ATLANTA
A federal judge sentenced a 67-year-old man to two years in prison for creating a hoax when he left a backpack containing two inoperable pipe bombs in Vickery Creek Park in Roswell, Georgia, according to officials.
Michael C. Sibley, of Marietta, Georgia, was sentenced to two years in prison to be followed by one year of supervised release. Sibley was convicted Sept. 9 after pleading guilty.
“Sibley built two nearly-operable pipe bombs that he recklessly left in Vickery Creek Park in a place intended to inflict maximum panic among the public,” said U. S. Attorney John Horn. “He compounded the crime by preying on stereotypical fears and prejudices by making it appear the bombs were planted by a Muslim. Thankfully an alert park visitor discovered and immediately reported the bag containing the bombs to police.”
According to Horn and the evidence, Sibley placed a backpack alongside one of the trails in Vickery Creek Park.
Roswell Police Department contacted FBI after a park visitor discovered the suspicious bag, which contained two pipe bombs that fortunately omitted one component and therefore were not capable of immediate detonation, officials said.
About 400 nails and screws were attached to the outside of the tubing consistent with construction designed for maximum fragmentation upon explosion, making the device more lethal.
On the bag containing the bombs, Sibley wrote a traditionally Muslim name on the backpack and he placed inside the bag, among other things, two books: one titled “The Rape of Kuwait” and the other titled “The Holy Qur’an.”
He also placed papers printed from three websites in the bag: the 2015 Atlanta Falcons schedule, a printout from a website for a Jewish Community Center in the Atlanta area, and a printout from the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority’s website.
These printouts were included to convey threats to these locations as well.
Based on the items recovered from the backpack, the FBI narrowed its focus to Sibley.
On March 20, 2015, Sibley voluntarily met with the FBI and confessed to making the devices and to placing them in Vickery Creek Park. He stated that he placed the bag with these devices, the books and other items in the park to “wake-up” people in the United States, according to officials.
He said he believes the Mexican border is poorly defended and that many people are entering this country illegally. He also said that he made the explosive devices and placed them in the park to make people realize that if this can happen in Roswell, Georgia, it can happen anywhere.
The FBI investigated this case.