On the heels of a March 21 guilty plea in the Southern District of New York, so-called MAGABomber
Cesar Altieri Sayoc wrote a somewhat lengthy letter to the judge that calls into question said plea. The Florida man wrote to Judge
Jed S. Rakoff to say that he was just following his attorney’s advice when he admitted that he knew the devices he mailed would hurt people and didn’t really mean it.
Judge Rakoff not only acknowledged on Tuesday that he received the letter, he also gave the the defendant and the government up to one week to send letters of their on “whether they believe it is necessary for further action to be taken at this time.” The judge also included a copy of Sayoc’s letter, which you can read below.
Sayoc went back to what happened at the plea hearing, when he said the judge asked, “Do you knowingly know the devices would hurt or harm anyone?”
“Your honor, my instructed me to say yes, but in my heart I wanted to say no,” he claimed. “I didn’t have a full understanding of what to say.”
“I answered under extreme emotional circumstances and not sound comprehending circumstances,” he continued. “I realized it was the wrong thing to say because under no circumstances my intent was to hurt or harm anyone. The intention was to only intimidate & scare.”
Sayoc further claimed that the devices were “not ever meant to work” or harm anyone. In closing, he expressed “remorse.”
Sayoc pleaded guilty on Thursday to sending bombs to perceived enemies of President
Donald Trump.
Targets included former Democratic presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton, actor
Robert de Niro, billionaire philanthropist
George Soros, and former President
Barack Obama, prosecutors say. The defendant’s social media activity showed he was a huge Trump fan. He
seemed to subscribe to conspiracy theories that teenage gun control advocate
David Hogg was a “paid protester.” He also endorsed anti-Semitic conspiracy theories about Soros.
Most targets were Democratic politicians, but all were perceived to be Trump critics. Only some, like
de Niro, made their criticisms in colorful terms, but all were known, one way or another, to be opponents of the president’s policies. Trump has consistently called CNN’s coverage–often coverage he doesn’t like–“fake news.” Sayoc was clearly responsive to those comments, as his van displayed a “CNN sucks” sticker.
Other recipients of packages included: former President
BillClinton, former CIA Director
John Brennan, CNN, former Attorney General
Eric Holder, Rep.
Maxine Waters, former Vice President
Joe Biden, Sen.
Cory Booker,
Debbie Wasserman Schultz, and former Director of National Intelligence
James Clapper. There were also reports of suspicious packages sent to billionaire
Tom Steyer and Sen.
Kamala Harris.
Sayoc, a registered Republican and
bodybuilder, was known in Florida for driving a white van covered in pro-Trump stickers. Those who knew him said he held violent, reactionary views. The supervisor of a pizza restaurant Sayoc used to work at told
the Washington Post that Sayoc voiced genocidal attitudes toward black, Jewish, and gay people.
In his letter, Sayoc notably referred to the devices he admitted to mailing as “hoax” and “decoy devices.”
That’s not what FBI Director
Christopher Wray said w
hen he announced Sayoc’s arrest. In fact, he specifically said “these are not hoax devices.”
“We can confirm that 13 IED’s were sent to various individuals across the country. Each device consisted of roughly of six inches of PVC pipe, a small clock, battery, and energetic material, potential explosives and material that give off heat and energy through a reaction to heat, shock, or friction,” Wray said. “Though we are still analyzing the devices in our laboratory, these are not hoax devices.”
https://lawandcrime.com/high-profil...-believe-devices-he-mailed-would-hurt-people/