Suspected cop killer Eric Frein
was slapped with terrorism-related charges Thursday in Pennsylvania for
allegedly admitting that he shot two state troopers in a bid to change
the government and "wake people up," according to court documents.
The 31-year-old survivalist and military buff was captured October 30 at an abandoned airport after leading a small army of law enforcement officers on a weekslong manhunt in eastern Pennsylvania.
Frein was arraigned on
charges including first-degree murder and making and possessing a weapon
of mass destruction for pipe bombs found while he was on the run in
connection with the September 12 ambush shooting that left Cpl. Bryon
Dickson dead and Trooper Alex T. Douglass wounded.
Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.
On Thursday, Frein was charged with two terrorism counts for committing
"a violent offense intending top influence the policy of the government
by intimidation or coercion" and committing a violent offense "intending
to affect the conduct of government," according to court documents.
After his arrest, Frein
allegedly told investigators that he "wanted to make a change (in
government) and that voting was insufficient to do so, because there was
no one worth voting for," according to affidavit filed in Pike County
in support of the new charges.
Frein allegedly called
the killing of Dickson an "assassination," the court documents said. The
suspect said the shootings were an attempt to bring about a change in
government and to "wake up people, because it was all he could do."
In addition,
investigators recovered a letter from Frein to his parents -- addressed
"Mom and Dad" -- on a thumb drive in which he writes of revolution and
complains that the United States "is far from what it was and what it
should be"
"I have seen so many
depressing changes made in my time that I cannot imagine what it must be
like for you," Frein allegedly wrote in the letter. "There is so much
wrong and on so many levels only passing through the crucible of another
revolution can get us back the liberties we once had. I do not pretend
to know what that revolution will look like or even if it will be
successful."
Frein's father, Michael,
a retired U.S. Army major with 28 years of service, told investigators
that he trained his son to shoot and that the younger Frein "doesn't
miss."
"Tension is high at the
moment and the time seems right for a spark to ignite a fire in the
hearts of men," Frein wrote to his parents. "What I have done has not
been done before and it felt like it was worth a try."
He added, "I do not have
a death wish but I know the odds. I tried my best to do this thing
without getting identified, but if you are reading this then I was not
successful."
Asked about the new
charges, Frein's lawyer, Michael Weinstein, said: "These are just
allegations right now, these are not substantiated yet. Let's take a
look at this evidence. We'll take this one step at a time. These type of
cases take a long time and require careful scrutiny."
Frein is charged in an
ambush outside the state police barracks in Blooming Grove. Frein melted
into the thick Pennsylvania woods after the shootings, authorities
said.
After his arrest,
authorities found a laptop, first aid supplies, shave kits, DVDs,
contact lenses and even a copy of the New Testament belonging to Frein,
according to police documents.
The suspect told
authorities he used a Lenovo Thinkpad laptop while on the run to access
open wireless connections and use the Internet, according to court
documents.
The manhunt lasted almost seven weeks and involved as many as 1,000 officers at times.
Frein's trove of
survival supplies indicated that he was well-equipped to survive alone
in the wilderness for weeks or even months.
In addition to various
articles of clothing and multiple weapons and ammunition, Frein had
packed food items such as cup noodles, rice, beans, five-gallon water
jugs, crackers, soy sauce, vegetable oil, and even a bottle of soju, a
Korean vodka.
When he was captured,
Frein did not put up a fight. He was shackled in the Dickson's
handcuffs, put in the backseat of the slain trooper's squad car and
driven to the barracks where the ambush on Dickson occurred.
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