Convicted bomber Ludwig arrested in B.C. pipeline blasts
Last Updated: Friday, January 8, 2010 | 6:37 PM PT
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TIMELINE: The pipeline bombings
- April 15, 2010 - 3rd letter received by newspaper
- A Dawson Creek newspaper receives another letter warning that "a long hot summer is coming."
- July 30, 2009 - EnCana posts $1M reward for bomber
- EnCana doubles its reward to $1 million for tips leading to the arrest and prosecution of the bomber.
- July 15, 2009 - B.C. paper gets 2nd letter
- A Dawson Creek newpaper receives a second letter connected to the EnCana bombings.
- July 7, 2009 - 6th bomb at B.C. pipeline causes gas leak
- EnCana's natural gas pipeline near Pouce Coupe, B.C. springs a small leak after being targeted.
- July 2, 2009 - 5th pipeline explosion near Pouce Coupe
- The fifth explosion is discovered by EnCana employees at a remote wellhead south of Dawson Creek.
- Jan. 5, 2009 - 4th pipeline bomb destroys metering shed
- A fourth explosion rocks an EnCana natural gas facility in northeastern B.C., east of Dawson Creek.
- Nov 1, 2008 - 3rd pipeline explosion hit EnCana pipeline
- Another explosion hits an EnCana sour-gas pipeline near the small community of Tomslake.
- Oct. 16, 2008 - 2nd pipeline bombed in northern B.C.
- Canada's pipeline industry is on high alert after two acts of sabotage in less than a week.
- Oct. 14, 2008 - RCMP probe first pipeline bombing
- The first explosive device damages a natural gas pipeline blasting a 1.8-metre crater east of Dawson Creek.
- July, 2008 - RCMP hunt stolen explosives
- A cache of high explosives are stolen from a remote site in Northern B.C., putting police on alert.
Wiebo Ludwig
- VIDEO: Wiebo Ludwig: protester or criminal?
- CBC Archives - June 21, 1999
- Ludwig plans internet ads to expand farm
- June 9, 2006
B.C. pipeline bombings
- RCMP seek help of convicted gas-well bomber
- Oct. 14, 2009
- Convicted bomber urges end to pipeline attacks
- Sept. 12, 2009
- Pipeline sabotage sends a message, convicted vandal says
- Oct. 19, 2008
Vandalism of oil and gas wells
- Community wants answers as Ludwig released from jail
- Nov. 14, 2001
- Ludwig, Boonstra guilty of six charges
- April 20, 2000
- Wiebo Ludwig injured in explosion
- April 19, 1999
Karman Willis case
- Wiebo Ludwig calls for public inquiry into unsolved killing
- Dec. 17, 2007
- No charges laid one year after Karman Willis killed
- June 20, 2000
- Charges unlikely in Ludwig shooting case, RCMP say
- Oct. 6, 1999
- Ludwig's daughter denies having gun
- June 23, 1999
Wiebo Ludwig, who served time for bombing Alberta oil and gas wells in the 1990s, has been arrested in connection with more recent bombings of EnCana pipelines in B.C., his lawyer says. (CBC) No charges have been laid against Wiebo Ludwig, an Alberta activist convicted of bombing oil and gas wells in the 1990s who was arrested Friday in connection with recent bombings at EnCana pipelines in northeastern B.C.
"That's going to be a wait-and-see situation," said Insp. Tim Shields, media relations for the RCMP in B.C. "Charges have not been approved by Crown counsel in British Columbia and, ultimately, they are the ones who have to make that decision as to whether or not charges are going to be approved."
RCMP have not named the man they arrested early Friday in connection with the bombings.
All they said is that they arrested a man in his 50s or 60s and were conducting a large search of an Alberta farm near Hythe, Alta., about 400 kilometres northwest of Edmonton, near the B.C.-Alberta border.
Earlier in the day, Ludwig's lawyer, Paul Moreau, confirmed his client was in custody and said he expected Ludwig would be charged with extortion.
Moreau said Ludwig was arrested at a hotel in Grande Prairie, Alta., on Friday morning after going there voluntarily to meet with a senior RCMP officer.
A police roadblock is set up on the road leading to Wiebo Ludwig's farm near Hythe, Alta. (RCMP) Ludwig spent nearly two years in prison after being convicted on charges related to the bombing of oil and gas installations in Alberta in the 1990s. He sent an open letter to the EnCana pipeline bomber in September 2009, expressing his support but urging the bombings to stop.
More than a dozen officers started searching the property for evidence related to the bombings.
"We cannot say what we are looking for specifically, or what information led us to the location, but we have followed a trail of evidence that ultimately led to the execution of the search warrant," said Supt. Lloyd Plante of the RCMP's national security program in B.C.
EnCana spokesman Alan Boras said the company was pleased an arrest had been made.
"We hope this development leads to potential conclusion of these events but that remains to be seen," Boras said.
EnCana targeted
Since October 2008, there have been six pipeline bombings in the Tomslake area of British Columbia, near Dawson Creek, targeting the facilities of the Calgary-based energy company EnCana.
Before the first attack, someone sent a handwritten letter to local news media demanding a stop to oil and gas operations.
The letter called EnCana and other companies "terrorists" that are "endangering our families with crazy expansion of deadly gas wells."
(CBC) The note was followed by three successive explosions, two of which caused leaks of sour gas. Reserves in the Tomslake area are mostly sour gas, which contains hydrogen sulphide that can be deadly in high concentrations if released into the air.
At the time of the sixth and most recent blast in July 2009, the RCMP labelled the attacks "domestic terrorism."
Residents of the town of Tomslake faced heightened scrutiny by the RCMP during the investigation over the past 15 months.
News of an arrest was greeted with relief by resident Ardyth Overholdt, who wrote a critical letter about the bomber to the Dawson Creek newspaper last year.
"Some people say, 'well ... that bombing wasn't that big of a deal anyway — no one got hurt,' which is a fairly odd attitude in my mind to take," she said Friday.
"So there so are those that say, 'Oh well, big deal, so what.' But for the rest of us, it's like it's a very big relief."
Corrections and Clarifications
- An earlier version of this story incorrectly referred to RCMP Insp. Tim Shields as a sergeant. Jan. 11, 2010 | 8 a.m. MT
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