Feds charge man for buying fireworks in NM, claiming he was going to use them against police in LA
'Threats like these strike at the heart of law and order — we will not hesitate to bring federal charges against anyone who seeks to harm law enforcement or endanger the safety of our communities,' Attorney General Pamela Bondi stated in part in a news release.
Story continues below
Wildfire: House sitter becomes unexpected hero, saving four protected raptors during Trout Fire
Trending: New restaurant in Old Town takes over space left by beloved eatery
Crime: Man sentenced for stealing copper in downtown Albuquerque
News: Feds charge man for buying fireworks in NM, claiming he was going to use them against police in LA
The feds said Grzegorz Vandenberg, 48, visited a travel center in Lordsburg to purchase the fireworks on June 12, 2025. While there, Vandenberg reportedly asked the cashier about the biggest fireworks that he could buy and the ones that could cause harm, according to court documents.
Vandenberg told store employees that he was a prior special forces military and claimed he could make pipe bombs. He then reportedly told employees that he was traveling to Los Angeles for the 'riots' with the intent to kill law enforcement officers or government officials, court documents stated.
Store staff reported that Vandenberg invited an employee to join him and his platoon in California and also claimed to have mortar explosives in his possession and reiterated his plan to use them to kill officers, per court documents.
Officials said Vandenberg purchased six mortars, each containing 60 grams of gunpowder, and 36 large fireworks before leaving the store in a vehicle with Montana license plates, heading west on Interstate 10.
Before he could leave, the cashier wrote down the vehicle's license plate number, officials said.
'Our message is clear: If you come after law enforcement officers, the FBI will spare no effort to find you and bring you to justice,' said FBI Director Kash Patel in the news release. 'This defendant allegedly intended to use explosives to attack police officers currently conducting law enforcement operations in Los Angeles and – with the help of a store cashier who took down his license plate information – we were able to put a stop to that plan. Law enforcement officers put their lives on the line to serve the American people and the FBI will always do our part to protect them.'
Vandenberg is charged with transporting explosives in interstate commerce with the knowledge and intent that they would be used to kill, injure, or intimidate individuals.
The DOJ said Vandenberg will remain in custody on conditions of release pending trial, which has not yet been scheduled. If convicted of the current charges, Vandenberg faces up to 10 years in federal prison.
The Las Cruces Resident Agency of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Albuquerque Field Office investigated this case with assistance from the Tucson Resident Agency of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Phoenix Field Office, Tucson Police Department, U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations, and Homeland Security Investigations El Paso.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Megyn Kelly Has No Sympathy for Trump on Epstein Mess
MAGA media star Megyn Kelly had some harsh words for President Donald Trump's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein crisis, saying it was 'hard to have a lot of sympathy' for the administration after a series of unforced errors. The issue has dominated the news for weeks after the Department of Justice and the FBI issued a memo earlier this month concluding that the financier, who died in prison in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, did not have a 'client list' and was not murdered—as many of the MAGA faithful believe—but killed himself. Instead of putting the controversy to rest, the announcement sparked anger and accusations of a cover-up among even some of Trump's most ardent supporters. That response was completely predictable, Kelly said on Monday's episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored, making it 'hard to have a lot of sympathy' for the administration. 'Now the president's very annoyed that it won't go away. It won't go away because of the way he's handled it,' she said. She listed a series of missteps on the part of the administration, including Attorney General Pam Bondi's decision to issue the memo in the middle of a slow news summer without holding a press conference to answer questions about the findings. That decision was particularly misguided considering Trump's picks to lead the FBI—Director Kash Patel and Deputy Director Dan Bongino—had previously 'fanned this flame' and pushed the theory that Epstein was murdered to protect his powerful associates. 'Whoever told the Justice Department that this could somehow be buried and that people would move on and that the Trump administration could get away with that ridiculous two-page summation of 'You're not getting any more information because there's no there there' should be fired,' she said. 