religious JW threatens with anthrax

by Dogpatch 3 Replies latest jw friends

  • Dogpatch
    Dogpatch

    This was a news article dated October 17th, but I didn't see it posted so here goes:

    A "very religious" Jehovah's Witness in Norwalk Connecticut, facing bankruptcy and realizing that Armageddon wasn't coming soon enough, decided to speed it up by calling 911 and threatening to "dust" government buildings with anthrax.

    Norwalk man detained for threat
    A Norwalk resident is still in custody tonight after allegedly threatening, in a 911 call, to "dust" court buildings in Fairfield County yesterday.

    The term "dust" apparently refers to anthrax or some other biological agent.

    Officials say 70-year-old Frederick Forcellina said he would also target railroads and schools. Forcellina was quickly arrested and now faces serious charges. News 12 Connecticut's Kelcey Kintner is live at the Bridgeport Federal Court House with more.

    Tom Forcellina will have a bond hearing here tomorrow to determine whether he will be released on bail. He faces a maximum of life in prison and a $250,000 fine.

    This whole case stems from a 911 call he allegedly made yesterday from Fairfield.

    ”I've been well educated in your country. My people have been bombed. Now we're doping the silent warfare. This is not a hoax. I'm telling you three of your symbols of justice, the court buildings in Stamford on Hoyt Street, the court building in Norwalk and the one on Lafayette in Bridgeport have been dusted. It's a silent warfare. And, this is no joke. We're tired. We’re going to turn around and do the railroad stations and maybe even some schools as horrid as it may sound,” allegedly said by Forcellina.

    This 911 call came in yesterday at 8:48 am.

    Police traced the call and arrived at this Fairfield pay phone just as the alleged caller Frederick Forcellina, was hanging up the phone. Forcellina is now in custody and friends are in disbelief.

    “He's sweet, he's funny, he's very religious so it's surprising something like this should happen, said Rosa Torcasio of Sarafina’s Deli.

    The local real estate broker and Jehovah's Witness lived in Norwalk and was a regular at Sarafina's Deli. Friends here say this must have been an act of desperation.

    Forcellina was apparently having money problems and scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court for a bankruptcy case. This is one of the court's he allegedly threatened to quote "dust."

    “I think he was having some financial difficulties and this was his way of probably trying to stall the situation. I don't think he's a terrorist. He's a really nice guy, not a bad bone in his body. A really nice guy, said John Torcasio, of Sarafina’s Deli.

    Fairfield Police Chief Joseph Sambrook says there's no way to justify this crime, especially in the aftermath of the September 11th attacks.

    “My message would be to anybody, don't even think about it, because here is a classic example of somebody thinking they're going to get away with something and it backfired and now this guy is in tremendous trouble,” said Sambrook.

    None of the court buildings were evacuated yesterday because an arrest was made so quickly. In the 911 call, he refers to "my people" but it's unclear if he is of Arab decent.

    http://www.news12.com/CDA/Articles/Transcript/0,2051,10-10-23162-30,00.html

    also on
    http://www.watchtowernews.org
    WatchtowerNews

  • conflicted
    conflicted
    ”I've been well educated in your country. My people have been bombed. Now we're doping the silent warfare. This is not a hoax. I'm telling you three of your symbols of justice, the court buildings in Stamford on Hoyt Street, the court building in Norwalk and the one on Lafayette in Bridgeport have been dusted. It's a silent warfare. And, this is no joke. We're tired. We’re going to turn around and do the railroad stations and maybe even some schools as horrid as it may sound,”

    He's a really nice guy, not a bad bone in his body. A really nice guy

    Oh yeah, he sounds like a real gem.

  • Dogpatch
    Dogpatch

    An appropriate article to go with the above. Our country is full of religious fundamentalists who want to kill or see others killed, so their religious fantasies can be realized.

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/comment/2001-11-05-ncguest1.htm

    Apocalyptic cult methods explain bin Laden

    By Patricia Pearson

    At the Pentagon memorial service last month, President Bush called the al-Qa'eda network "a cult of evil," and for the first time, I thought: "Yes, that sounds right." It is a kind of cult, and Osama bin Laden — far from being the Muslim world's Che Guevara, is its evil and manipulative guru.

    There has been a great deal of semantic confusion about who, precisely, our enemy is. Bin Laden has succeeded in linking his lunatic cause with a broader sense of anger and frustration that persists in the Muslim world. We cannot allow him to maintain that link.

    The enemy of this particular war is not Islam, and it isn't the Muslim world, for very few Muslims, regardless of their policy grievances, would die for the sake of killing our children.

