The pastor of a lawyer badly burned in a bombing at a north Georgia law firm says the lawyer will remain in the hospital for at least a month.
Jim Phillips, of Calhoun, was taken to the Joseph M. Still Burn Center in Augusta after a bomb exploded Friday at the Dalton law firm where he worked.
Rev. Billy Beard, assistant pastor of the church attended by Phillips, said the 79-year-old lawyer is in good spirits. Phillips was still in critical condition Sunday evening.
Dalton police spokesman Bruce Frazier said Sunday investigators are working ot determine why 78-year-old Lloyd Cantrell of Varnell threw a bomb into the McCamy, Phillips Tuggle and Fordham law firm.
Cantrell died in the blast.
(The Associated Press)
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Monday, October 20, 2008
Dalton man facing long recovery after bombing
Posted by
Dave
at
10/20/2008 12:32:00 PM
Labels: Cantrell, car bombing, Dalton, Firearms and Tobacco, U.S. Bureau of Alcohol and Firearms
Friday, October 17, 2008
Supect dead, 4 wounded in Dalton bombing
Police say a bomb blew up at the Dalton, Ga., law office of McCamy, Phillips, Tuggle & Fordham today, killing one and injuring four others. (Courtesy WGCL)
Georgia investigators say a 71-year-old man suspected of setting off an explosion at a small-town law office has died.
Four other people were injured in the explosion that blew out the windows at McCamy, Phillips, Tuggle & Fordham around 10 a.m. Friday.
Police say there was some kind of disturbance at the office before the blast. An officer saw someone get out of a sport utility vehicle and run behind the building. Then something exploded.
Firefighters are still battling a small blaze that flared up after in initial blast.
The suspect's body is still in the building in Dalton, about 25 miles southeast of Chattanooga, Tenn.
Two of the injured were treated at a hospital and released, one was admitted and a fourth was taken to a burn center.
Officials said in a statement that: “Dalton police received a 911 call regarding a disturbance at the law firm. The first police officer, to arrive on the scene spotted a person in a small SUV. When this person saw the officer, he jumped out of the SUV and ran behind the law firm, at which time the explosion occurred. The police officer was not injured. One fatality has been reported and is still at the scene.
Police Lt. Bruce Frazier said the blast was caused by some type of explosive device. Investigators were looking into a person of interest in the case, but no one had been arrested, he said. He declined to provide more details.
Bomb squads were checking for sweeping the premises for other explosives, Georgia Bureau of Investigation spokesman John Bankhead said.
Four people hurt in the explosion were in stable condition at Hamilton Medical Center, spokeswoman Emily Michael said. One of the four was being taken to the Joseph M. Still Burn Center in Augusta, spokeswoman Beth Frits said.
The eight-lawyer firm, founded in 1932, works out of a two-story, colonial-style house. Police cordoned off the block and shut down a post office near the law firm, which specializes in personal injury and wrongful death cases, according to its Web site. An elementary school across the street was locked down, though it wasn't damaged.
State and federal investigators were assisting local authorities.
(The Associated Press)
Posted by
Dave
at
10/17/2008 03:00:00 PM
Labels: Bureau of Alcohol, car bombing, Dalton, explosion, Firearms and Explosives, Tobacco
Thursday, August 7, 2008
Police: video game taught bombmaking
Posted by
Name
at
8/07/2008 05:31:00 PM
Labels: car bombing, grand theft auto, milton, molotov cocktail, video game
