Times Publishing Company
St. Petersburg Times
December 22, 1989, Friday, City Edition
SECTION: NATIONAL; Pg. 6A
LENGTH: 593 words
HEADLINE: Officials check letters sent to Bomb targets
SOURCE: Baltimore Sun
DATELINE: BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
BODY:
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - Investigators are examining letters sent recently
to some of the targets of mailed
bombs this week to determine if they
come from the sender of the
bombs.
Allen Whitaker, the FBI agent in charge here, said at a news
conference Thursday that some of the letters received since the
bombings could be interpreted as claims of responsibility.
Four mailed
bombs were received in three states between Saturday
and Tuesday. Two exploded, killing a federal judge in Birmingham and a
lawyer in Savannah, Ga.
"There have been followup letters sent since the receipt of the
Bomb parcels," U.S. Postal Inspector Leo Shatzel confirmed in Atlanta.
"It appears these letters may have been sent by the individual who
mailed the parcels."
Investigators would not divulge details of the letters, who
received them or what they said. Whitaker said
"there are numerous
communications, written and telephonic, that are being evaluated."
Shatzel described the letters as
"threatening."
The FBI offices in Birmingham, Jacksonville and Atlanta have set up
local telephone lines seeking tips from the public that might help
their investigation. The U.S. Postal Inspection Service has also set up
a tip line in Atlanta.
The establishment of the phone lines suggested that
investigators
still are searching for a breakthrough in the inquiry. Whitaker said an
informed tip might provide a shortcut to the task of sifting through
the
"enormous amount of information that we have to evaluate, manage
and act upon."
Investigators are concentrating on finding links between the
apparent targets in the bombings, all of whom had at least some
involvement in civil rights issues.
The first
Bomb exploded Saturday in the home of U.S. 11th Circuit
Judge
Robert Vance, killing the 58-year-old jurist and seriously
injuring his wife. Robert Robinson, 42, a Savannah alderman and lawyer
for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, was
killed Monday when he opened a package at his office.
A
Bomb mailed to the federal appeals court in Atlanta was detected
and disarmed Monday. Another, addressed to the
NAACP legal staff in
Jacksonville, was disarmed Tuesday.
FBI agents have interviewed lawyers associated with cases that had
been before the federal appeals court. They also have identified four
desegregation cases that went before the court. Vance was part of a
ruling panel in a case involving desegregation issues in Jacksonville.
Robinson was involved in another case, involving desegregation efforts
in Savannah.
Investigators also are looking at a case in which black plaintiffs
are to be awarded $ 3.75-million for their claims of employment
discrimination at Warner Robins Air Force Base.
At least one of the
Bomb packages bore a return address of Warner
Robins, a small community 10 miles south of Macon, Ga.
The FBI has said that none of the people identified in the return
addresses is involved in the crimes. They also have concluded that at
least three, and perhaps all, of the
Bomb parcels were mailed in
central Georgia.
The proximity of the mailings has suggested the crimes may be the
work of one person, and not an organized group.