Dry Ice Bombs are deadly serious devices, possibly staged as "curiosity" or "prank" to cover up terrorist attacks or attacks intended to cause panic and terror if not injury and damage.
October 14, 2013 Dry Ice Bomb Shuts Down LAX Termina
May 28, 2013 Christian Isaiah Barnes Disneyland Dry Ice Bomb
2002 a woman picked up a bottle at a gas station convenience store, he said. It exploded and “lacerated her hand:”
1992 Los Angeles a liquor store operator was cleaning up when he saw a glass bottle, picked it up, and it exploded. The fragments “slit his throat,” Robi said, and “he bled to death.”
Dry Ice Bomb Shuts Down LAX Terminal
October 14, 2013 Dry Ice Bomb Shuts Down LAX Terminal At Los Angeles International Aiport, terminal 2 was closed after a bomb constructed from dry ice and a 20 oz plastic bottle exploded in an employee-restricted restroom at about 7 p.m, delaying about four flights until 8:45 p.m. after the LAPD bomb squad investigated and cleared the scene. The next day another bomb went off in a restricted employee bathroom. Airport police and a bomb squad cleared the bomb and two other unexploded bottles around 9:45 p.m. Detectives from the Los Angeles Police Department's Criminal Conspiracy Section were investigating how the bombs were placed in security areas, and the federal FBI is assisting, but investigators don't believe the incident is linked to terrorism. On October 15, 28-year-old Dicarlo Bennett was arrested. who had studied at Santa Monica College and was a former ramp supervisor for Servisair, an airport contractor. Police focused on airport employees, and LAPD chief stated "Whether you think this is a harmless prank or a way to disrupt operations at the airport, it won't matter, You will go to jail."
DRY ICE BOMBS HAVE BEEN DEADLY, COPS SAY IN WAKE OF LAX ARREST LA weekly
DENNIS ROMERO OCTOBER 16, 2013 The man accused of placing at least three dry ice explosive devices around LAX did it out of “curiosity,” police said at a news conference today In 1992, the detective said, a liquor store operator was cleaning up when he saw a glass bottle, picked it up, and it exploded. The fragments “slit his throat,” Robi said, and “he bled to death.” In 2002 a woman picked up a bottle at a gas station convenience store, he said. It exploded and “lacerated her hand:”
Can a harmless prank have the same effect as "real" terrorism like a driver who does not stop, but does not actually kill anybody in a DC police chase, or a man who delays trains for hours by waving a knife? And why is a person with employee access doing this? The mother of "airport boy" also works at the airport.
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