[7 / 1 / ?]
Quoted By:
I Failed to Brawl /b/
Kurt William Havelock, a restaurateur who was enraged over being denied a liquor license, had well-thought out plans to kill as many people as he could at Super Bowl XLII. The Super Bowl that made history when Eli Manning and the NY Giants beat the New England Patriots when they were 18 and 0 could have made history another way.
Kurt William Havelock drove up within sight of the stadium the Super Bowl was at on last Sunday with a loaded rifle and ammunition. The big game was held in Glendale, Arizona, a suburb of Phoenix. The Associated Press reports Havelock had 200 rounds of ammunition when he drove up to the stadium. Thankfully, the man changed his mind at the last minute.
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It was a shocking plot. Havelock had sent letters to media outlets claiming he was going to "shed the blood of the innocent" at the Super Bowl. In the letters he says his family has been attacked and the futures of his children have been destroyed.
"He waited about a minute and decided he couldn't do this," FBI Special Agent Philip Thorlin said. Havelock then called his fiancé and met his parents at his Tempe condominium. "He was very upset, he was sobbing hysterically," Frank Havelock said. "He said, 'I've done something terribly, terribly wrong.'"
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He was charged Monday with mailing threatening communications. He is being held without bail, and additional hearings have yet to be scheduled.
Kurt William Havelock, a restaurateur who was enraged over being denied a liquor license, had well-thought out plans to kill as many people as he could at Super Bowl XLII. The Super Bowl that made history when Eli Manning and the NY Giants beat the New England Patriots when they were 18 and 0 could have made history another way.
Kurt William Havelock drove up within sight of the stadium the Super Bowl was at on last Sunday with a loaded rifle and ammunition. The big game was held in Glendale, Arizona, a suburb of Phoenix. The Associated Press reports Havelock had 200 rounds of ammunition when he drove up to the stadium. Thankfully, the man changed his mind at the last minute.
***
It was a shocking plot. Havelock had sent letters to media outlets claiming he was going to "shed the blood of the innocent" at the Super Bowl. In the letters he says his family has been attacked and the futures of his children have been destroyed.
"He waited about a minute and decided he couldn't do this," FBI Special Agent Philip Thorlin said. Havelock then called his fiancé and met his parents at his Tempe condominium. "He was very upset, he was sobbing hysterically," Frank Havelock said. "He said, 'I've done something terribly, terribly wrong.'"
***
He was charged Monday with mailing threatening communications. He is being held without bail, and additional hearings have yet to be scheduled.