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  • 3
    days
    ago

    Ricin-letters suspect tried to 'elude' FBI, documents say

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A former martial arts instructor charged with sending poisoned letters to President Barack Obama and other officials spotted government agents tailing him in the days before his arrest and then tried to dodge them — using tactics that included hiding under a blanket — according to FBI documents released in the case on Thursday.


    James Everett Dutschke, 41, of Tupelo, Miss., was arrested at his home on April 27 and charged with mailing letters laced with the nerve agent ricin to Obama, U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and county judge Sadie Holland.

     

    James Everett Dutschke of Tupelo, Miss., has been arrested, accused of sending letters containing deadly ricin addressed to President Obama and a senator. He has feuded with Paul Kevin Curtis, who was charged with the crime and later released. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    The documents released Thursday include FBI applications for warrants in order to get Dutschke’s phone records so they to track his whereabouts — while Dutschke seemed determined to hide.

    In the documents, FBI investigators detail Dutschke’s movements while they were trailing him in order to gather evidence.

    According to the documents, on April 24, at about 3:30 a.m., Dutschke and his wife Janet left their home in a green van and drove to two different banks, where they appeared to take cash out of ATM machines.

    After leaving the second bank, Dutschke and his wife returned to their home. As they left the green van, Dutschke waved at the surveillance team that had been watching him, the documents state.

    Then, while investigators moved to get into another position, Dutschke took off in the green van and went missing for about 12 hours, according to the FBI documents.

    It wasn’t until 3:15 p.m. that day that agents were again able to find Dutschke and his green van at his former business -- Tupelo Taekwondo Plus.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Dutschke left the martial arts studio at about 8 p.m. that night and got into an acquaintance’s truck and “crouched down in the rear seat of the truck and was covered by blankets,” the FBI said.

    “The acquaintance and Dutschke appeared to attempt to elude law enforcement,” the documents state. The two traveled what was described as an “evasive route,” taking two hours to drive only 22 miles from Tupelo to Mantachie, Miss.

    A friend of Dutschke's, Kirk Kitchens, told The Associated Press on April 25 that he helped Dutschke sneak away to Kitchens’ home, but he said it was to escape from the news media. Kitchens said he and Dutschke stayed at the home for a while before slipping out through the woods to rendezvous with someone else, who drove Dutschke to another location.

    Dutschke, 41, was arrested three days later. He is being held without bond in the case pending action by a federal grand jury. He has denied involvement in the letters.

    Dutschke could face the death penalty in the ricin-letters case. Earlier in April, he pleaded not guilty to two child molestation charges.

    The FBI investigators say traces of ricin were found on a dust mask and other items seized from Dutschke’s former martial arts studio. FBI agents also said that Dutschke ordered 50 red castor beans — used to make ricin — on eBay last November and December.

    Another man, Elvis impersonator Paul Kevin Curtis, was first held in connection with the crime, but charges were later dropped.

    Curtis has said that Dutschke was attempting frame him. The two had feuded for years, Curtis said.

    Related:

    Mississippi man charged with attempted use of a biological weapon in ricin case

    31 comments

    Hes a Republican terrorist apparently. And an accused child molester. http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/29/us/james-dutschke-profile Not surprised by that, are you??

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    Explore related topics: ricin, president-barack-obama, james-everett-dutschke, kirk-kitchens
  • Updated
    2
    May
    2013
    5:19pm, EDT

    Suspect held without bail as judge sends ricin-letters case to grand jury

    Officials say they've linked James Everett Dutschke to the ricin letters sent to the president and lawmakers, having found traces of the toxin in his martial arts studio and in the suspect's trash.

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A federal judge said Thursday that a man accused of sending poison-laced letters to President Barack Obama and other officials should remain in jail without bond, and ruled that a grand jury will decide on formal charges, local media reported.


    “It appears to the court that there is probable cause to hold the defendant,” U.S. Magistrate S. Allan Alexander said Thursday in a preliminary hearing, the Daily Journal of Northeast Mississippi reported. 

    /

    Everett Dutschke speaks to the media as federal officials search his property in Tupelo, Mississippi, April 23, 2013.

    James Everett Dutschke, 41, of Tupelo on Thursday also waived his right to a bond hearing, according to NBC affiliate WMC TV. Monday, the judge also decline to set bond after authorities argued the suspect was a flight risk.