'That person is an idiot and didn't understand the Republican base—certainly the core MAGA base.' Instead of getting out ahead of the scandal, the administration has been trying to play catch-up by seeking the grand jury transcripts from Epstein's criminal proceedings—despite knowing the court was not likely to release them—and by speaking to Epstein's accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell. Maxwell, however, is not a reliable source considering she's currently serving a 20-year prison sentence for luring and grooming and Epstein's victims, Kelly said. 'Can we really trust anything this woman says when she it's either this—give something up or someone up—or spend 20 years in jail?' Kelly said. Kelly said she agreed 'completely' with Morgan's assessment of the administration's handling of the scandal, which he described as 'leading everybody up to the water's edge, and then not giving anyone a drink.' 'This is self-inflicted,' she said. Trump and Epstein were friends for years until they had a falling out not over Epstein's sexual impropriety but because he 'stole' Trump's hired help, the president said Monday.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
FBI Has Secret Epstein Prison Tape With No ‘Missing Minute'
The FBI has a version of the surveillance video filmed near Jeffrey Epstein's prison block on the night of his death that—unlike the video released to the public—is not missing a minute of footage. Earlier this month, the Department of Justice released nearly 11 hours of CCTV footage taken inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center intended to show that Epstein had died by suicide. The Trump administration immediately faced questions about why the time code displayed in the video indicated that the minute before midnight was not included in the clip. The DOJ said the 'full raw' clip would have captured anyone entering Epstein's cell the night he died, but forensic analysis showed the video was edited repeatedly over several hours, with about a minute of footage missing. Now, government sources say the FBI, Bureau of Prisons, and DOJ inspector general all possess a copy of the video that contains the infamous 'missing minute,' CBS News reported. It's still not clear what that minute shows or why it was missing from the video the DOJ released, according to CBS. The FBI and the DOJ declined to comment, and the Bureau of Prisons told the network it 'had no additional information to provide.' The missing minute has been fodder for conspiracy theorists who believe Epstein—who was awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges when he died the night of Aug. 9-10, 2019—was murdered to protect his powerful clients and associates. Attorney General Pam Bondi explained away the discrepancy in the video by saying that the system resets every night, 'so every night should have that same missing minute.' She hasn't shared any other footage confirming that explanation, though, and surveillance video experts told CBS that resets aren't a feature of most video systems. The footage was taken in a cell block in the Special Housing Unit where Epstein was held at the MCC. The block is near Epstein's cell, but doesn't show it. Instead, a common area and set of stairs leading to various 'tiers,' one of which held Epstein's cell, are visible in the back third of the frame. The FBI found that cameras directly outside Epstein's cell had malfunctioned the night he died. According to the FBI and the DOJ, anyone attempting to access the tier containing Epstein's cell from the common area would have been visible in the footage. But Julie K. Brown, the Miami Herald reporter whose reporting exposed Epstein in 2017 and 2018, told CNN's Jake Tapper earlier this month that there were actually other entrances to Epstein's wing besides the one shown on camera. 'It's quite possible that someone from another part of that area could have gone up into his cell,' she said. 'We don't know because we don't have anything on his cell door. The doors they show in that video are not of his cell.' The Daily Beast has contacted the DOJ and FBI for comment. The Epstein controversy has consumed the Trump administration for weeks after the DOJ and the FBI issued a memo earlier this month stating conclusively that the disgraced financier did not have a 'client list' and died by suicide. Those conclusions angered many of the president's own supporters, who expected the administration to provide bombshell revelations in the case. Trump himself was friends with Epstein for more than a decade before the two had a falling out in the early 2000s. On Monday, Trump contradicted a previous claim from his White House that he had cut ties with Epstein because the financier was a 'creep,' suggesting their relationship actually ended because Epstein 'stole' Trump's staff. He also said that he had 'never had the privilege' of visiting Epstein's private Caribbean island.

