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Topic: Rodney Coronado


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In the News (Thu 24 Dec 09)

  
  AR.net >> Discussion Forum >> Court Reigns in Rodney Coronado
In a recent newsletter, Americans for Medical Progress reported that the parole conditions for Rodney Coronado have apparently been altered to prevent Coronado from continuing his very public writing and speaking campaign in favor of animal rights.
Coronado fire bombed a laboratory at Michigan State University and served almost five years in jail for his crimes before being paroled.
Coronado quickly repudiated those remarks while in jail and after his release on parole began writing articles for activists publications such as No Compromise extolling the virtues of the Animal Liberation Front and similar groups.
www.animalrights.net /808   (218 words)

  
 Animal rights duo guilty in Sabino case | www.azstarnet.com ®
Count One: Rodney A. Coronado, 39, and Matthew A. Crozier, 33, were both convicted of conspiring to prevent officers of the United States from doing their duty by force, intimidation or threat and injuring an officer's property.
Coronado was arrested in Sabino Canyon on March 24, 2004, along with Esquire magazine writer-at-large John Rich-ardson, whose confiscated tape recordings of the group's movement provided the basis for the case against Crozier and Coronado.
Coronado's attorney, Antonio Felix, said after the verdict that the jury may have been influenced by "evidence that didn't need to be there" concerning the danger posed by mountain lions.
www.azstarnet.com /news/106901   (1162 words)

  
 [No title]
Rod Coronado, a veteran animal rights advocate, was convicted for his role in the firebombing and served a three and a half year prison sentence.
November 2004: Rod Coronado was indicted in Arizona on a felony charge of conspiracy to impede or injure an officer.
Coronado, a longtime activist and spokesperson for extreme environmentalist movements, attempted to disrupt an effort by the Arizona Game and Fish Department to capture and kill mountain lions in Sabino Canyon near Tucson in March.
www.adl.org /Learn/Ext_US/Ecoterrorism.asp   (7234 words)

  
 This is an ANIT
Rodney Coronado is a known criminal with violet destructive Behavior, hoping to bring About forced world change to his ideologies through tarrist tactics, dissemination of miss-information and miss-leading the people as to the right of his way.
Rodney Coronado uses heinous tactics such as fire bombing research labs, schools, and legal busyness that he feels violates his personal view of what is right.
Rodney Coronado is unwilling to die for his beliefs, but supports the killing of humans in order to bring about his forced views.
www.freespaces.com /opaww3/case2.htm   (627 words)

  
 Arrested
Yesterday in Tucson, federal agents arrested animal-rights militant Rodney Coronado on charges that during an August 2003 "revolution summer" event in San Diego, he taught a room full of activists how to make incendiary devices out of common household materials.
Coronado offered a similar firebomb-building demonstration earlier in 2003 during a "Conference on Organized Resistance" held at American University in Washington, DC (click here to see video).
Coronado may be headed for long-term federal custody, but at least he'll feel right at home.
www.consumerfreedom.com /news_detail.cfm?headline=2977   (542 words)

  
 Definition of Rodney Coronado
Coronado was also involved in the liberation of minks at an MSU mink research farm on Jolly Road, wrecking equipment and opening animals' cages.
Coronado was raised on an Native American Indian reservation and as a young man sailed with Captain Paul Watson and helped sink the entire Icelandic whaling fleet.
Coronado lives in Tucson, Arizona and is currently being indicted on conspiracy charges for his activism in Oregon.
www.wordiq.com /definition/Rodney_Coronado   (315 words)

  
 Animal Liberation Press Office   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Rodney Coronado is facing 20 years in prison for telling other activists about his exploits at a 2003 conference for animal rights activists held the day after activists burned a partially completed condominium complex nearby.
Coronado was taken into custody near his home in Tucson, and after arraignment is expected to be transferred to San Diego for trial.
Coronado's words and actions fighting for animal liberation and the preservation of what little environment that has not been destroyed by humans, the corporate-controlled federal government is using any measures they can dig up to silence him.
animalliberationpressoffice.org /press_releases/pr_06_02_24_rodindicted.htm   (398 words)

  
 Animal Crackers: Rodney Coronado Endorses Non-Nonviolence
Coronado would have us believe, to be considered in the same light as Watson, Newkirk etc. — a visionary, a man ahead of his time.
Coronado then returns to the virtues of debate: we should, he tells us, consider killing humans (though he discreetly — or cowardly — refrains from using the word) because it is a tactic that has been validated by history.
Coronado's curious world, the "nonviolent" tactics that aren't working include beatings and the use of anti-personnel bombs and fire-bombs.
brianoconnor.typepad.com /animal_crackers/2005/12/rodney_coronado.html   (1416 words)

  
 Bombs and Shields
Coronado is a member of the Pascua Yaqui tribe, who hold eagle feathers sacred.
Last February Coronado was indicted on felony charges that he demonstrated how to use a destructive device at a 2003 lecture he gave in San Diego.
Coronado served four years in prison for that arson and is currently awaiting sentencing in Arizona, for disabling a mountain lion trap.
bombsandshields.blogspot.com /2006/07/rod-coronadotucson-arizona-us-native.html   (236 words)

