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Friday,
November 30, 2001
Suspected
anthrax hoaxer one of the FBIs most wanted fugitives
By
Karen Gullo
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
Clayton Lee Waagner, one of the FBIs most-wanted
fugitives, is a suspect in a string of anthrax hoax letters
sent to abortion clinics, Attorney General John Ashcroft announced
Thursday.
Ashcroft
said the FBI had obtained information over the Thanksgiving
holiday indicating Waagner had claimed responsibility for
sending more than 280 letters to clinics across the United
States.
The FBI considers Waagner extremely dangerous. He has
survival skills and may be heavily armed, Assistant
FBI Director Rueben Garcia said.
Ashcroft
called Waagner a self-described anti-abortion warrior.
Scores
of family-planning clinics in at least 12 states have received
letters containing anthrax threats, according to officials
of feminist and abortion-rights organizations.
The Feminist Majority Foundation said more than 450 clinics
and advocacy organizations received letters in envelopes carrying
white powder and letters signed by the Army of God.
None of
the powder sent to the clinics has tested positive for anthrax.
Waagner,
44, an escaped inmate from Illinois, was placed on the FBIs
Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list in September.
He escaped
in February from a Clinton, Ill., jail where he was awaiting
sentencing on federal firearms and auto theft convictions.
He also is being sought for a Pennsylvania bank robbery, firearms
violations in Tennessee and a carjacking in Mississippi.
Police
said that on Sept. 7 Waagner abandoned a car on a highway
in Memphis after colliding with a tractor-trailer. A pipe
bomb was found in the car, along with anti-abortion literature
and weapons.
Hours
later, a man believed to be Waagner committed a carjacking
in Tunica, Miss., some 40 miles southwest of Memphis, authorities
said. A casino there was evacuated after a tip that he was
there.
He had
been arrested in September 1999 after entering Illinois with
his wife and eight children in a stolen Winnebago, which had
four stolen handguns under the drivers seat, authorities
said.
During
his trial, Waagner testified that he had watched abortion
clinics for months, stocking up weapons after God asked him
to be my warrior and kill doctors who provide
abortions.
In June,
abortion clinics were warned after someone purporting to be
Waagner posted an Internet message threatening to kill employees
of abortion providers.
That
same month, a federal grand jury charged Waagner with robbing
a bank just outside Harrisburg, Pa., in May.
The FBI
is offering a reward of $50,000 for information leading to
Waagners arrest.
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