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Explosive-laden Calif. home to be leveled (How is this not national news HOLY FUCK!)

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Gaborn

Member
ESCONDIDO, Calif. – Neighbors gasped when authorities showed them photos of the inside of the Southern California ranch-style home: Crates of grenades, mason jars of white, explosive powder and jugs of volatile chemicals that are normally the domain of suicide bombers.

Prosecutors say Serbian-born George Jakubec quietly packed the home with the largest amount of homemade explosives ever found in one location in the U.S. and was running a virtual bomb-making factory in his suburban neighborhood. How the alleged bank robber obtained the chemicals and what he planned to do with them remain mysteries.

Now authorities face the risky task of getting rid of the explosives. The property is so dangerous and volatile that that they have no choice but to burn the home to the ground this week in a highly controlled operation involving dozens of firefighters, scientists and hazardous material and pollution experts.

Authorities went into the home after Jakubec was arrested, but encountered a maze of floor-to-ceiling junk and explosives that included 13 unfinished shrapnel grenades.

Bomb experts pulled out about nine pounds of explosive material and detonated it, but they soon realized it was too dangerous to continue given the quantity of hazardous substances. A bomb-disposing robot was ruled out because of the obstacle of all the junk Jakubec hoarded.

That left only one option — burn the home down.

San Marcos Fire Chief Todd Newman acknowledges it is no small feat: Authorities have never dealt with destroying such a large quantity of dangerous material in the middle of a populated area, bordered by a busy eight-lane freeway.

"This is a truly unknown situation," said Neal Langerman, the top scientist at the safety consulting firm, Advanced Chemical Safety in San Diego. "They've got a very good inventory of what's in there. Do I anticipate something going wrong? No. But even in a controlled burn, things occasionally go wrong."

He said the burning of the house would provide "an amazing textbook study" for bomb technicians in the future.

San Diego County authorities plan to burn the home Wednesday but need near perfect weather, with no rain, no fog, and only light winds blowing toward the east, away from the city. They have warned residents in the danger zone that they will be given less than 24 hours notice to evacuate their homes for a day, and that nearby Interstate 15, connecting the area to San Diego, will be closed.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has declared a state of emergency, and hospitals will be on standby in case there is a rash of people getting sick, Newman said.

Some 40 experts on bombs and hazardous material from across the country and at least eight national laboratories are working on the preparations.

They have analyzed wind patterns to ensure the smoke will not float over homes beyond the scores that will be evacuated. They have studied how fast the chemicals can become neutralized under heat expected to reach 1800 degrees and estimate that could happen within 30 minutes, which means most of the toxins will not even escape the burning home, Newman said.

The county has installed 18 sensors that will measure the amount of chemicals in the smoke and send the data every two minutes to computers monitored by the fire and hazardous material departments.

Experts also have mapped how far the plume will travel and predict it will not go beyond Interstate 15. They calculate that if there is an explosion, it would probably throw the debris only about 60 feet.

"It certainly would not be a detonation that would level a neighborhood," Newman said.

Crews are clearing brush, wood fences and other debris that could cause the blaze to spread beyond the property in a region hit by wildfires in recent years. They also are building a 16-foot-high fire-resistant wall with a metal frame between the property and the nearest home, which will be coated with a fire-resistant gel.

Firefighters, who will remain 300 feet away, are placing hose lines in the front and back yards and will have a remote-controlled hose aimed at the nearest neighbor's home. Ambulances also will be parked nearby.

The Sheriff's Bomb Squad will ignite the fire remotely with a sequenced series of incendiary devices, Newman said.

Air pollution control experts have installed a portable weather station on a nearby fire station that will tell them immediately when the weather shifts, while authorities observe the burn from helicopters overhead.

Afterward, officials will monitor the air and groundwater for toxins. Hazardous material crews will be brought in to remove the top layer of dirt on the half-acre property, possibly digging down as much as 6 inches.

"It'll be a tedious process that will probably take a long time," Newman said.

It also will be expensive, he said, although no one knows yet how much the price tag could run or who will pay for it. They could not be reached for comment.

