Advertisement

FBI kill man allegedly plotting bomb attack on hospital treating coronavirus patients

Click to play video: 'Coronavirus outbreak: FBI shoot and kill man who allegedly sought to plant bomb inside hospital'
Coronavirus outbreak: FBI shoot and kill man who allegedly sought to plant bomb inside hospital
WATCH: A man shot and killed Tuesday night by FBI agents in Belton, Missouri was “a potentially violent extremist,” according to new information from the FBI. – Mar 27, 2020

A man fatally injured by the FBI was planning a bomb attack on a medical facility in the Kansas City area, the agency said in a news release Wednesday.

Timothy Wilson, 36, was injured Tuesday when FBI agents served a probable cause arrest warrant in Belton after a long-running domestic terrorism investigation, according to a statement Wednesday from Timothy Langan, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Kansas City office.

Click to play video: 'FBI warns conspiracy theories fuel domestic terrorism'
FBI warns conspiracy theories fuel domestic terrorism

The statement did not detail what happened when agents served the warrant, but said Wilson was armed when he was injured and died later at a hospital.

Story continues below advertisement

A monthslong investigation determined that Wilson was a potentially violent extremist, motivated by religious, racial and anti-government beliefs, according to the statement. He had planned for several months to carry out a bombing and decided to target a Kansas City-area hospital using a “vehicle-borne” improvised explosive.

Wilson chose a hospital that was providing critical care during the current coronavirus pandemic and had taken steps to acquire materials to build the bomb in an attempt to cause “severe harm and mass casualties,” according to the statement.

Breaking news from Canada and around the world sent to your email, as it happens.

The FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force kept close watch on Wilson and was prepared to arrest him when he tried to pick up what he thought was a bomb, although there was no bomb, the statement said. The FBI worked with federal prosecutors in the U.S. Attorneys office in Kansas City during the investigation.

No further details were released.

Sponsored content

AdChoices