Police
detonate 3 bombs found in Toronto car
Updated
Fri. Aug. 31 2007 11:50 PM ET
CTV.ca
News Staff
Police
technicians have detonated three improvised explosive devices at Toronto's Leslie
Street Spit after finding the bombs in the trunk of a car.
Southbound
lanes of the Don Valley Parkway and all lanes of the Gardiner Expressway -- both
major arteries in and out of the city's downtown core -- were reopened after police
shut down traffic to transport the explosives.
At
a news conference Friday afternoon, Deputy Police Chief Tony Warr said the three
bombs were each about 35 centimetres long.
Police
say the three explosives are linked to the arrest of a 37-year-old man taken into
custody Thursday night. The man is the subject of an ongoing investigation into
letter bombs mailed to two residences in Toronto and one in Guelph.
The
bombs were discovered in the trunk of the man's silver sedan, Warr confirmed at
an earlier news conference Friday morning.
The
car was parked at an Esso gas station near Overlea Boulevard near Thorncliffe
Park Drive.
Warr
said police believe the three letter bomb incidents and the explosives found in
the vehicle, are linked.
The
motive behind the letter bombs appears to be personal between the suspect and
the recipients, Warr said.
Police
have identified the man arrested on Thursday night as Adel Arnaout.
Arnaoult
has been charged with:
Three
counts of attempted murder;
Three
counts of intending to cause explosion;
One
count of possessing explosives for unlawful purposes.
Toronto
police recently asked the public to closely scrutinize any suspicious packages
they received in the mail after two letter bombs were received by city residents.
On
Aug. 19, a real estate lawyer living in the city's Sheppard Avenue and Yonge Street
area received an envelope that smelled of petroleum. The lawyer alerted police
and the package was detonated safely.
About
a week earlier, a resident of the city's east end, near Victoria Park Avenue and
Lawrence Avenue East, received a bubble-wrapped envelope that also contained a
petroleum-like liquid. A male resident was injured when he tried to open the package
and it exploded in his hands.
Both
packages were 21.6 cm by 27.9 cm and each had properly addressed courier receipts
attached. They were also both rigged to explode when opened. The courier company
has said it did not send the packages.
A
third package was mailed to a residence of Guelph.