FBI agents descended on the Montevideo mobile home belonging to the parents of Buford "Bucky'' Rogers in May because a witness in Texas had told them Rogers was on the verge of carrying out multiple bombings, an FBI agent testified Tuesday.
Appearing in a St. Paul federal courtroom, FBI agent Shane Ball said the same witness had told federal agents that Rogers had cheered the Boston Marathon bombing and was about to carry out plans of his own to bomb the Montevideo Police Department, a communications tower and a National Guard armory.
"It was a very real plot," Ball said.
He did not name the witness, who Ball said was the sole source of information on the alleged plot that led to the May 3 raid.
Although the FBI labeled it a terror case in a news release issued after the arrest, a federal grand jury did not indict Rogers on terrorism charges when it released its report three weeks later. He was indicted on four felony counts, including being a felon in possession of a firearm and three counts of possessing "unregistered destructive devices." The devices included two Molotov cocktails, two "black powder nail devices" and a pipe bomb.
Rogers, 24, was seated in the courtroom dressed in orange prison garb Tuesday. His father and mother, Jeff and Margaret Rogers, and Rogers' brother and fiancée sat in the back of court.
"The people they have as witnesses are lying through their teeth," Jeff Rogers said afterward. He said the FBI's witness, whom he did not name, previously lived in the mobile home with the family.
Miranda warning delayed?
Andrew Mohring, Rogers' federal public defender, is seeking to suppress much of the evidence, including an interview Rogers gave to the FBI immediately after his arrest.