    Though prosecutors initially charged the former martial arts instructor with an attempted use of a biological weapon — ricin —  Alexander referred the case to an upcoming grand jury to determine formal charges.

    The only witness to testify in the Oxford courtroom Thursday was FBI Special Agent Stephen E. Thomason, who wrote an affidavit to the court supporting Dutschke’s arrest.

    Thomason testified that lab analysis shows the granular substances found in the letters is ricin, the Daily Journal reported. He also said initial testing show the letters are linked to a computer printer owned by Dutschke, though with some uncertainty

    Thomason also revealed that the FBI would execute a search warrant at another location where Dutsckhke was believed to keep some of his belongings.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    According to the affidavit, the FBI found traces of the nerve agent ricin in a martial arts studio once used by Dutschke and on a dust mask. FBI agents watched as Dutschke threw the items in a trash bin, the affidavit said.

    The affidavit, unsealed on Tuesday, also alleged that Dutschke ordered castor beans — used to make ricin — on eBay last November and December.

    The FBI is still conducting tests in order to identifying trace evidence, residues, and signatures of production that could provide evidence to support the investigation.

    The ricin case originally focused on Elvis impersonator, Paul Kevin Curtis, a man whom Dutschke had feuded with for years. Curtis was arrested two weeks ago and briefly detained but but charges were later dropped. Curtis has said Dutschke framed him.

    An FBI surveillance team was watching Dutschke on April 22 when he entered his former dojo, Tupelo Taekwondo Plus, and removed a bunch of things and tossed them into a garbage bin on the street, the affidavit said.

    Ricin can be lethal, but an FBI agent testified in court that the variety found in the letters sent to Obama, Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Judge Sadie Holland of Lee County, Miss. wasn’t very potent.

    Dutschke has maintained he is innocent of the charges. His attorney, George Lucas, has said no evidence has shown the letters were dangerous, or used a weapon as initial charges state.

    NBC News' Pete Williams and Tracy Connor contributed to this report.

    Related:

    • Feds: Ricin traces found in martial arts studio linked to suspect
    • No bond for martial arts instructor charged with sending ricin letters

     

     

    This story was originally published on Thu May 2, 2013 4:07 PM EDT

    15 comments

    "His attorney, George Lucas, has said no evidence has shown the letters were dangerous, or used a weapon as initial charges state." Because of all the strange characters and over the top melodrama,I wouldn't be surprised one bit if that wasn't really George Lucas the film maker.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mississippi, updated, president-barack-obama, roger-wicker, ricin-letters, sadie-holland
  • Updated
    29
    Apr
    2013
    11:49am, EDT

    No bond for martial arts instructor charged with sending ricin letters

    James Everett Dutschke of Tupelo, Miss., has been arrested, accused of sending letters containing deadly ricin addressed to President Obama and a senator. He has feuded with Paul Kevin Curtis, who was charged with the crime and later released. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A judge declined to set bond Monday for a Mississippi martial arts instructor charged with sending poisoned letters to President Barack Obama and other government officials.

    Prosecutors said they believed James Everett Dutschke was dangerous and a flight risk, according to NBC affiliate WTVA.

    Dutschke was arrested Saturday morning at his home in Tupelo and charged with attempted use of a biological weapon — the poison ricin, which authorities say turned up in letters to the president, a senator and a Mississippi judge.

    The arrest was the latest bizarre twist in the case. Authorities first arrested another man, an Elvis impersonator named Paul Kevin Curtis, who frequently writes to Congress and who has a longstanding feud with Dutschke. Charges against Curtis were dropped.

    Curtis says he was framed. He has said Dutschke snubbed him after showing interest in publishing his book on a black market for body parts. Curtis also acknowledged posting a fake Mensa certificate online as part of a trap he set for Dutschke.

    Law enforcement officials said they found traces of ricin after searching Dutschke’s home, business and cars. Dutschke has said that he is a patriotic American, holds no grudges and didn’t do it.

    “I wouldn’t recognize ricin if I saw it,” he told reporters last week. “Would you?”

    Dutschke, 41, who earlier this month pledged not guilty to two child molestation charges, faces life in prison if he is convicted on the ricin charge.

    Bert Mohr / AP

    Paul Kevin Curtis speaks to reporters last week in Oxford, Miss.

    Besides Obama, the ricin letters were sent to Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and to Judge Sadie Holland of Lee County, Miss. The letters to Obama and Wicker were intercepted at screening facilities. Holland’s letter reached her, but she was unharmed.

