ERIE, Pa., Sept. 4, 2008

Confession In Bizarre Collar Bomb Plot

Man Admits He Helped Concoct A Bank Robbery Scheme That Killed A Pizza Deliveryman In 2003

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    • The collar bomb.

      The collar bomb.  (AP)

    • Brian Douglas Wells wearing the collar bomb before it exploded, killing him.

      Brian Douglas Wells wearing the collar bomb before it exploded, killing him.  (CBS)

    • Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong, Brian Douglas Wells and Kenneth Barnes.

      Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong, Brian Douglas Wells and Kenneth Barnes.  (AP/CBS)

    • Brian Wells' driver's license photo.

      Brian Wells' driver's license photo.  (AP)

    • This is the cane-shaped firearm found in the car of a pizza deliveryman Brian Wells.

      This is the cane-shaped firearm found in the car of a pizza deliveryman Brian Wells.  (AP Photo/FBI)

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(AP)  A man admitted Wednesday in federal court that he helped plot a bizarre bank robbery that ended when a bomb strapped around a pizza deliveryman's neck exploded and killed him, the first conviction in the five-year-old case.

Kenneth Barnes pleaded guilty to conspiracy and a charge of aiding and abetting at a hearing in which prosecutors also revealed new details, based on a statement by Barnes, about deliveryman Brian Wells' alleged involvement in the scheme.

According to Barnes, Wells tried to back out on the day of the robbery, refusing to put on the collar-bomb after realizing it was real. Another plotter then fired a single shot from a gun, scaring him into putting it around his neck.

Barnes, 54, could be sentenced to life in prison, but his attorneys hope he will get a lighter sentence in exchange for his cooperation.

Defense attorney Alison Scarpitti said her client played a minimal role in the plot. In court, Barnes admitted he was one of the lookouts at the bank and that he told one of his accomplices how to build a pipe bomb.

The investigation into the convoluted scheme began when Wells, 46, walked into a PNC Bank branch on the outskirts of Erie on Aug. 28, 2003, with a pipe bomb locked onto his neck. He presented a teller with a note demanding money and walked away with about $8,700.

Wells was cornered by police a short time later and told officers the bomb had been put on his neck at gunpoint. It exploded, killing him, as police waited for a bomb squad to arrive.

Prosecutors have concluded Wells was an active member in the scheme at first, but was coerced as the plot unfolded. His family insists he was an innocent victim.

Barnes told authorities that he and Wells had discussed the plan with the scheme's mastermind and her boyfriend, prosecutors told the judge.

Prosecutors previously said Wells had his neck measured for the bomb, which he thought would be fake. In court on Wednesday, they said Barnes told investigators that on the day of the robbery, Wells realized the bomb was real and refused to put it on - until one of the plotters fired a gun.

"If he died, he could not be a witness," authorities said in an indictment filed last year against Barnes and his alleged co-conspirators.

Before Barnes courtroom confession, U.S. Attorney Mary Beth Buchanan described Wells as having a limited role in the plot and speculated that he may have been coerced into participating. The bomb that killed Wells was on a timer but it was unclear if his co-conspirators planned on his death, she said.

"Sadly, the plans of these other individuals were much more sinister ... and he died as a result," Buchanan said. "It may be that his role transitioned from that of the planning stages to being an unwilling participant in the scheme."

Prosecutors also said Wells lied to the police officers who caught him, telling them he had been abducted by a group of black men even though all the alleged plotters were white.

Last year, federal authorities announced charges against Barnes and the woman they labeled the ringleader, Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong. A federal judge recently ruled Diehl-Armstrong is mentally unfit to stand trial, a decision that could be changed depending on how she responds to treatment.

Prosecutors said Diehl-Armstrong, 59, was angry with her father about an inheritance dispute and wanted to rob a bank to raise money to pay Barnes to kill him. Barnes told investigators he was to get a $100,000 down payment and be paid $200,000 to kill her father.

Diehl-Armstrong is currently serving a seven- to 20-year prison sentence for killing her boyfriend, 45-year-old James Roden, to keep him silent about the bank robbery scheme. She pleaded guilty but mentally ill in that case.

An ex-boyfriend, William Rothstein, got two timers from Diehl-Armstrong for the time bomb and called in a phony pizza order used to bring Wells to a secluded dead-end road, according the indictment. Rothstein has since died of cancer.

Wells told police officers that, when he got to the secluded area, he was confronted by the group of men and forced to put on the bomb.

In his car, investigators found a gun resembling a cane and a nine-page handwritten letter that included detailed instructions on what Wells was to do with the bank money and how he could unlock the collar-bomb by going through a kind of scavenger hunt, looking for clues and landmarks.

Prosecutors on Wednesday said the bomb was built in such a way that it would have been impossible to remove without detonating it. They said they are still unsure who built it.

Diehl-Armstrong's attorney, federal public defender Thomas Patton, has declined to comment on Barnes' guilty plea.

Barnes might testify against Diehl-Armstrong, according to his lawyer. He is to be sentenced Dec. 3.

U.S. Attorney Mary Beth Buchanan called Barnes' plea "a significant step toward closure." She called the bank robbery "one of the most bizarre crimes ever committed in western Pennsylvania."


