Text Version
RSS Feeds
Newsletter
Home Forum Photos Features Newsletter Archive Employment
About US Help Site Map
SEARCH   About US FAQ Site Map Site News
  SERVICES
  -Text Version
  -RSS Feeds
  -Newsletter
  -News Archive
  -Give us feedback
  -Voices of Readers
  -Online community
  -China Biz info
  What's new
 -
 -
U.S.: Canadian pleads guilty to terrorism charge
+ -
17:43, March 14, 2008

 Related News
 U.S. eyes closing West Coast salmon fisheries
 U.S. holds largest simulated cyber-attack exercise
 3 groups sue U.S. for missing polar bear deadline
 Canada raises number of harp seals for slaughter
 Deadly crash: former lovers' loose lips sink ship
 Comment  Tell A Friend
 Print Format  Save Article
A Canadian man pleaded guilty Thursday in Santa Fe, New Mexico, to a federal terrorism charge for plotting to blow up the Trans-Alaska oil pipeline in 2000.

Prosecutors say Alfred Heinz Reumayr wanted to drive up the price of oil in order to profit from the sale of oil and gas futures he had planned to purchase. The plot was broken up after a co-conspirator went to federal authorities.

Reumayr, 58, of New Westminster, British Columbia, pleaded guilty to one count of terrorism transcending national boundaries in an agreement with prosecutors accepted Thursday by U.S. District Judge Bruce Black. He faces 13 years in prison; his lawyer said the sentencing hearing could be held this summer.

Prosecutors say Reumayr planned a series of explosions along the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System in early January 2000 aimed at disrupting the oil supply from northern to southern Alaska.

Had it been successful, it would have had "an enormous negative economic and environmental impact on the United States and Canada," said William Newell, special agent in charge of the Phoenix field division of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Authorities said Reumayr sought help with the scheme from a former Green Beret and explosives expert with whom he had served time in a Texas prison. Jim Paxton of Albuquerque — who is now dead — went to the ATF and became an informant.

Paxton testified in a 2001 extradition hearing in British Columbia that Reumayr wanted the explosions to coincide with Jan. 1, 2000, to capitalize on fears of computer failures.

Reumayr has been in custody since August 1999 and was indicted on eight counts. He lost his fight against extradition to the U.S. in 2006, when the Supreme Court of Canada dismissed his appeal.

Source: Xinhua/Agencies



  Your Message:   Most Commented:

|About Peopledaily.com.cn | Advertise on site | Contact us | Site map | Job offer|
Copyright by People's Daily Online, All Rights Reserved

http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90777/90852/6373760.pdf