2 hours ago
Islamic State and al-Qaida threat is intense in Africa, with growing risks in Syria, UN experts say
UNITED NATIONS -- The threat from Islamic State and al-Qaida extremists and their affiliates is most intense in parts of Africa, and risks are growing in Syria, which both groups view as a 'a strategic base for external operations,' U.N. experts said in a new report. Their report to the U.N. Security Council circulated Wednesday said West Africa's al-Qaida-linked Jama'at Nasr al-Islam wal-Muslimin group, known as JNIM, and East Africa's al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab have continued to increase the territory under their control. The experts monitoring sanctions against the two groups said 'the organization's pivot towards parts of Africa continued" partly because of Islamic State losses in the Middle East due to counterterrorism pressures. There are also 'increasing concerns about foreign terrorist fighters returning to Central Asia and Afghanistan, aiming to undermine regional security,' they said. The Islamic State also continues to represent 'the most significant threat' to Europe and the Americas, the experts said, often by individuals radicalized via social media and encrypted messaging platforms by its Afghanistan-based Khorasan group. In the United States, the experts said several alleged terrorist attack plots were 'largely motivated by the Gaza and Israel conflict,' or by individuals radicalized by IS, also known as ISIL. They pointed to an American who pledged support to IS and drove into a crowd in New Orleans on Jan. 1, killing 14 people in the deadliest attack by al-Qaida or the Islamic State in the U.S. since 2016. In addition, they said, 'Authorities disrupted attacks, including an ISIL-inspired plot to conduct a mass shooting at a military base in Michigan,' and the IS Khorasan affiliate issued warnings of plots targeting Americans. In Africa's Sahel region, the experts said, JNIM expanded its area of operations, operating 'with relative freedom' in northern Mali and most of Burkina Faso. There was also a resurgence of activity by the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, 'particularly along the Niger and Nigeria border, where the group was seeking to entrench itself.' 'JNIM reached a new level of operational capability to conduct complex attacks with drones, improvised explosive devices and large numbers of fighters against well-defended barracks,' the experts said. In East Africa, they said, 'al-Shabab maintained its resilience, intensifying operations in southern and central Somalia' and continuing its ties with Yemen's Houthi rebels. The two groups have reportedly exchanged weapons and the Houthis have trained al-Shabab fighters, they said. Syria, the experts said, remains 'in a volatile and precarious phase,' six months after the ouster of President Bashar Assad, with unnamed countries warning of growing risks posed by both IS and al-Qaida. 'Member states estimated that more than 5,000 foreign terrorist fighters were involved in the military operation in which Damascus was taken on Dec. 8,' the experts' 27-page report said. Syria's new interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaa led the rebel group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, once an al-Qaida affiliate that later split from it. He has promised that the country will transition to a system that includes Syria's mosaic of religious and ethnic groups under fair elections, but skeptics question whether that will actually happen. The experts expressed concern at the Syrian military's announcement of several senior appointments including 'prominent Syrian armed faction leaders' and six positions for foreigners — three with the rank of brigadier general and three with the rank of colonel. 'The ideological affiliation of many of these individuals was unknown, although several were likely to hold violent extremist views and external ambitions," the report said. As for financing, the experts said the HTS takeover in Syria was considered to pose financial problems for the Islamic State and likely to lead to a decline in its revenues. Salaries for Islamic State fighters were reduced to $50-$70 per month and $35 per family, 'lower than ever, and not paid regularly, suggesting financial difficulties,' said the experts, who did not give previous salaries or family payments. They said both al-Qaida and the Islamic State vary methods to obtain money according to locations and their ability to exploit resources, tax local communities, kidnap for ransom and exploit businesses. While the extremist groups predominantly move money through cash transfers and informal money transfer systems known as hawalas, the experts said the Islamic State has increasingly used female couriers and hawala systems where data is stored in the cloud to avoid detection, and 'safe drop boxes' where money is deposited at exchange offices and can only be retrieved with a password or code.