Prosecutors said the chemicals in the house include hexamethylene triperoxide diamine (HMTD), erythritol tetranitrate (ETN), and pentaerythitol tetranitrate (PETN), which was used in the 2001 airliner shoe-bombing attempt. The home has been declared a public nuisance and therefore the county does not have to reimburse the owners, who were renting the house to Jakubec.

Authorities also found a grenade mold, a bag with pieces of metal, a jar with ball bearings, three wireless doorbells with remotes, molds of human faces, handguns and a blue

Escondido police shirt, among other items, according to court records.

Jakubec, who is being held without bail, pleaded not guilty Monday to eight federal charges related to making destructive devices and robbing three local banks.

The federal grand jury alleges that Jakubec made nine detonators and 13 grenade hulls containing high explosives. They were discovered in the home after a gardener was injured in November in a blast that occurred when he stepped on chemical residue in the backyard, authorities said. Mario Garcia, 49, suffered eye, chest and arm injuries.
Little is known about Jakubec, a 54-year-old unemployed software consultant. His estranged wife has told the San Diego Union-Tribune that he became increasingly unstable since losing his job several years ago.

[Related: New challenge of homegrown terrorists]

His attorney, Michael Berg, told reporters outside the courthouse Monday that his client "is anxious to tell his side of the story" but now was not the right time. Berg said Jakubec wants to apologize to anyone who will be adversely affected by the destruction of the house and that he is upset he and his wife will lose everything inside the home.

Neighbors say the couple did not draw attention.

Since the incident, Patti Harrison has stared at the home on the knoll in front of her own and wondered what went through Jakubec's mind.

"When I saw those pictures at the meeting with authorities I thought 'oh my goodness, that's just crazy,'" she said.

Harrison and her husband bought their home in 1974, when it was surrounded by avocado groves. She is grateful that they have home insurance. For the evacuation, she plans to close the windows and pack her family's important records and treasured items.

"I've decided because God protected us all this time when we did not know what was there, that he will do the same now," she said.

She said she is praying for the best: "I would like all the homes to be here when they're done."

Story Here
 

RoboPlato

I'd be in the dick
"I would like all the homes to be here when they're done."
:lol Generally a good goal. The description of what's inside the place is absolutely insane. I hope there's video of this once they do it.
 

user_nat

THE WORDS! They'll drift away without the _!
So what happens to this George Jakubec guy?

I assume jail, but what kind of sentence would he get.
 

Celsior

Member
user_nat said:
So what happens to this George Jakubec guy?

I assume jail, but what kind of sentence would he get.
Probably charge him for having weapons of mass destruction, so life.
 

Jobiensis

Member
I better remember to keep checking on this before my bike ride to work. All those people flooding the surface streets is going to be a mess, might just have to stay home from work.
 

Dan

No longer boycotting the Wolfenstein franchise
Psh, they should find the real life version of the Hurt Locker dude, set up some cameras and turn it into a huge broadcasting event.
 

Busty

Banned
Dan said:
Psh, they should find the real life version of the Hurt Locker dude, set up some cameras and turn it into a huge broadcasting event.

Through in a stoned Joe Rogen and a tribute to Andre The Giant and we have ourselves a pay-per-view.
 
Dan said:
Psh, they should find the real life version of the Hurt Locker dude, set up some cameras and turn it into a huge broadcasting event.
So you want a reckless EOD guy that would get everyone killed IRL?
 
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:
I was wondering when someone was going to post that! Sigh the pains of discovering cool stories...but still being at work. :lol

Yeah Ive been reading about it in the paper all week.


If his name was Abdul George Mohhamed Jakubec you can be sure it would be front page of every website.
 

Dan

No longer boycotting the Wolfenstein franchise
CaptYamato said:
So you want a reckless EOD guy that would get everyone killed IRL?
Not really, definitely no. Though it'd be exciting in a magical consequence-free world.

But I wouldn't be surprised to see such television events happening 10 years down the line.
 

Sullen

Member
The fucked up part is that the county doesn't have to reimburse the people who owned they house. They were just renting it to this nut, and now it is going to be a complete loss.
 