©MMVIII, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 17 Comments
by gatofeo September 7, 2008 3:39 PM EDT
Take all those responsible for this man''s death and execute them. Download six .30-30 bullets into their heart at close range.
And have them dig their own grave, with a shovel, before their execution. Give them a taste of the terror they caused this poor man.
Confiscate everything they own. Give it to the parents, wife or children of the man murdered by the explosive device, to do with as they wish: sell it, burn it, whatever.
It can''t bring back the victim, but it will ease the pain of those he left behind.
I believe some crimes are so heinous as to deserve burning at the stake. This may be one of them. I''m serious.
Chain them to metal poles in the ground, in the remote desert. Pile wood around. Ignite it by remote control. And let no one within miles. I don''t want them to see one sympathetic eye. Let them die in terror and agony, totally alone.
Perhaps, in their final moments, they''ll get a taste of what it''s like to die helpless and terrified, just like their victim.
Reply to this comment
by rhs648 September 5, 2008 10:25 PM EDT
The police are stupid. They still want the victim to be guilty, even as it is revealed that he was FORCED not coerced. They continue to find justification for not helping the man.

Posted by rudy654

Whether it is a policeman or not, you don''t expect someone to risk his life when someone has a bomb around their neck. You do what is prudent and call in the bomb squad. It is not the police who got this man in this position. Police are paid to take risks but not sacrifice themselves needlessly.
Reply to this comment
by rhs648 September 5, 2008 10:21 PM EDT
"Prosecutors also said Wells lied to the police officers who caught him, telling them he had been abducted by a group of black men even though all the alleged plotters were white."

Probably why it took five years, the cops instantly believed him, and spent a couple of years looking for some non existent "Black" men.

It begs the question how many "Black'''' men were unnecessarily hassled by police as a result.

Posted by brianbwb

You are right. It is unfortunate when people of any race are falsely accused. On the other hand, the police would have no choice but to chase down any leads provided. Fortunately, the police realized that they had been told a lie and eventually solved this. Each participant probably gave different accounts of what happened and who was involved. These appear to be very sleezy people.
Reply to this comment
by shippg September 5, 2008 4:45 PM EDT
This is awful. All involved should die, no matter how small their role was.
Reply to this comment
by nlm2383 September 5, 2008 1:20 AM EDT
Anyone still living involved in this should be sentenced to death and anyone who has already died deserved what they got...
Reply to this comment
by akakjb September 4, 2008 8:12 PM EDT
Everybody''s got it wrong. This isn''t a David Lynch or a Saw film, it''s got the Cohen Brothers written all over it. The ''mastermind'' is a mentally deranged woman who recruited the gang who couldn''t shoot straight to rob banks to get the money to have her father whacked. It would be funny if it weren''t true. Still, at least it had nothing to do with 9/11.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 September 4, 2008 6:55 PM EDT
"Prosecutors also said Wells lied to the police officers who caught him, telling them he had been abducted by a group of black men even though all the alleged plotters were white."

Probably why it took five years, the cops instantly believed him, and spent a couple of years looking for some non existent "Black" men.

It begs the question how many "Black'' men were unnecessarily hassled by police as a result.
Reply to this comment
by xmanborg September 4, 2008 6:53 PM EDT
I am sure Hallmark will make this into one of their Quality made for TV movies.

Staring Kevin Bacon and Paris Hilton.
Reply to this comment
by incog-nito September 4, 2008 6:29 PM EDT
It''s obvious that they wanted to kill this guy anyway. There is no reason whatsoever to use a real bomb, when a fake one that looks real will do just fine.
Reply to this comment
by slim1h2o September 4, 2008 5:49 PM EDT
They continue to find justification for not helping the man.

Posted by rudy654 at 01:10 PM : Sep 04, 2008

I tend to agree with you. It used to be that police departments motto was, "To Serve and to Protect".

Now-a-days it should read, "To Ticket and confiscate", or, "We don''t Care, longs the city makes money off the peoples misery".

This country is no longer a world leader. We do lead the world in "most imprisoned".

We should be proud.(?)
Reply to this comment
by blackyowe September 4, 2008 5:39 PM EDT
I live near Erie. I am glad they finally got the details on this case and solved it. It was really horrible and frightening! It certainly is a case one does not forget quickly!
Reply to this comment
by sistatee-2009 September 4, 2008 5:36 PM EDT
Robbing a bank by blowing up a pizza delivery man. True genius.
Reply to this comment
by gopack443 September 4, 2008 5:18 PM EDT
Does any of this seem to resemble Saw to the rest of you? It''''s sicko. It makes me nauseous just thinking about it. I wonder why people think movies like that are entertaining.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by c12k

Obviously you watched it, Why don''t you tell us.
Reply to this comment
by thevicar2 September 4, 2008 4:51 PM EDT
A few creepy, sleeze-ball, dead-end, toothless social outcasts get together, rob a bank, shoot each other, and blow each other up. Whats the big deal?

As long as they are all either dead, or in jail, we are better off...now can we get on with normal people business?
Reply to this comment
by rudy654-2009 September 4, 2008 4:10 PM EDT
The police are stupid. They still want the victim to be guilty, even as it is revealed that he was FORCED not coerced. They continue to find justification for not helping the man.
Reply to this comment
by no2zeebas September 4, 2008 3:43 PM EDT
Does any of this seem to resemble Saw to the rest of you? It''''s sicko. It makes me nauseous just thinking about it. I wonder why people think movies like that are entertaining.

Posted by c12k at 11:59 AM : Sep 04, 2008

Get over your ultra dumb self...
Reply to this comment
by chris12karen September 4, 2008 2:59 PM EDT
Does any of this seem to resemble Saw to the rest of you? It''s sicko. It makes me nauseous just thinking about it. I wonder why people think movies like that are entertaining.
Reply to this comment
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