Long Island Man Threw IED Onto New York Subway Tracks
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Michael Gann, 55, of Inwood, New York, was charged with manufacturing at least seven of the explosive devices found hidden on the subway and rooftops. Jay Clayton, U.S. attorney for the Southern
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NewsNation on MSNMan indicted for allegedly planting homemade IEDs in ManhattanA New York man was indicted Tuesday on multiple federal charges for allegedly attempting to use improvised explosive devices in Manhattan, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York.
Video Quality Speed 00:00 00:36 Michael Gann was charged after manufacturing at least seven explosive devices. (TNND) Michael Gann, 55, was charged with manufacturing at least seven of the explosive devices found hidden on the subway and rooftops.
Michael Gann, 55, of Inwood, New York, was charged with manufacturing at least seven improvised explosive devices, prosecutors said on July 22.
Waveland Golf Course in Des Moines is closed as Des Moines police investigate an improvised explosive device (IED) that was found. According to Sgt. Paul Parizek with the
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Despite those efforts to pave a safe path for the infantry, Hamas managed to place newly laid IEDs in the area where the IDF infantry would later pass through. The five IDF soldiers who were killed and the 14 soldiers who were wounded on Monday in Beit Hanun by Hamas were ambushed because the terrorist group managed to place improvised explosive devices (IED) there in between air force and artillery barrages,
The IED has become a widely used weapon for insurgents in Iraq for one reason: it works. The IED's effectiveness as a weapon system largely derives from its ability to detonate in close proximity ...
Des Moines Police’s Bomb Squad Unit responded to Waveland Golf Course Thursday afternoon after a golfer found an improvised explosive device. “We sent some
The IED attached to the drone has led some analysts to conclude drug cartels may now be using the technologies to attack enemies on either side of the U.S.-Mexico border.
A man accused of building explosive devices and stashing them on Manhattan rooftops and the Williamsburg Bridge has been indicted on weapons-related charges, authorities say. Michael Gann allegedly made at least seven improved explosive devices (IEDs) using precursor chemicals — chemicals that can be combined into an explosive mixture — that he bought online.