Tyler poison gas plot
The Tyler poison gas plot was an American domestic terrorism plan in Tyler, Texas, thwarted in April 2003 with the arrest of three individuals and the seizure of a cyanide gas bomb along with a large arsenal. Authorities had been investigating the white supremacist conspirators for several years and the case received little media coverage and limited attention in public from the government.
Conspirators
The three individuals were linked to white supremacist and anti-government groups. They were:- William Joseph Krar, born 1940, originally from Connecticut then Goffstown New Hampshire
- Judith L. Bruey, Krar's common-law wife
- Edward S. Feltus of Old Bridge, New Jersey, an employee of Monmouth County Department of Human Services Feltus was a member of the New Jersey Militia.
Investigation
Federal authorities had been observing Krar since at least 1995, when ATF agents investigated a possible plot to bomb government buildings, but Krar was not charged. In June 2001, police investigating a fire at Krar's Goffstown storage facility found guns and ammunition, but were persuaded this was legitimate as part of his business.Since the September 11 attacks, their attention was focused on Middle Eastern terrorist activities. They were only alerted to Krar's recent activities by accident when he mailed Feltus a package of counterfeit birth certificates from North Dakota, Vermont, and West Virginia, and United Nations Multinational Force and Observers and Defense Intelligence Agency IDs in January 2002. The package was mistakenly delivered to a Staten Island man who alerted police. In August 2002, FBI investigators spoke to Feltus, who admitted to being in a militia and to be storing weapons.
In January 2003, a Nashville state trooper stopped Krar in a routine traffic stop and found drugs, chemicals, false IDs and weapons in the car. Krar was arrested and the FBI were alerted. Krar was bailed and one month later an FBI lab reported that white powder found in the car was sodium cyanide; an arrest warrant was issued for Krar.
In April 2003, investigators found weapons, pure sodium cyanide and white supremacist material in a storage facility in Noonday, Texas rented by Krar and Bruey. More weapons were found at their Tyler, Texas home. The weapons included at least 100 other conventional bombs, machine guns, an assault rifle, an unregistered silencer, and 500,000 rounds of ammunition. The chemical stockpile seized included sodium cyanide, hydrochloric acid, nitric acid and acetic acid. The cyanide was in a device with acid that would trigger its release as a gas bomb.
Sentencing
On May 4, 2004, Krar was sentenced to 135 months in prison after he pleaded guilty to building and possessing chemical weapons. Bruey was sentenced to 57 months after pleading to "conspiracy to possess illegal weapons."As per a lookup at the Bureau of Prisons prisoner database on September 18, 2012, Krar died in prison on May 7, 2009, Bruey was released on May 30, 2008, and no information is available for Edward Feltus.