    “Boy, I must be important,” she joked to The Clarion-Ledger newspaper of Jackson. “I’m right up there with the president and Senator Wicker, huh?”

    Ricin is made from castor beans and can kill, but an FBI agent testified in court that the ricin in the letters was crude and not very potent, and looked like castor beans ground in a blender.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    This story was originally published on Mon Apr 29, 2013 9:05 AM EDT

    68 comments

    I liked how when the last guy was involved everyone was screaming about how they weren't surprised because of where he was from or that he liked elvis and all the types of punishment he deserved.it just shows how people believe every thing theyre told by the media.will at least one of those people c …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mississippi, updated, president-barack-obama, roger-wicker, ricin-letters, sadie-holland
  • 5
    May
    2011
    1:04pm, EDT

    'Relief,' then a release: Students explain bin Laden bashes

    Anna F. Curtis, journalism student at University of Missouri

    Huge celebration in University of Missouri's Greektown. Champagne, fireworks, crowd surfing.

    By Ian Sager, TODAY.com

    It started as a murmur, but quickly grew into a roar.

    Chants of "U-S-A! U-S-A!" riccochted across the campus of The Ohio State University, building and evolving until it found a sympathetic audience near the famed Mirror Lake.  

    If this were any night but Sunday, May 1, 2011, the revelry would have been chalked up to pent-up finals stress, or a successful sporting victory. But, this was not the case as college students across the country had the monster pulled from their their closets, and in Columbus, that meant a dip in the chilly water despite air temperatures and weather patterns that were less-than ideal.

    Nearly ten years after 9/11, the children who watched the towers fall fill America’s colleges and universities, and on the evening the world learned of Osama bin Laden’s death, many took to the streets, celebrating the death of their generation's boogeyman. 

    'There is finally justice'
    Though they were young at the time - most were between the ages of 8 and 12 - many millennials cast the al-Qaida chief's death as a pivotal moment in their development. They came of age of age under the shadow of 9/11 and its vestiges: the war on terror, color-coded terror alerts and seemingly endless security lines at airports -- and Sunday offered the chance to shed a portion of that weight.

    "We watched the second plane hit the tower, and just watching that was painful," University of Oklahoma senior Steve Sichterman told msnbc's Contessa Brewer. "We were just solemn, and so it is really a great thing to know there is finally justice for those 3,000 plus people that were killed."

    “It was really a feeling of relief," said Oklahoma student Timothy Marquis when asked how he reacted to news that bin Laden was dead.

    "For ten years we had been searching for him and I remember being in middle school and seeing the attacks on 9/11. Relief came from the feeling that we finally got him," he told Brewer.

    At The Ohio State university (user-submitted image below) students plunged into Mirror Lake, a tradition usually saved for the hours surrounding a football game against Michigan.

    David Krogh

    Students at The Ohio State University jump into Mirror Lake, a tradition marked and remembered during Beat Michigan Week.

    Similar scenes were acted out across the country (sans lake, but with the same energy and excitement).

    George Washington and American students helped fill the area outside the White House.  

    Demi McLaren, 20, a sophomore history and secondary education major at American told the Washington Post "someone put, ‘Party on the White House lawn,’ on Facebook,” then immediately packed into a car with six other students. “We knew it was going to be a rager.”

    Boston Common rocked late into the night thanks to the city's many colleges. Penn State looked like it had just won the Rose Bowl (user-submitted image below). From the looks of pictures submitted to msnbc.com, West Virginia University, known for its couch burnings after Mountaineer football games, lost many a living room centerpiece during the course of the evening. 

    Robert A. Kolodzieski

    At Penn State University. Absolute once in a lifetime experience! USA! Can't believe this has happened after ten years.

    'Intense sense of closure'

    In addition to pouring outside, college students took to the Internet in heavy numbers in the hours following the announcement pf bin Laden's death. They searched for a semi-private place to vent, support one another and above all, find closure.

    University of Delaware celebrations were branded an "intense sense of closure for people who were frightened little kids in '01" on Twitter. 

    Of course, there are students who contend that the fun - which, it must be said, took place for many amid the stress of finals - was less meaningful and more effervescent.

    Sean Morrow, a senior at Clark University in Massachusetts, told the Associated Press, that it "is kind of surreal to watch people celebrating someone's death."

    Morrow contends he understands it because, for him and many others his age, bin Laden was their boogeyman, "the main negative person of our generation."

