Posted on 03/15/2021 1:31:49 PM PDT by ransomnote
PHOENIX, Ariz. – Jared Trent Atkins, 27, of Phoenix, Arizona, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge John J. Tuchi to 15 years in prison, followed by twelve years of supervised release. Atkins previously pleaded guilty to attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction.
In the early morning hours of April 28, 2019, Atkins entered a gas station in Phoenix, Arizona, and stabbed the night clerk working inside. Atkins then fled the gas station and drove to his place of employment, where he stole three radiological devices containing Iridium-192 along with the tools to open the devices and expose the radiological material. Approximately one hour after the stabbing and theft, Atkins set fire to a vehicle at a Mesa car dealership.
Atkins texted his co-workers to inform them he had the radiological devices. He warned his co-workers to stay home until the devices were found. Security footage from Scottsdale Fashion Square Mall shows Atkins driving on Camelback Road adjacent to the Mall. Atkins later told the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) he intended to have a “last stand” and considered conducting it at the Mall.
Atkins then drove to Mt. Ord in the Payson area and called his family to say goodbye. Atkins opened one of the radiological devices. Atkins planned to commit suicide by irradiation, knowing he would harm anyone who tried to stop or arrest him. For unknown reasons, however, Atkins closed the radiological device and returned to Phoenix.
Later the same morning, Atkins drove back to his apartment, with the radiological devices and the bloody knife he used to stab the gas station clerk. The Phoenix Police Department and FBI agents responded to the scene, but Atkins barricaded himself inside his apartment. After roughly two hours of a standoff and working with a negotiator, Atkins agreed to surrender and was taken into custody without further incident. Law enforcement safely recovered all three radiological devices, including all stolen radiological material, from Atkins’s vehicle.
On April 28, 2019, Atkins was arrested on state charges in Maricopa County. He subsequently pleaded guilty to Aggravated Assault and Arson of Property, and was sentenced to three and a half years in prison. Atkins’s federal sentence will run consecutive to his state sentence.
“Today’s sentence sends a powerful message of deterrence to would-be criminal actors who plan to weaponize industrial technologies,” said Acting United States Attorney Anthony Martin. “As was done in this case, we stand ready to work alongside our federal and state partners to respond quickly to any threats to public safety.”
“This case is a prime example of how the FBI and our partners come together to keep our communities safe,” said Sean Kaul, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Phoenix Field Office. “From beginning to end, this investigation was truly a team effort. I commend the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force and the Phoenix Police Department, which did significant work on this investigation from the day of the incident, to the weeks, and months that followed. I also commend the Phoenix Stabilization Task Force members, who played an important role in this case by finding and successfully securing the radiological material.”
The FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force and the Phoenix Police Department investigated the case, with support and assistance from the FBI Phoenix Stabilization Task Force, Laboratory, and Intelligence Analysts.
This case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kristen Brook of the District of Arizona, and Celeste Corlette and Jason Denney of the National Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section.
CASE NUMBER: CR-20-00344-PHX-JTT
RELEASE NUMBER: 2021-112_Atkins
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For more information on the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Arizona, visit http://www.justice.gov/usao/az/
Follow the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Arizona, on Twitter @USAO_AZ for the latest news.
He went postal.
Workplace related violence < \Obama >
Ir 192 is really not that dangerous.
https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/radiation/emergencies/isotopes/iridium.htm
Exposure to Ir-192 can increase the risk for cancer because of its high-energy gamma radiation. External exposure to Ir-192 can cause burns, acute radiation sickness, and even death. Internal exposure could occur only if a person were to swallow one of the Ir-192 seeds or pellets. Internal exposure from Ir-192 could cause burns in the stomach and intestines if the high-energy industrial pellets are swallowed. Ir-192 seeds and pellets would be excreted in the feces. Long-term health effects of internal exposure would depend on how strong the seeds or pellets were and how long they stayed in the body.
Emailing your coworkers, attacking a gas station attendant and burning up a car dealership is what you do when you’re trying to keep a low profile after stealing radiological devices.
Not exactly a terrorist weapon.
Not exactly a terrorist weapon.
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I think release of radiological content would impact the public peace - you can’t see it but it’s there.
Depending upon the amount of ir192 it could be fatal in minutes.
Most industrial “xray” is actually performed with ir192 sources.
Over the years there have been accidents and occasional intentionally caused incidents with industrial strength sources.
If you search a person will find the after reports of these, going back into the 50s.
Anything that can create an image after traveling 6 to 10 feet and penatrating an inch or more of steel had the ability to damage biological objects.
Ok, I did some interweb searching, he gained access to Geotechnical density meters. Those are extremely low level sources used in measuring density of soil and asphalt.
The source is pretty well encapsulated, and so low of level the NRC doesn’t require much in the way of monitoring to use them. It would take a very long time of suitcase contact, to even be over one max. Level of exposure, and even longer before one has enough radiation to become sick.
Which explains how he gained access to them without anyone else being notified.
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