FBI: ISIS-supporting son of police captain planned campus explosion

“You get the rifles. I’ll get the powder,” the man told an FBI witness, according to a criminal complaint.


Alexander Ciccolo, 23, is the son of Boston Police captain Robert Ciccolo, police confirmed.
The Adams resident was arrested for taking possession of four firearms from a witness working with the 
FBI, the complaint says.

“What I am gonna do is prepare fire bombs. I’ll do that today. T[hey] are cheap and effective,” Ciccolo said in a July 2 instant message to the witness, according to the FBI. “You get the rifles. I’ll get the powder.”

WalMart receipts show he purchased a pressure cooker on July 3 in North Adams, the complaint says.
epa04845471 Handout image released by the US Attorney's office showing two Glock pistols and two assault rifles purchased by Alexander Ciccolo, a/k/a Ali Al Amriki on 04 July 2015 from a confidential informant working with the Western Massachusetts Joint Terrorism Taskforce resulting in Ciccolo's arrest in a complaint unsealed in Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 13 July 2015. Ciccolo has been charged with being a felon in possession of firearms and in connection with a plot to engage in terrorism on behalf of ISIL. EPA/US ATTORNEY'S OFFICE / HANDOUT HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY
The firearms Ciccolo got from the FBI witness.
When the FBI searched his apartment, they found several partially constructed Molotov cocktails, two machetes, and a long curved knife, according to the complaint.

After his arrest, Ciccolo met with a nurse for a routine medical screening. There, he took a pen and “forcefully stabbed” the nurse in the head, causing a bloody gash and breaking the pen in half, according to the complaint. He also waived his Miranda Rights and reaffirmed his support for ISIS, the FBI said.

Ciccolo had a “long history of mental illness” and had previously abused alcohol, according to the complaint.

The planned target of Ciccolo’s plan changed several times, according to the FBI. He first wanted to attack two bars and a police station, the complaint says. His planned targets then rotated between a university cafeteria, dorm rooms, and a bar near the university, the complaint says.

The Ciccolo family released a statement through the Boston Police Department Monday afternoon:
“While we were saddened and disappointed to learn of our son’s intentions, we are grateful that authorities were able to prevent any loss of life or harm to others. At this time, we would ask that the public and the media recognize our grief and respect our desire for privacy.”
The FBI had been tracking Ciccolo since fall of 2014, when he expressed a desire to fight for ISIS, the complaint says. Ciccolo told an acquaintance that his “faith is under attack” and he was “not afraid to die for the cause,” the FBI complaint said.

He is scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday for a detention hearing.

 

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