Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. with Dr. Benjamin Spock and Bernard Lee at Chicago's anti-war march in March of 1967.
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latimes.com
Spokane bomb casualties could have been severe, FBI says
The device was found on the route of Spokane's annual Unity March, held on Martin Luther King Day.
By Abby Sewell, Los Angeles Times
9:38 PM PST, January 18, 2011
A "potentially deadly" explosive device that could have caused severe casualties was found along the intended route of a Martin Luther King Day march in Spokane, Wash., half an hour before the event was to begin, the FBI said Tuesday.
The annual Unity March was rerouted after city workers noticed a black Swiss Army backpack apparently abandoned on a bench about 9:25 a.m. Monday, said Frank Harrill, the supervisory senior resident agent in the FBI's Seattle division.
The device inside "clearly would have had the potential to inflict multiple casualties, injury and death, to humans," Harrill said in an interview Tuesday. He declined to describe the device.
The FBI said the backpack also contained two T-shirts — one from the 2010 Stevens County Relay for Life, an American Cancer Society fundraiser, and the other reading, "Treasure Island Spring 2009."
About 1,500 people marched along the new route without incident while the Spokane Explosives Disposal Unit neutralized the device.
No one has claimed responsibility or offered a motive, Harrill said. But he called the connection with the King Day march "inescapable."
"We're treating this as an act of domestic terrorism," he said.
The FBI, which is leading the investigation, is offering a $20,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible.
The area has a history of white supremacist activity. Until 2001, the Aryan Nations was headquartered in nearby Hayden Lake, Idaho. As recently as April 2009, the Spokesman-Review newspaper reported that residents of a Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, subdivision had found Aryan Nations recruitment letters on their lawns.
Ivan Bush, who works for Spokane Public Schools and has helped organize the King Day march for more than 20 years, said the attempted attack pained him.
"Man, that's a sad testament," Bush told the Associated Press. "Here we are in the 21st century and these types of things are still happening. It just hurts."
abby.sewell@latimes.com
Copyright © 2011, Los Angeles Times
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