Where is theodore kaczynski being held




















The campus security officer who opened it, Terry Maker, sustained minor cuts and burns when the bomb exploded. McConnell, psychology professor, and Nicklaus Suino, research assistant, both at the University of Michigan in Another computer store owner, Gary Wright, was severely injured by a bomb in Utah in as were California geneticist, Charles Epstein, and Yale University computer science professor, David Gelernter, both in In total, the FBI tracked 16 bombs created by Kaczynski that resulted in 23 injured victims and three deaths.

Only two bombs were identified and diffused prior to the explosion. In due time, the unsub i. They painstakingly investigated the lives of victims and recovered bomb components but Kaczynski was smart. He was careful to leave no forensic evidence, he used only easily found materials to make his bombs, and the victims were chosen at random.

Kaczynski was arraigned in Sacramento the home of his third and final murder victim and charged with multiple counts related to his numerous bombing attacks. He rejected an insanity plea but later attempted suicide in his jail cell in early which resulted in a psychiatric evaluation. Kaczynski was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia.

As a result, Kaczynski was offered a plea bargain, which allowed him to avoid the death penalty. He killed three people and injured 23 over the course of and During that time, he mailed and hand-delivered 17 bomb devices, mostly targeting university professors and scientists as well as airline officials to make a statement about modern technology.

He felt that technology was a system that humanity could not control, that it was something that would become increasingly harmful to both people and the environment. He wanted a revolution to halt technology's progess before it caused what he believed to be irreversible damage. Therefore, he targeted primarily people with connections to technology. He sent bombs to computer store owners, airline officials, geneticists, professors and other academics. He even managed to get bomb onto a passenger plane with the hopes it would blow the entire aircraft.

Kaczynski continued to create bomb after bomb while evading arrest for nearly two decades —— while being known only as the Unabomber , a named derived from his FBI case file. He did so as he lived alone as a mostly self-sufficient recluse in the woods.

While soaking in the wilderness that surrounded him, he spent most of his days writing. He wrote about the trials and tribulations of creating bombs and his personal feelings to each of his bombing attacks, albeit in code. His writing habit ultimately led to his capture. He said if it was published, he'd halt his bombing campaign.

After much debate, the FBI pushed for its publication and Kaczynski was fingered after his brother recognized the writing style. He was a arrested in and charged with ten counts of illegally transporting, mailing, and using bombs, and three counts of murder. Kaczynski was finally caught in his secluded cabin deep in the Montana wilderness on April 3, , according to the FBI site.

CNN reported that he pled guilty in for sending bombs in the mail and was sentenced to eight life sentences. So, it's unsurprising that the Unabomber is still in jail today. Before he was caught, Kaczynski spent 18 years sending meticulously handmade explosive devices through the U. Postal Service to his intended targets, according to CNN. In the end, Kaczynski was responsible for the deaths of three recipients of his mail bombs and countless injuries to his 23 surviving victims, according to the FBI.

He was finally caught, not by the FBI alone, but with the aid of his own brother.



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