Airport Worker Intended to Use his Access to Secure Areas to
Commit Terrorist Attack
A Wichita, Kansas, man working as an avionic technician for
an aeronautics company and possessing restricted access to secure airport
areas, was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison today for attempting to
explode a car bomb at the airport in Wichita, Assistant Attorney General for
National Security John P. Carlin and U.S. Attorney Barry R. Grissom of the
District of Kansas announced.
Terry Lee Loewen, 60, pleaded guilty on June 8 to one count
of attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction. Loewen was arrested in December 2013 when he
tried to enter the grounds of the Wichita Mid-Continent Airport for the purpose
of exploding a bomb. (The airport was
recently renamed the Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport).
“Terry Loewen abused his privileged airport access to
attempt to perpetrate a terrorist attack in Wichita,” said Assistant Attorney
General Carlin. “The National Security
Division’s highest priority is protecting the United States against terrorist
threats. We will continue to pursue
justice against those who seek to carry out violent attacks against Americans,
whether at home or abroad.”
“Here in the heartland, terrorism will never shake our faith
in the things this country stands for – freedom, fairness and opportunity,”
said U.S. Attorney Grissom. “We won’t
give way to those who would inflict violence on their fellow citizens.”
In his plea, Loewen admitted he came to the attention of the
FBI late in May 2013 when he became a Facebook friend of a person who was
posting comments advocating violent jihad.
The FBI began communicating with Loewen through an undercover
employee. After Loewen expressed his
desire to engage in violent jihad, the undercover employee offered to introduce
him to someone who could help him do it.
Loewen told the undercover employee he was waiting for what
he called “the green light” from Allah to carry out a violent attack on a
civilian target. He said that he did not
expect to live through any of the attacks he had in mind. Loewen also said that he was inspired by the
teachings of Osama bin Laden and Anwar Al Awlaki, and that he had downloaded
thousands of pages of information on jihad.
In September 2013, Loewen sent photos of airplanes on the
tarmac at the Wichita airport. He
commented that he could have “walked over there, shot both pilots … slapped
some C4 on both fuel trucks and set them off before anyone even called TSA.”
In October 2013, Loewen met with a second undercover FBI
employee who Loewen believed was a “brother” and would help him blow up a
plane. Loewen said that he had scouted
the airport to determine a time and place for an attack that would be sure to
kill as many people as possible.
Loewen assisted the second FBI employee in the final
assembly of an improvised explosive device.
He was not aware that the explosive materials used in the device were
inert. In the early hours of Dec. 13,
2013, the second FBI employee picked up Loewen at a Wichita hotel. They drove to where the bomb was stored and
finished wiring the device. When they
reached the airport, Loewen used his badge twice at a card reader to attempt to
get onto the tarmac before he was arrested.
Loewen was sentenced by Senior U.S. District Judge Monti L.
Belot of the District of Kansas.
Assistant Attorney General Carlin and U.S. Attorney Grissom
commended the Wichita FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force, which includes members
from the FBI, the Sedgwick County, Kansas, Sheriff’s Office and Kansas Highway
Patrol. Assisting with the investigation
were the FBI Kansas City, Missouri, Division, the Transportation Security
Administration, the Wichita Airport Authority and the Wichita Police
Department. Assistant Attorney General
Carlin and U.S. Attorney Grissom also commended the prosecutors on the case,
Assistant U.S. Attorneys David Smith and Tony Mattivi of the District of Kansas
and Trial Attorney Erin Creegan of the National Security Division’s
Counterterrorism Section.
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