Posted on 12/19/2005 1:29:57 PM PST by CedarDave
Officials Fret Over Disappearance Of Explosives 150 Pounds Of Explosives Missing From Sandia-Affiliated Company
POSTED: 2:10 pm MST December 19, 2005 UPDATED: 2:17 pm MST December 19, 2005
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Officials discovered hundreds of pounds of explosives stolen in Albuquerque on Sunday.
One hundred fifty pounds of c4, 250 pound deta sheet, and 2,000 blasting caps were taken from a Sandia Labs employee's company.
Officials are very concerned about these thefts.
The items were stolen from a facility in Southwest Albuquerque.
Burglars apparently cut through steel bars to get at the goods.
C4 is a plastic explosive.
A deta sheet is another explosive that looks like a rubbery sheet of orange or green paper.
What makes deta sheets especially dangerous is that they can be hidden in books or letters. It cannot be spotted by a metal detector but are used by engineers for detonation.
Blasting caps are devices used to set off explosives.
If you know anything about the disappearance, please call police.
Copyright 2005 by TheNewMexicoChannel.com.
We develop technologies to sustain, modernize, and protect our nuclear arsenal, prevent the spread of weapons of mass destruction, defend against terrorism, protect our national infrastructures, ensure stable energy and water supplies, and provide new capabilities to our armed forces.
Our primary sponsors are the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration, the Department of Defense, and Department of Homeland Security. We also work with other government agencies, industry, and academic institutions to accomplish our missions in the following strategic areas:
Sandia's Science, Technology, and Engineering program conducts a large variety of R&D programs that support the five key areas above.
Sandia is making our rapidly changing world safer and more secure. All of our work is linked by a commitment to "science with the mission in mind."
Where are those located? The South Valley, West Mesa??
Cherry was famous for their fiber optic detonators. I wonder if that's what is missing.
Yikes!!
I suggest only 8 ounces in the middle of the bus. The compression wave will kill people within 30 feet.
This is a good discussion to have. The terrorists know this and have studied it. It's about time average Americans become aware of this stuff and keep their eyes open and take the headphones off.
Lot's of possibilities....if it was off the DOD/DOE property it had minimum non alarmed dual padlock security. If it was on the site and was a regular storage site for the conttractors office aka Cherry Eng then it had a facility license issued that reviewed it's storage through sandia explosive safety and USAF base explosive safety EOD , Fire Department, Security Forces etc etc .....
Until location is known it's all a guess !
I will suggest that folks understand this may NOT be a C-4 theft and just a detasheet theft as detasheet is classed as C-1, C-2, C-3 and C-4 in grade/strenght. I would suggest that a presstitute may have got this confused.
I know Chris Cherry as he was a trainer guru at Indianhead and on the DOE ARG and DOD IND teams (improvised Nuke devices). He was also the guy the FiBi's had dismantle the Unabombers cabin full of boobytraps. He's a good guy ....
Jeez, I didn't even think...... I'm an old man FF, sometimes it takes a little while for the noggin to kick in. Good point and well understood . Thanks, and Merry Christmas.
Also from your link:
"Sandia is a government-owned/contractor operated (GOCO) facility. Lockheed Martin manages Sandia for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration. We seek collaborative partnerships on emerging technologies that support our mission."
Ummmm....maybe these explosives are what made that plane go boom off the coast of Florida? (tighting screws on tin hat here..lol) This really is disturbing. Why isn't the media covering this instead of the plane crash?
No kidding, BobS.
"Joe Six Pack" needs to wake up. The WOT cannot be won by being PC.
Wow. Thanks for the information on that. I didn't think about the fact that it could be just a detasheet theft.
South of Manzano Mt old WSA on the road back to Coyote Canyon is the Applications labs. The WSA with the sandia munitions is just SW of the USAF conventional dumb and dues east of the small arms range.
Unsure where Cherry Eng may have been given space and office to work. I would suggest it's outside of a frag potential area.....
Never heard of it, but Geez Louise, we're talking some serious juice here....
The ballpark figures are 5 kilovolt and 1 microfarad rating for the capacitor, and the peak current required ranges between 500 and 1000 amperes.
A bit bigger than a MRE heater in the dumpster....
Just a SWAG on my part of course....C-1 thru C-4 is just a few of the ratings it carries.....
Stay safe !
So glad that this info was released, got to give the them a heads up.