  
 Rodney Coronado
Rodney Coronado fire-bombed a laboratory at Michigan State University in East Lansing, destroying decades of research into protecting wild mink.
Rodney Coronado is a selfish individual that has no consideration for other people.
Activists like Rodney Coronado cannot be rehabilitated because they do not want to be rehabilitated.
www.targetofopportunity.com /coronado.htm   (1438 words)

  
 Rodney Coronado Biography
Rodney Adam Coronado is a long-time ringleader of the Animal Liberation Front, a criminal enterprise that the FBI classifies as America’s most dangerous domestic terrorism threat.
In a November 30, 2002 speech, Coronado openly confessed to at least six other arsons, all of them part of a crime spree known as “Operation Bite Back.” While the FBI was most intensely investigating Coronado, PETA gave him over $70,000 in “grants” from its tax-exempt coffers.
Since that time, Coronado has shown a tendency to flee jurisdictions where warrants were issued for his arrest.
www.activistcash.com /biography.cfm/bid/3255   (465 words)

  
 Support for Rod Coronado
Coronado is a hero to some people here in his hometown, especially those on the left wing of the environmental and animal-rights movements.
Coronado said he finds it ironic to be hauled back into court now that he has renounced his earlier use of violence.
Coronado said that afterward he got on with his life — which, he grants, is not your average person’s.
www.supportrod.org   (4185 words)

  
 Dismissal sought in S.D. speech case | The San Diego Union-Tribune
Animal-rights activist Rodney Coronado, 40, of Tucson gave a speech Aug. 1, 2003, in Hillcrest in which he described sinking whaling ships in Iceland and setting fire to animal research facilities.
Coronado has not been charged in connection with the University City arson and says he was not in San Diego when it started.
Coronado is serving an eight-month sentence in federal prison for illegally springing a mountain lion trap in Arizona.
www.signonsandiego.com /uniontrib/20061106/news_1m6active.html   (913 words)

  
 Article
Coronado, who brought a reporter along to bear witness, even carried a bottle of lion urine to throw dogs off the trail.
Coronado was caught, and on December 13, 2005, found guilty by a federal jury in Tucson, Ariz., of conspiracy to impede or injure an officer of the United States, interfering with a forest officer and depredation of government property.
Although trouble with the law is nothing new for the 39-year-old, ironically it’s his addiction to the limelight that has been his undoing on several occasions—including the last incident, where tapes made by the reporter were introduced as evidence.
www.freehunters.org /article.aspx?id=1062   (912 words)

  
 San Diego Grand Jury Indicts Environmental Activist
Coronado is not charged with setting a fire 15 hours earlier that caused $50 million in damages and destroyed a large apartment complex under construction in the University Towne Center area of San Diego, prosecutors said.
Coronado, 39, is scheduled to be arraigned in Tucson on Thursday and could be brought to San Diego within the next couple of weeks, said Shane Harrigan, chief of the criminal division of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in San Diego.
Coronado’s case is the fifth to be brought under the statute nationally, and the first in the San Diego region, he said.
www.gnn.tv /threads/13239/San_Diego_Grand_Jury_Indicts_Environmental_Activist   (1626 words)

  
 Environment saboteur accused of possessing eagle feathers
Rodney Coronado, a convicted Tucson environmental saboteur facing charges in two criminal cases, has been cited with new counts alleging that he violated federal laws protecting birds of prey.
Coronado, the 39-year-old unofficial spokesman for Earth Liberation Front, was charged by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service this week with possessing eagle feathers.
In February, Coronado was indicted in connection with giving a 2003 speech on how to make a firebomb just hours after members of the group reportedly ignited a $50 million apartment blaze in San Diego, the most expensive act of eco-terrorism in U.S. history.
www.azcentral.com /arizonarepublic/local/articles/0722coronado0722.html   (269 words)

  
 California Wine and Food Magazine
A recent federal income tax return filed by PETA shows a $1,500 cash payment to the "North American Earth Liberation Front." And Rodney Coronado, a convicted arsonist who previously received $70,400 from PETA, was in San Diego on the day of the University City arson.
Coronado spent 57 months in federal prison for firebombing a Michigan State University research lab.
Rodney Coronado was quoted in several news stories about Saturday's $30 million arson, but reporters failed to note that he himself was in San Diego only hours before the fire was set.
www.californiawineandfood.com /news/elf-backed-by-peta.htm   (443 words)

  
 The State News - www.statenews.com
Coronado, a longtime leader of the underground Animal Liberation Front, has been connected to numerous raids against animal research centers, some of which occurred about a dozen years ago.
Coronado said the firebombings of the early 1990s "ushered in a new culture that animals abusers are going to have to live in - one where they know there are people willing to represent those they are oppressing and abusing."
Coronado became a fugitive until he was arrested in September 1994.
www.statenews.com /article.phtml?pk=23918   (3267 words)

