Bewildered residents in rural
Tennessee are grappling with fear and confusion as they try to understand why
someone would send a bomb in the mail to their neighbor.
Retired lawyer John Setzer, 74, died
Monday after "an unknown package exploded," the Tennessee Bureau of
Investigation said.
His wife, 72-year-old Marion Setzer,
was seriously injured and airlifted to Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
A barrage of federal, state and
local authorities descended on the neighborhood near Lebanon, Tennessee, about
30 miles east of Nashville. The FBI, U.S. postal inspectors, the Department of
Homeland Security and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
are also investigating.
"It doesn't make sense at
all," family friend Ken Caldwell told CNN affiliate WTVF. "When I've heard it said that it was
targeted, I thought, well, they must have targeted the wrong person."
A
dedicated servant
Before he retired, John Setzer
worked on bankruptcy and other cases.
His former law partner, George Cate
Jr., said Setzer was a dedicated servant and a pastor at "little country
churches." The two met while serving in the Army Reserve.
Cate couldn't understand why anyone
would want to target Setzer or his wife.
"I could hardly believe what I
was being told because nothing had happened in my recent times to make me
anticipate anything of this kind happening," Cate told CNN affiliate WZTV. "John and Marion Setzer are a great
couple, and they have dedicated themselves to taking care of other
people."
He remembered when the couple's son
John was killed by a dog at age 3. After that, whenever the Setzers saw a news
report about a child's death, they "would immediately go and visit with
the parents of that child and share something of what they had gone
through."
Cate and Setzer became partners at the
law firm bearing their names between 1979 and 1991. Setzer worked on general
civil cases and also specialized in living trusts, his former partner said.
Cate said Setzer's love of law
became hampered by his health problems, which made it difficult to respond to
all his clients' needs. Setzer continued working from home after leaving the
office, but eventually decided to quit practicing, Cate said.
Terrified of the mailbox
On the Setzers' quiet rural street,
neighbors were terrified about whether a bomb might arrive in their mailbox.
Some told WZTV that officers went house-to-house Monday night to check
mailboxes for devices.
"Of course it makes us a little
anxious to go check our own mailbox when we see something like this happen,
because normally boxes are delivered and mail is delivered, and you don't
question it," neighbor Tony Dedman told the affiliate.
Postal Inspectors have investigated
an average of 16 mail bombs over the past few years, the U.S. Postal
Inspection Service said. By contrast, the Postal Service has
processed more than 170 billion pieces of mail each of the past few years.
The agency said mail bombs often
have similar characteristics, such as a fake or non-existent return address.
They often have excessive postage attached to the package because the sender
doesn't want to deal face-to-face with a window clerk.
An $8,000 reward is available for
information leading to the arrest and conviction of anyone responsible for the
attack on the Setzers.
Source: CNN
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