Anti-abortion 'Terrorist' Convicted in Anthrax Hoax
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, Dec. 4, 2003
PHILADELPHIA A self-described "terrorist" who told
jurors that abortion providers should be shot was convicted of
mailing fake anthrax to women's clinics to try to shut them down.
The federal jury found Clayton Waagner guilty on 51 of 53
counts, including the most serious charge, threatening to use a
weapon of mass destruction.
Waagner, who was once on the FBI's "10 Most Wanted" list,
could face decades in prison when he is sentenced. He is already
serving a 49-year term for car theft and weapons violations. No new
sentencing date was set.
The jury verdict, reached Wednesday after less than four hours
of deliberation, followed a trial in which Waagner
represented himself.
After the verdict, he shook hands with prosecutors and
told U.S. District Judge Anita Brody, "It was fun." He said
he intended to appeal.
In a rambling closing argument delivered hours earlier, Waagner
argued that the government had not proven its case but stopped
short of declaring himself innocent.
He told jurors he was "tickled" that someone had sent letters
containing death threats and white powder to hundreds of clinics in
24 states in 2001. He said only his abhorrence for killing
prevented him from doing "what I should have done: shooting them,
abortionists and clinic workers, in the head."
Waagner acknowledged he repeatedly confessed to sending the
letters, but suggested he might have been taking credit falsely for
an act he admired.
"Is my story true? That's for you to decide," he said.
Waagner was acquitted of two counts in which the government
claimed that he had posted a message on the Internet warning that he planned to kill clinic workers.
Prosecutors said there was no question Waagner was behind the
letters, sent at the same time of the anthrax attacks.
"This defendant threatened bombs, bullets and bioterrorism,"
said Justice Department attorney Sheila Berman. "When he did that,
he violated their sense of security. He violated their peace of
mind, and he violated federal law."
Waagner, 47, of Kennerdell, was awaiting sentencing on gun
charges when he escaped from prison in February 2001. He was on the
run for 10 months before he was recaptured near Cincinnati.
Authorities said evidence found in the stolen Mercedes he was
driving included copies of the death threats, the addresses of the
targeted clinics and a detailed log that included entries such as "mailed anthrax" and "faxed FBI bomb threat."
Waagner told jurors he had dedicated his life to disrupting abortion clinics.
"There is no question that I terrorized these people," Waagner
said. "Let there be no question, I was doing stuff out there to
shut down clinics."
But he said jurors should find it hard to believe that a ninth-grade
dropout such as himself could have written the letters.
To illustrate his point, he turned to his standby attorney as he
read one letter aloud and asked for help pronouncing the word
"malaise."
© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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