Arrested
Yesterday in
Tucson, federal agents arrested
animal-rights
militant Rodney Coronado on charges that during an August 2003
"revolution
summer" event in San Diego, he
taught a room full of activists how to make incendiary
devices out of common household materials. Coronado offered a similar
firebomb-building demonstration earlier in 2003 during a "Conference
on Organized Resistance" held at American University in Washington, DC (click here to see
video).
Coronado may be headed for long-term federal custody, but at
least he'll feel right at home. He spent 57 months in prison during the 1990s
for his role in an Animal Liberation
Front arson that destroyed a research facility at Michigan State
University. In a 2004 interview with The State News in Lansing, an
unrepentant Coronado said "I wish I
could do it again ... I have absolutely no regrets."
Court records in the Michigan State case show that
People
for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) president
Ingrid Newkirk
"arranged ... days before the MSU arson occurred" (emphasis in the
original) for Coronado to send her overnight packages containing stolen
documents from inside the lab and a videotape of the arson fire being started
(click
here and see page 9).
Coronado never implicated PETA or Newkirk in court.
PETA gave him
over $70,000 (including a $25,000 forgiven "loan" to Coronado's father) for
his unsuccessful legal defense. In a 2003 interview with ABC's 20/20,
Newkirk
defended Coronado, insisting that he is "a fine young man and a school
teacher." (Click
here for video.)
And there's no doubt he'll be "a fine young cellmate," too.
In a 2005 interview with The San Diego Union-Tribune, Coronado
defended his habit of expressing himself publicly with milk jugs and kerosene.
"You're damn right when you say I've shown people how to make a
firebomb," he told the Union-Tribune. "I've done my time for my
crimes, and I should be able to talk about them. We are simple people. We are
an organization using simple tools."
"We" refers to the
Earth Liberation Front -- a
PETA-funded
terrorist group. According to the Associated Press, "Daniel Dzwilewski, special
agent in charge of the San Diego FBI office, alleged that
Coronado was a national leader of the radical Earth Liberation
Front." Dzwilewski told reporters yesterday: "America will not tolerate terrorists ... Whether you were born
here or abroad, we will not stand back and allow you to terrorize our
communities under the guise of free speech."
Amen to that. Rodney Coronado may spend 25 years in prison
if he is convicted. He may also receive 7-1/2 years in prison in April, when he
is sentenced for sabotaging a federal hunt of mountain lions that threatened
Arizona families.
Of course, Coronado could beat the rap -- particularly if
PETA opens its checkbook again and hires a top-flight attorney. Will PETA pony
up part of its $29 million
income to defend the indefensible again? Time will tell. But in the
meantime, Coronado is off the streets and behind bars. One down, many to go.
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