Man admits bringing explosive device to abortion clinic
WICHITA, Kan. --A homeless man has pleaded guilty to criminal use of explosives after he went to apply for a job a Wichita abortion clinic with a small bottle of gunpowder and a wick in his backpack.
Moises R. Trevizo Jr., 20, admitted Monday to the charge, which stemmed from his arrest in August, The Wichita Eagle reported. His trial had been scheduled to start the same day, and he is now scheduled to be sentenced June 24 in Sedgwick County District Court.
Trevizo went to the South Wind Women's Center, which opened in 2013 in the building where Dr. George Tiller provided abortions before being killed at a church in 2009, in August to apply for a job. A security guard at the clinic discovered the homemade explosive device, along with clothing and several knives, while searching the man's backpack, which police said held everything Trevizo owned.
A precautionary evacuation was ordered for the clinic, a building that has long been the site of anti-abortion violence; Tiller was shot and wounded there in 1993, and it was bombed in 1996.
Authorities quickly ruled out the chance that Trevizo might be a protester involved in a bomb threat. Police had said Trevizo didn't mean any harm, and that device was too small to damage the clinic.
Depending on his criminal history, Trevizo could be sentenced to anything from probation to more than a decade in prison. He remains in Sedgwick County Jail in lieu of bond, according to jail records.