Posted on 06/05/2002 9:52:05 PM PDT by Prodigal Daughter
FBI investigates Army imposter
2002-06-05
By The Associated Press
The FBI is investigating a man who called himself an Army captain and looked through a briefcase and laptop computer belonging to a victim of last month's deadly interstate bridge collapse.
The man, wearing fatigues and a beret, showed up within two hours of the Interstate 40 collapse and told the mayor he was in charge. He identified himself as Capt. William Clark.
Mayor Jewell Horne said Wednesday that the man told her Army Capt. Andrew Clements had died in the river and that his briefcase and laptop were in the water. A fisherman found the items the day of the collapse and gave them to a Webbers Falls police officer.
The officer gave the items to Clark, who took them and went through them, the mayor said. He brought the briefcase and computer to city hall later that day and asked the mayor to lock them in a safe.
He wanted the key, but Horne said she refused to give it to him.
"He kept trying to say that he was in charge," Horne said. "I finally looked at him and said, 'No, you're not. Until the governor declares martial law, you are not in charge in this town.'"
The mysterious man left Webbers Falls on Monday night, she said.
The mayor said it was eerie that the man knew Clements was among the victims even before his body was recovered.
"But he was correct," she said. "There was a Capt. Clements. There was a briefcase and there was a computer."
Clements, 35, of Woodbridge, Va., was among 14 people killed May 26 when a barge hit the Interstate 40 bridge, causing it to topple into the Arkansas River.
Horne said she was so busy answering phones and directing rescuers that she "didn't have time to think a lot" or check the man's credentials. Two volunteers from the Tulsa medical examiner's office eventually called authorities to check on him, she said.
The FBI, the Army and police in Van Buren and Fort Smith, Ark., are looking for the man, said FBI spokesman Gary Johnson. He said the man obtained goods and services by impersonating a rescue worker.
"It's certainly a very intense investigation," Johnson said.
Authorities are looking into whether the man stayed at a hotel in Van Buren, Ark., free under the auspices of taking part in the rescue operation.
The man also told an Associated Press reporter his name was Capt. William Clark and that he was from Fort Carson, Colo. The fort has no record of the man, said spokeswoman Kim Tisor.
Too many variables for that. Timing the Captains car against currents ect. But it does sound likely Captain Clements was a courrier and being tailed. The barge collision was an accident and Captain Clark {?} moved in. For what purpose though and by whom would be the question. It's easy enough to put a pinger on a car and follow it at a safe distance.
And maybe he wanted to return the computer because he already purged the information that he wanted to remain a secret, and he figured that a sanitized computer would be less suspicious than no computer at all?
One thing seems certain he knew who was in that car. Most police and rescue services will not announce names over a radio of victims. That likely rules out someone with a police scanner unless it was an analog cell phone call that was intercepted and the alleged Captain Clark was a mental case who just likes to respond to emergencies.
He wouldn't under that type of senerio of hearing a police report. Which says Clements possibly was a courier and either had a following escort or an unfriendly following him.
I just found this on a Google search for "bridge collapse Oklahoma":
USMA at West Point website has an article on the middle of the page: Graduate dies in Oklahoma bridge collapse: 31 MAY) Capt. Andrew Clements, 35, a 1991 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, was among those killed Sunday in the I-40 bridge collapse in Webbers Falls, Okla.
But the link is broken! The other links on the page aren't broken!
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