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NCJRS Abstract


The document referenced below is part of the NCJRS Library collection.
To conduct further searches of the collection, visit the NCJRS Abstracts Database.

How to Obtain Documents
 
NCJ Number: NCJ 120196  
Title: Explosives and Terrorism (From International Terrorism: The Decade Ahead, P 123-125, 1989, Jane Rae Buckwalter, ed. -- See NCJ-120184)
Author(s): J Grubisic
Sale: University of Illinois at Chicago
1033 West Van Buren Street, Suite 500
Office of International Criminal Justice
Chicago, IL 60607-2919
United States
Publication Date: 1989
Pages: 3
Type: State-of-the-art reviews
Origin: United States
Language: English
Note: Presented at the Third Annual International Symposium on Criminal Justice Issues in 1988.
Annotation: The information on and materials needed for making a bomb are readily available; a terrorist intent on making a bomb need only be resourceful.
Abstract: There are MK II fragmentation-type, modified military hand grenades available almost anywhere. They are inert but can be modified easily using readily available items. The body of the grenade is filled with shotgun or similar powder, a smoke grenade fuse is inserted in the threaded end, and a moly bolt is placed in the opposite end as a seal. Also, chemicals are available on the commercial market that, with paper mixtures, produce an excellent explosive. Recently, a Neo-Nazi was arrested when he sold an undercover police officer a 6-inch pipe bomb made from chemicals purchased at a drugstore. In another instance, what appeared to be an ordinary tube of caulking was a high-order explosive made commercially. An amount about the size of a marshmallow, used on a solid block of concrete 2-feet in diameter, left nothing but small pebbles after detonation. Frequently, terrorists use plastic explosives that only a trained eye will notice in an x-ray. Sentex, which is manufactured in Czechoslovakia, is common in Europe and is used by terrorists. An electronic switch called an E-cell is small and undetectable as an explosive timing device.
Main Term(s): Explosives
Index Term(s): Terrorist tactics ; Terrorist weapons
 
To cite this abstract, use the following link:
http://www.ncjrs.gov/App/Publications/abstract.aspx?ID=120196

* A link to the full-text document is provided whenever possible. For documents not available online, a link to the publisher's web site is provided.


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