Greenville, South Carolina ---- United States Attorney
Sherri A. Lydon announced today that Wesley Dallas Ayers, 27, of Anderson,
South Carolina, was sentenced in federal court for using, attempting to use,
and threatening to use weapons of mass destruction; possession and discharge of
a firearm in furtherance of a violent crime; and use of an explosive device
during the commission of a felony.
United States District Judge Henry M. Herlong, Jr., of Greenville
sentenced Ayers to 361 months in federal prison and five years of supervised
release. There is no parole in the
federal system.
Ayers had previously admitted that he constructed, and then
placed, three explosive devices in various parts of Anderson County between
January 24, 2018, and February 24, 2018.
A device placed by Ayers on January 30, 2018, at the intersection of
Travis and Martin Roads in Anderson County, detonated and injured one
individual. The other two devices, which
Ayers also placed in or near area roadways, were intercepted and rendered safe
by federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies.
In that same timeframe, Ayers placed three hoax devices,
which resembled explosives but did not contain any blasting agent. With some of those devices, the defendant
left threatening messages that more, and more powerful, devices were to come.
Ayers was arrested after an exhaustive month-long
investigation, with the combined efforts of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation; Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco Firearms and Explosives; Anderson
County Sheriff’s Office, and numerous law enforcement agencies from around the
State of South Carolina. DNA and other
forensic evidence associated Ayers with the various devices. Additionally, a search of his property
produced numerous items consistent with the manufacture of the same.
Judge Herlong found that the dangerous and lethal nature of
the devices, weaponized with shrapnel, concealed in household items, and
publicly placed in or near roadways justified the substantial sentence. He
emphasized the length of Ayers’ campaign against the citizens of Anderson
County for more than a month’s time and that only by the efforts of law
enforcement and sheer good fortune were more individuals not seriously harmed
or killed.
The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation in conjunction with numerous other federal, state, and local law
enforcement agencies. Assistant United
States Attorney D. Josev Brewer of the Greenville office prosecuted the
case.
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