    "That’s why I think we all went out to celebrate what is not only for the victims receiving justice, but for all those men and women overseas that have fought for so long and are going to continue to be fighting the war on terror," he told the news service.

    John F. Ryan

    Virginia Military Institute celebrates on Sunday.

    Despite the overwhelming scenes of glee, millennials' reactions remain mixed, much like older generations that celebrated in similar fashions across the country. The one common thread seems to be that the evening will go down in history a "where were you when moment."

    “Without a doubt, just like with September 11th, we’re all going to remember where we were," University of Oklahoma student Sichterman explained.

    "We have all the country songs to remember where we were, and we’ll remember where we were on May 1st, 2011.”

    Toby Keith, the gauntlet has been thrown.

    Click here for more on the reaction across college campuses and in cities: Ohio State; Oklahoma State; Penn State University; Boston; Washington

    Click here and here for more images and accounts of spontaneous celebrations from the evening the world learned of Osama bin Laden's death.

    3 comments

    i dont wanna hear another damn thing thank you

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    Explore related topics: college, terror, osama-bin-laden, 9-11, ground-zero, president-barack-obama
  • 5
    May
    2011
    12:43pm, EDT

    An 'inspirational' drive-by

    Szjuval Joseph, a student from the Bronx, talks about seeing President Barack Obama's motorcade pass by in New York City following the wreath laying ceremony recognizing the death of Osama bin Laden.

     

     ******

     

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Steve Archipolo waits for President Obama's motorcade at Ground Zero in New York City on Thursday.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, msnbc.com

     “I wouldn’t be anywhere else but here. … I haven’t slept since then, in peace,”  Steve Archipolo said Thursday, as he stood in the crowd gathered outside the World Trade Center memorial site for President Barack Obama’s wreath-laying ceremony.

    Archipolo was referring, of course, to the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks orchestrated by Osama bin Laden, who was killed Sunday by U.S. forces in his hideout in Pakistan.

    That conjured up fresh memories for the 44-year-old Archipolo, who lives just a few hundred yards from the World Trade Center site. On Thursday, he recalled that he was first alerted to the 9/11 attacks by his son,  who saw one of the planes strike a building from a window in their home.

    “This is a little closure in my life to remember the victims who died,” said Archipolo, who was carrying a large American flag he borrowed from his church. “(But) the nightmare is still there.

    “It’s 10 years, but we’re never going to be at peace. We’re never going to have that feeling where, ‘we’re safe. We’re always going to be on alert. … We know that we can be attacked at any time.”

    Still, he said Thursday’s gathering gave him a “good feeling.”

    “I’m proud to be here,” he said. “… Our freedom, they can’t take. It’s just nice to see people out here.”

    ******

     

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Malynda Irby, in yellow, reacts with the crowd on St. Peter's Church steps as President Barack Obama''s motorcade passes by at Ground Zero in New York City on Thursday. "I just really admire him as a leader," said Irby, who is visiting New York on a work trip from Buffalo. "I've never been so proud of any president in my life as I am of him."

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Irby, in yellow, is emotional after seeing President Obama waving and smiling toward her from the passing motorcade. Speaking about this week of Obama's presidency, Irby said,"This is just a high mark so far."

     

    ******

    President Barack Obama laid a wreath at ground zero in New York City to honor the people who lost their lives from the attacks of the World Trade Center on September 11th, 2001.

     

    From the pool report on the wreath-laying ceremony:

    Attendance at the wreath-laying ceremony was tightly restricted. Among those attending were New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Port Authority Chairman David Samson.  Uniformed officers from the FDNY, NYPD and Port Authority also stood at attention along the pathway to the site of the ceremony, the Survivor Tree. Other elected officials from the New York area and a group of 9/11 families also viewed the ceremony.  

    One of the youngest in attendance was 14-year-old Payton Wall.

    As is his habit, Obama read some of the letter sent to the president on Monday, including one from Wall. Payton lost her father, Glen James Wall, in the World Trade Center attack and wrote about how she has handled the loss.  

    So Obama asked that she be invited to the ceremony.  When White House staff called Payton's mother, she had no idea that Payton had written the president.  Payton, her mother, her sister and her friend (who also lost her father on 9/11) all were in attendance.

    The president is now meeting privately with family members of 9-11 victims.