Sullen said:
The fucked up part is that the county doesn't have to reimburse the people who owned they house. They were just renting it to this nut, and now it is going to be a complete loss.

Apparently it had been declared a nuisance, so I assume the owners just took the money and didn't really give a crap.
 
What kind of insurance/reimbursment will the owners (giving them the benefit of the doubt) have in this kind of situation? Kinda shitty to foot them the bill as they're victims too.
 
Manos: The Hans of Fate said:
Apparently it had been declared a nuisance, so I assume the owners just took the money and didn't really give a crap.
Declared a nuisance prior and independent to the discovery of the tenant?
 

Dan

No longer boycotting the Wolfenstein franchise
NotTheGuyYouKill said:
Wow. That's kinda... wow.

If it's really that bad, I'm surprised that guy didn't accidentally blow himself and the entire neighborhood up.
It seems it was, however, an accidental explosion that led to this discovery:
The federal grand jury alleges that Jakubec made nine detonators and 13 grenade hulls containing high explosives. They were discovered in the home after a gardener was injured in November in a blast that occurred when he stepped on chemical residue in the backyard, authorities said.
 

Akia

Member
I'm am so happy this guy was caught and that he wasn't from a Muslim country. Gosh the media would've had a field day with it. I could see the headlines now "Middle Eastern Terrorist Found with Explosives Stash"
 

kevm3

Member
Why isn't this huge, earth-shattering news to most of these stations?
Because he's not a dastardly, villainous brown man
 

Verano

Reads Ace as Lace. May God have mercy on their soul
to answer your question Gaborn..
ESCONDIDO, Calif.

Escondido means hidden bro.
 

Burger

Member
XiaNaphryz said:
There better be video coverage when the burn that thing down.

Can we get a camera from the 1990's that's recording onto an old VHS tape, zoom it in slightly too far and off centre and held and operated by a small child?
 
This guy is NOT a terrorist like Assange or Muslims are.

And when it is discovered that he was hoarding this stuff to defend against the changing country or socialism or the war against the Second Amendment or government or something, he'll be called a misunderstood patriot.

lolmerica
 

Imm0rt4l

Member
captmcblack said:
This guy is NOT a terrorist like Assange or Muslims are.

And when it is discovered that he was hoarding this stuff to defend against the changing country or socialism or the war against the Second Amendment or government or something, he'll be called a misunderstood patriot.

lolmerica

My sentiments exactly. Fucking sad.
 

DarkKyo

Member
captmcblack said:
This guy is NOT a terrorist like Assange or Muslims are.

And when it is discovered that he was hoarding this stuff to defend against the changing country or socialism or the war against the Second Amendment or government or something, he'll be called a misunderstood patriot.

lolmerica
You think Assange is a "terrorist"? Who is he terrorizing? Major corporations and governments? Pfft

Or are you just being ironic?
 

Jobiensis

Member
Dechaios said:
You think Assange is a "terrorist"? Who is he terrorizing? Major corporations and governments? Pfft

Or are you just being ironic?

Wait, you picked out the statement about Assange and not the statement about Muslims.
 

DarkKyo

Member
Jobiensis said:
Wait, you picked out the statement about Assange and not the statement about Muslims.
Obviously there is something problematic with that part of his post as well, but the muslim/terrorist-generalization thing is something that many US citizens have had set in their minds for some time so I figured it'd be old news to point that out. *shrug*
 

Jobiensis

Member
Dechaios said:
Obviously there is something problematic with that part of his post as well, but the muslim/terrorist-generalization thing is something that many US citizens have had set in their minds for some time so I figured it'd be old news to point that out. *shrug*

Yeah, well that's why I assumed (or hoped) the whole thing was sarcasm.
 

Funky Papa

FUNK-Y-PPA-4
Some crazy pictures

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I can see why not even the bomb squad dares to get there.
 

Binabik15

Member
Is a grenade mould used to form the exposives or was he running a metal smelting operation in his little bomb lab as well?

That´d be even crazier.

Edit: bah, pics make my question superfluous.
 
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