaker
Heights Police Department; North Olmstead Police Department; U.S.
Postal
Inspectors; and the Defense Criminal Investigative Service. Assistance
in this
case was also provided by the U.S. National Park Service Park Rangers,
Sagamore
Hills Police Department, and Brecksville Police Department and the
Summit
County Sheriff’s Office.
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