  
 Press Release | Consumer Group Urges Delaware Church To Distance Itself From Domestic Terrorist
I urge you to reconsider allowing Rodney Coronado to use your church as a platform for his violent message.
Coronado is a convicted felon who spent over 4 years behind bars for the animal rights-related arson of a research laboratory at Michigan State University.
Rodney Coronado has demonstrated that he has no interest in expressing remorse or atoning for his crimes.
www.consumerfreedom.org /pressrelease_detail.cfm?release=13   (947 words)

  
 Convicted ecoterrorist faces new charges | www.tucsoncitizen.com ®
Rodney Coronado, who awaits sentencing for interfering with federal efforts to trap mountain lions in Sabino Canyon in 2004, faces new charges alleging that he violated federal laws protecting birds of prey.
Coronado was convicted in 2005 of one felony and two misdemeanors for interfering with federal efforts to trap and remove mountain lions from Sabino Canyon.
In February, Coronado was indicted in connection with giving a 2003 speech on how to make a firebomb just hours after members of the group reportedly ignited a $50 million apartment blaze in San Diego, the most expensive act of ecoterrorism in U.S. history.
www.tucsoncitizen.com /ss/local/20256   (393 words)

  
 Collecting Delaware Books - George Brydges Rodney, Delaware's Western Writer
George Brydges Rodney was born in New Castle in 1872 into one of Delaware's oldest families.
Rodney was educated in New Castle schools, Wilmington Friends School, and Lehigh University.
Rodney served in the Philippines, Hawaii, and the American West as a cavalry officer.
www.jnjreid.com /cdb/gbrodney.html   (1941 words)

  
 Campus Radical
In addition to the usual gaggle of anti-American, anti-capitalist, radical feminist, and other “social change” activists, the conference’s highlight (or lowlight, depending on your perspective), was a presentation by Rodney Coronado, a convicted arsonist who spent 57 months in prison for burning down a research lab at Michigan State University.
Yesterday, Coronado addressed a lecture hall full of tomorrow’s window-smashers and bomb-hoaxers, instructing them on how to assemble a crude incendiary device for just two dollars, using a milk jug, a sponge, and a stick of incense.
Rodney Coronado will soon take his “by any means necessary” rhetoric to college campuses across the country.
www.consumerfreedom.org /news_detail.cfm/headline/1758   (405 words)

  
 PETA2 // Boards
They mentioned something about a man named Rodney Coronado who went to jail because he was the "ringleader" of ALF and bombed some places or something to that nature.
Coronado, a Native American of the Yaqui nation, had already been helping Native Americans and animals for many years by the time he was charged with burning down an empty Michigan State University laboratory where animals were being infected with painful diseases.
Coronado deserved to be defended against the arson charge and permitted to continue being a productive member of society.
streetteam.peta2.com /public/folder_view.cfm?pageid=341&option=view_thread&postid=1422557&folderid=728   (740 words)

  
 Burgers Make McDonald's Target For Ecoterrorists
That's not good enough for ALF and ELF, said Rodney Coronado, a former ALF member who spent more than four years in prison for a 1992 fire bombing of animal research laboratories at Michigan State University.
Coronado demonstrated a device similar to that used in the Chico attack at a January conference at Washington, D.C.'s American University.
While Coronado encouraged property damage aimed at corporations, he emphasized ALF's and ELF's credo of avoiding injuries or death to humans or animals.
www.libertymatters.org /newsservice/2003/faxback/5.2.03_2452_Burgers.htm   (941 words)

  
 cbs2.com - S.D. Environmentalist Charged With Teaching Arson
Prosecutors say Rodney Coronado gave the lecture hours after a $50 million fire destroyed a big apartment complex in the costliest act of esotericism in U.S. history.
Coronado was arrested Wednesday in Tucson, Arizona, on a charge of distribution of information relating to explosives, destructive devices and weapons of mass destruction.
Coronado served four years in federal prison for a 1992 blaze at a Michigan animal research facility.
cbs2.com /topstories/local_story_053194438.html   (172 words)

  
 Coronado Boathouse 1887 - Sign On San Diego . com
Coronado Boathouse 1887 - Sign On San Diego.
Our wine list is extensive and varied, featuring vintages from around the globe.
Patio dining is available, allowing you to enjoy the incredible views of the marina, bay and skyline.
www.coronado-boathouse.com /wine.html   (70 words)

  
 ABC30.com: Environmentalist Charged with Teaching Arson in San Diego
Coronado previously served four years in federal prison for a 1992 blaze at a Michigan animal research facility.
Daniel Dzwilewski, agent in charge of the San Diego FBI office, alleged that Coronado was a national leader of the radical Earth Liberation Front.
Describing himself as an unofficial ELF spokesman, Coronado told The Associated Press at the time that young activists are "doing the only thing they know to do and that is strike a match and draw a whole lot of attention to their dissatisfaction with protecting the environment."
abclocal.go.com /kfsn/story?section=local&id=3932979   (536 words)

  
 ABCNews.com : Message Boards   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Ingrid Newkirk has given aid and comfort to one Rodney Coronado who is in jail for terrorist acts supporting animal rights.
Coronado also went around to several colleges and taught college students how to make firebombs.
Coronado is a "former member" of the Animal Liberation Front which is known for its terrorists acts that it actually takes credit for.
forums.go.com /abcnews/thread?threadID=462785   (452 words)

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