    Two years ago, the eminent American psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton wrote a book about cults called Destroying the World to Save It, documenting what he called a "loosely connected, still-developing global subculture of apocalyptic violence."

    Lifton, who has also written about Nazi doctors and the psychology of totalitarianism, focused his analysis on the Aum Shinrikyo cult in Japan, which released sarin gas into the Tokyo subway in 1995, killing a dozen people.

    Why? Why indeed. Aum Shinrikyo built a rationale for mass murder on a "global stew" of New Age religion, ancient rituals and science fiction. Lifton was fascinated by how ordinary people could be persuaded to engage in extraordinary horrors.

    In Aum Shinrikyo's ranks one found doctors, research scientists and other members of the Japanese professional classes — not unlike the demographics of the Rajneeshee cult in Oregon, whose members laced salad bars with salmonella bacteria in 1984, or the members of Jonestown who committed mass suicide in 1978.

    People do not need to be impoverished or brutalized to transform themselves into apocalyptic warriors. In Aum Shinrikyo, members appear to have come together out of vague spiritual or social malaise and then fallen under the charismatic spell of Aum's guru, Shoko Asahara. Over time, and a great deal of brainwashing, they developed a "collective megalomania" that culminated in the subway attack.

    Reading profiles of the Sept. 11 hijackers, one glimpses a similarly disturbing ordinariness. The hijackers were not traumatized victims of American foreign policy; nor did they spring from deeply orthodox Muslim families. Some drank; some had Western girlfriends; Mohamed Atta's sisters are a doctor and a zoology professor.

    Understanding al-Qa'eda purely in the context of Islamic fundamentalism is unsatisfactory. It leaves something out, some process of psychological transformation for the individual members.

    Consider, by contrast, the suicide bomber who assassinated Indian President Rajiv Gandhi in 1991 — a Tamil woman who reportedly had been raped by Indian soldiers during the Sri Lankan occupation. Her quest for justice took a terrible route, but one can at least discern a connection between personal trauma and revenge.

    Curious about the cult analogy, I called Steve Hassan, formerly a high-ranking member of the Unification Church, also known as the "Moonies," and now a leading expert on mind control. We talked about the fact that many of these hijackers were reportedly leading a normal life when, after coming into contact with certain Islamic groups — on a university campus in Hamburg, Germany, for instance — they suddenly turned inward, becoming secretive and aloof. That rang very loud bells for Hassan, who fell in with the Moonies on a New England college campus in 1974 after befriending three "attractive young women" who encouraged him to come to meetings.

    "There's a big difference between a personality change as a result of religious epiphany and a personality change as a result of a systematic social influence," he says. "I did not realize that I was being manipulated. (But) by the end of 3 days, I was blown away. My parents said I looked like I was on drugs.

    "I had been taught that the world was facing Armageddon and that God had chosen me, and that Satan would work through the people I loved to try to talk me out of it. I was indoctrinated into distrusting my own thought processes and into believing that killing people was for their own good."

    Hassan observes that many of the techniques that he encountered with the Moonies are evident in bin Laden's camps: "social isolation, controlling their sleep, showing them non-stop videos of Muslims dying, being buddied up, so that they're never alone. ... Destructive mind control strips away their ability to think for themselves."

    The cult framework goes a little way to explaining the dissonance between who these hijackers were and what they eventually did on behalf of al-Qa'eda.

    My sense of this was confirmed by John R. Hall, the co-author of Apocalypse Observed: Religious Movements and Violence in North America, Europe and Japan.

    "There are two kinds of apocalyptic sects," he told me. "One kind engages in a withdrawal from society at large to another world, which they establish as a utopian heaven on earth." Most American cults fall into this category, Hall says, although they resort to violence if they feel threatened.

    "The other kind of apocalyptic group," he says, "is the warring sect. It seeks to bring on the final battle of Armageddon by launching a holy war against the existing social order. Osama bin Laden's al-Qa'eda is definitely of the latter type; indeed, it is a classic case."

    Many pundits are saying that the eradication of bin Laden will be fruitless unless certain "underlying causes" in the friction between East and West are addressed. But that presumes a rational stance in modern terrorism, and there is none.

    America needs to get across to the Muslim world this absolutely essential fact: Bin Laden is not championing their cause or proposing to lead them to a better future. He wants to destroy the world, and that can be no sane man's cause.

    Patricia Pearson, a freelance writer and author living in Toronto, is a member of USA TODAY's board of contributors.

  • MrMoe
    MrMoe

    I wonder how the government will look at JW's now? Probably won't do a thing, but you never know. I hope they see it as the act of a single person. Otherwise, my poor parents.

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