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Feds Indict Klansman Who Designed Radiation Gun to Kill Muslims


After nearly seven months, federal prosecutors have decided to move forward with charges against one of two men charged with conspiring to build a portable, remote-controlled device designed to deliver fatal doses of radiation to Muslims 鈥 聽or 鈥渕edical waste,鈥 as the plotters called their intended targets.

Glendon Scott Crawford, 49, was charged in an indictment last week with attempting to produce a radiological device, conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction and distribution of information related to weapons of mass destruction. Another suspect, Eric Feight, 54, was named in the original complaint but was not indicted. Both were .

According to sources who spoke with the of Albany, Feight and his lawyers are working on a plea agreement in exchange for testimony against Crawford.

The case has been under investigation by a Joint Terrorism Task Force since at least April 2012, when Crawford went to a Schenectady synagogue, Congregation Gates of Heaven, and 鈥渁sked to speak with a person who might be willing to help him with a type of technology that could be used by Israel to defeat its enemies while they slept.鈥

Crawford, with Feight鈥檚 help, had designed a device he described as聽 鈥淗oroshima on a light switch.鈥 The device, he explained, was a 鈥渨eaponized radiation device鈥 that would deliver a deadly dose of radiation.

鈥淸T]he target(s) and those around them would not immediately be aware they had absorbed lethal doses of radiation and the harmful effects of that radiation would not become apparent until days after the exposure,鈥 court documents say.

Shortly after the pair began pitching their device, the FBI began monitoring and recording much of Crawford鈥檚 communications, including attempts to solicit financing from two Jewish organizations. Then, in August 2012, Crawford traveled by car from his home in Albany, N.Y., to North Carolina to meet and solicit funding from an unidentified 鈥渞anking member of the Ku Klux Klan,鈥 specifically the Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, who cooperated when contacted by FBI agents.

In early October of that year, Crawford traveled to Greensboro, N.C., to meet with a cooperating witness and two undercover FBI agents who posed as 鈥淪outhern businessmen of means who were associated with the KKK.鈥

Crawford 鈥渄escribed to the [undercover FBI agents] his radiation emitting device, his remote initiation device, mobilizing the radiation device and discussed operation security concerns,鈥 a criminal complaint filed last June said. 鈥淐rawford again solicited money to finance his scheme (primarily to fund the purchase or acquisition of an industrial strength x-ray system).鈥

While his attempts to sell the device to organizations with conflicting ideologies might be perplexing, Crawford identified himself in conversations recorded by the FBI as 鈥渁 member of the , specifically, the United Northern & Southern Knights of the Ku Klux Klan鈥 and there was no mistaking what he intended to do with the device.

Messages left Tuesday with Crawford鈥檚 defense attorney, Kevin Luibrand, were not returned.

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