RSS
Contact
FAQs

Biography of Pastor Fred Phelps
World's Greatest Publishing Company
WBC Monograph
WBC Manifesto (TULIP doctrines)
Memo on the Church
Doctrine of Absolute Predestination
Meaning of "God Hates Fags"
The following is quoted from an April 6, 1996, article by Steve Fry in the Topeka Capital-Journal.

Topekan gets 16 days in pipe bomb incident

A Shawnee County judge on Friday sentenced a Topeka man to 16 days in jail and two years of probation on a charge of criminal damage to property in connection with a pipe bombing at the home of Brent Roper and Shirley Phelps-Roper.

District Judge Franklin Theis said the jail time was a message that Kent B. Lindstrom’s Aug. 20, 1996, detonation of a pipe bomb outside the home of the couple and their eight children was “an act of terrorism.”

“There’s no justification for it,” he said.

The bomb was a 4- to 6 inch “explosive device” made of a PVC pipe 1 inch around that was detonated with a fuse.

Lindstrom, 26, had pleaded no contest to criminal damage to property, a class E felony, as part of a plea arrangement with the district attorney’s office. Before the plea, Lindstrom was charged with felony arson and property loss of under $25,000.

After the sentencing, the Rev. Fred W. Phelps Sr. said he would ask the U.S. Attorney to file federal charges against Lindstrom.

Lindstrom is to spend weekends in jail. Theis said he didn’t want to interfere with Lindstrom’s job at a used-car dealership or his full-time education. However, Theis said he did want the jail sentence to inconvenience Lindstrom.

Lindstrom’s sentence also includes payment of $1,751 in restitution, 100 hours of community service, a prohibition on contact with the victims or their family, and a ban on possession of any explosives or weapons.

The restitution is to pay for $1,691 in damage to the Phelps-Roper van and for $60 worth of damage to a fence, Phelps-Roper said.

Theis declined to rule on a request by Jonathan B. Phelps that Lindstrom be ordered to pay, as restitution, $833 in reward money to a woman who provided information about the explosion.

After the explosion, a $5,000 reward was offered. Six people provided information, Fred Phelps Sr. said, and the $5,000 reward has been split six ways, or $833 for each person.

So far, none of the reward has been paid. The other five informants haven’t requested rewards. Attorneys representing the victims and Lindstrom have 10 days to file documents about the reward question.

Before he was sentenced, Lindstrom told Theis, “I do regret my involvement in this act.”

Also before the sentencing, Fred Phelps Sr. said he was the intended victim.

He said Lindstrom and others planned to blow up his house but incorrectly chose the Phelps-Roper house because it was the largest one on the block, assuming it was Fred Phelps Sr.’s home.

The Phelps-Roper van absorbed the blast, which occurred 8 to 10 feet from where a 4-day-old boy and a 1 ½ year-old girl slept, he said.

Pedro Irigonegaray, Lindstrom’s defense attorney, disputed that Fred Phelps Sr. was the target.

“There is no evidence that there was any intent or plan to blow up the house. It is an exaggeration without foundation,” Irigonegaray said.

“It was an immature act which was intended to set off a device, a large firecracker.”

The Westboro Baptist Church’s picketing is “exceedingly offensive and abusive,” Irigonegaray said, and it’s “inappropriate” to “cloak” these acts as religion.

“God is the one to judge, not us mortals,” the defense attorney said, adding that Lindstrom’s crime deserved punishment because people could have been harmed.

HomeNewsAudioVisualWrittenBlogs

1955-2008 © Copyright Westboro Baptist Church. You may use any of our material free of charge for any reason.