"One hundred fifty pounds of c4, 250 pound deta sheet, and 2,000 blasting caps were taken from a Sandia Labs employee's company."
SOMEONE is in alot of trouble.
I concur. I thought every red blooded American Boy grew up making his own (better) fireworks, building muzzleloaders, and joined the Service knowing how to calculate a shaped charge, or whip up a freestyle satchel charge before he got out of AIT, from the toys in hand.
Seems this is 'evil knowledge' only to be known by our betters and our enemies.
Well I do know that if it is just all C-4 rated detasheet then it's even worse. I would be more inclined to go with a SWAG from you on this anyway.
It is something to be concidered for sure.
GERRY YONAS addresses session announcing the opening of the Bi-National Sustainability Laboratory at Santa Teresa, N.M.
Download 300dpi JPEG image, binational-yonas.jpg, 676K (Media are welcome to download/publish this image with related news stories.)
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. After four years of preparation, the BiNational Sustainability Laboratory announced itself ready for business in a 4,000-square-foot facility in Santa Teresa, N.M., a short ride east from El Paso and a few miles from the Mexican border.
The two-hour opening ceremony on Nov. 18 was attended by approximately 125 dignitaries, entrepreneurs, and researchers.
This will be a wonderful opportunity for collaborative technical efforts to enhance border security, said Sandia National Laboratories vice president Gerry Yonas, who was the first to envision a border laboratory and who led the fight for its existence. This is a perfect opportunity to follow up on work with Canada and Mexico to foster a continental approach in dealing with terrorism.
The BNSL a collaboration initiated and championed by Sandias Advanced Concept Group is financially supported by the United States, Mexico, and the State of New Mexico. Sandia is a National Nuclear Security Administration laboratory.
The general purpose of the fledgling enterprise is to change the U.S.-Mexican border from a political trouble spot to a necklace of research centers stretching from the Gulf Coast to the Pacific. Success would be defined by the number of research ideas its personnel could morph into functioning, profit-making companies, with better paying jobs on both sides of the border the hoped-for result.
Border security is an obvious possible project. Other projects of current interest include environmental and water technologies, advanced materials for petroleum processing, and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS).
The U.S. Economic Development Administration of the Dept. of Commerce and Mexicos CONACyT [Mexican National Council of Science and Technology, a cabinet-level group that reports directly to President Vicente Fox] contributed initial funding of $400,000 each, and the State of New Mexicos Economic Development Department, $100,000. Ten states on both sides of the border have expressed interest in taking part in the project, as have U.S. and Mexican national laboratories, research universities and centers, and businesses.
Secretary of New Mexicos Economic Development Dept. Rick Homans said, Today takes us from a concept on paper to a project housed in a building a huge step forward.
A spokesperson for the Mexican National Council of Science and Technology (CONACyT) said in Spanish that people around the world are interested in copying this model; even though we have only just started, it is a dream shared. Its like we are on the field in a stadium and they are looking at us from many parts of the stadium, from many parts of the world. We hope this will change the way borders are looked at.
The BNSL was envisioned initially as occupying a large building a shining laboratory on a hill, or at least, on the border in which Mexican and U.S. researchers would work on the knotty problems that might one day cause enmity between neighbors. Solutions would include better border crossing sensors and arrangements, more efficient use of water, research into areas of joint interest like crop development in arid regions, and a central location where Mexican and U.S. researchers could share cultures.
This has evolved into a vision of a main lab in Santa Teresa, says Yonas, and a subsidiary string of small research centers that the BNSL would help fund. These would provide training and cross-border legal and patent expertise, as well as some laboratory space, and bring together researchers in government, universities, and private industry to create marketable goods that will bring to life and make more secure the somewhat desolate border region.
In both versions, the BNSL is expected to provide business planning, mentoring, incubation, marketing techniques, and aid in morphing technological ideas into developed products
We envision ourselves as an engine of research excellence for sustained economic development [east and west along] the US-Mexico border, said BNSL president Paul Maxwell.
Yonas, who spoke briefly, described himself as a card-carrying physicist and dreamer and compared the BNSLs task to that of sherpas who accompany tourist mountain climbers to the top of Mt. Everest over and over without recognition.
The BNSLs activities will require steady, careful, sherpa mountain climbing, he said.
Ping me if ya hear more on this please !
Ya'll Stay safe !
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