     ******

    Out of sight of the crowd gathered outside, President Barack Obama soberly laid a wreath Thursday at New York's Ground Zero and declared, "When we say we will never forget, we mean what we say."

    Returning to the site where Osama bin Laden inflicted his greatest damage, the president closed his eyes and clasped his hands at the outdoor memorial where the twin towers of the World Trade Center once dominated the Manhattan skyline. He shook hands with 9/11 family members and others dressed in black at the site where the skyscrapers were brought down by planes commandeered by bin Laden's followers. Nearly 3,000 people were killed. (The Associated Press provided this reporting.)

    ******

    As President Barack Obama’s motorcade arrived at Ground Zero, the more than 1,000 people gathered outside screamed, jumped up and down, waved and flashed “V” signs with their fingers.

    Obama waved back from behind his limousine’s closed window.

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Carl Cumberbatch, left, and Adam O'Neil on St. Peter's Church steps, waiting to see the president's motorcade arrive at Ground Zero in New York City.

    A few people in the crowd held up signs referring to the killing of Osama bin Laden on Sunday by U.S. special operations forces . “Congratulations! America and the world celebrates,” “Mr. President, America thanks you!” read two of them.

    ******

     A crowd of several hundred people gathered outside Ground Zero Thursday in advance of President Barack Obama’s arrival, even though they weren’t going to be able to see the wreath-laying ceremony at the World Trade Center memorial site in memory of 9-11 victims.

    The ceremony was taking place near the center of the plot where the Twin Towers once stood, and the view from beyond the police barricades was blocked by cranes and other construction equipment.

    But members of the crowd said they felt it was important to be there nonetheless.

    Australian Peter Dunstan, 55, a civil servant from Perth, said he and his wife planned their vacation trip across the U.S. long before they knew about the ceremony, but made sure they were there for it after learning that Obama planned to honor the victims.

    “One of the reasons we’re here is Australians died in the World Trade Center,” he said.

    He described his emotions as “mixed, bittersweet … just the fact that people died unnecessarily.”

    Dunstan said the death of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden also was on his mind.

    “The perpetrator is dead … he can’t do us any more harm. I think it was justice done. He probably ranks up there with Hitler and his ilk. … I hope it puts the demise of al-Qaida a step closer.”

    Adam O’Neil, 70, a retired New Yorker, stood on a nearby corner, in front of St. Peter’s Church.

    O’Neil, originally from Trinidad, said one of his third cousins died in the subway station beneath the World Trade Center on 9-11.

    He said he decided to stand in front of the church so he could offer a prayer for him as Obama was laying the wreath.  He said that he was doing so on behalf of his entire family – 11 brothers and sisters still in Trinidad.

    “I think of him all the time,” he said of his cousin, adding that the memory leaves him “very sad.” “This feeling will be with me the rest of my life.”

    ******

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    Tyrone and Gayle Stallings took their great-nieces out of school to attend Thursday's wreath-laying ceremony at Ground Zero to commenorate the victims of the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

     

    More than an hour before President Barack Obama was due to arrive at Ground Zero to lay a wreath in memory of the victims of the Sept. 11 terror attacks, several hundred people were gathered outside police barricades in hopes of catching a glimpse of the president.

    Among them were Tyrone and Gayle Stallings from Roselle, N.J., who said they took their great-nieces, Brielle Campbell, 6, and Jaylaah Lee, 10, out of school to attend the ceremony at the site of the fallen World Trade Center.

    “I thought this was better history than a history class,” Gayle said. She said she hoped the girls would come away with the understanding “that the country is still together …  our spirit is alive.”

    She said she delivered the first piece of the lesson as they walked out of the subway, telling the girls that: “The souls of innocent people are in the building. It was full of life. Now we’re just coming through a hole.”

    Tyrone said that the death of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden on Sunday provided added impetus for the trip, adding, “Today feels good. … It did give some closure at least.”

    David Friedman / msnbc.com

    A flag seller works the crowd waiting outside the site of the fallen World Trade Center, more than an hour before President Barack Obama's arrival for a wreath-laying ceremony.

    But he echoed the words of U.S. counterterrorism officials in warning that the war on terror is not over. “We’re going to have to remain vigilant still ... probably forever,” he said.

    320 comments

    There is probably good reason Bush does not want to attend this. Now that the guy we should have been after all along has been brought to justice I think the United States should seek Damages form the Saudi Bin Laden Family. Our People and our Economy needs to be made whole again. We need to also De …

    Show more
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