of death. remember when they were eating the monkeys heads. i didn t like that at all. unibomber. greg: you could have knocked them out with a feather from elizabeth warren warren s hat. he suggested donald trump included a solution for ukraine which was more solutions with diplomacy not escalation. we go now to the world for their reaction. greg: wow, that was a special effect. of course that didn t really happen. the world is still here. now, the media admitting that donald trump would have solved this problem is a tougher pill to follow than vie ago ra kilmeade sells out of his backpack. speaking of being proven right the manhattan da grand injury
virtually 18 years to the day after timothy mcveigh attacked oklahoma city. he was a brilliant mathematician who hated society. he was extremely smart but socially awkward. he started fantasizing about killing people. the unibomber left his angry mark of death. he orchestrated a vicious bombing spree that killed three, maimed four, and injured 19 others. in all, 16 bombs. their locations all over the united states. i began to think, i may not make it. his base of operations was crude. the cabin was a bomb factory. but his devices were hideously lethal. matches, pieces of wood, nails. that is an anti-personnel
we re learning more about the coast guard lieutenant who intend hurt civilians rarely seen by this country. prosecutors revealed he spent hours online researching famous mass attackers, including the unibomber. prosecutors say he had 15 weapons, 1,000 rounds of ammunition, a stock pile of drugs and a list of targets including prominent democrats and journalists. the only reason we found about any of this is because professor tweeted about the case yesterday after learning the details from detention memo. but to be clear that s not how
and javier amadore, a forensic psychologist. thank you, sir, you listened to this, you heard what julia talked about, caustic terror as well. you weren t able to join us on the show last night but you sent your thoughts on a profile for the suspect. you nailed it. you said the simplest possible explanation is usually right. you predicted a male harboring a lot of hatred and anger, encouraged by the president s rhetoric. how did you come to these conclusions? well, i ve worked on a lot of terrorism cases. i m a clinical psychologist, but also a forensic psychologist. my very first case was the uni bomber who sent 23 bombs over 20 years, injured i m sorry, injured 23 people over 20 years, killed three people. and other domestic terrorism cases as well as foreign domestic terrorist cases. and, you know, there are certain categories. but in the united states, with respect to domestic terrorism, we do see people who are
reporter: he has a long criminal history in south florida dating back to 1991 he s been charged with criminal fraud , selling steroids even making a bomb threat. two key clues helped end the four day nationwide manhunt. one he had his fingerprint on one of the envelopes used to house the bomb and two, dna was found on at least two explosive devices. charles back to you. charles: steve the question is what are investigators looking for, former fbi special agent, he directed the task force that captured the unibomber and he joins us terry thanks for joining us. thank you, charles. charles: bring us up to speed where you think investigators are right now? well, they are just about everywhere that caesar has been in the last few months. they have his car ready and they re looking at that, trying to identify and talk to everybody he knew and trying to put together as christopher wray