Skip navigation
advertisement

LSU student held in threat against Sen. Clinton

Classmate reported he was asked to be part of ‘terrorist act’

Slideshows: The path to presidency
U.S Senator Barack Obama
EPA
  The long road to the White House
Barack Obama’s two-year journey to his historic election encompassed fist bumps and bowling balls, controversies and celebrations.
Image: Barack Obama
The Rise of Barack Obama
  A leader in the making
Witness private and political moments along Barack Obama’s path to the presidency, as seen by official White House photographer Pete Souza.
AP
  Presidential journey
Want to follow the roots of President-elect Barack Obama? Get ready to visit three countries, five time zones and six states.
AP
  World reacts to Obama’s victory
From the U.S. president-elect’s ancestral homes in Kenya and Ireland to his namesake town in Japan, election fever grips the globe.
Gonzales Testifies At Senate Hearing On NSA Surveillance
Getty Images
  A look at Biden
A glimpse over the years at U.S. Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del.
Slideshow
Crazy candidate merchandise
Online entrepreneurs cash in on the heated election with candidate-related toys, finger puppets, comic books — and even condoms.
updated 6:49 p.m. ET May 4, 2007

BATON ROUGE, La. - A 19-year-old Louisiana State University student was being held Friday on $1 million bond, accused of planning an attack against Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.

State District Judge Mike Erwin set bond after Richard Ryan Wargo of Shreveport was booked with terrorizing, communicating false information of planned arson and possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

Clinton, D-N.Y., a presidential candidate, is scheduled to be in Baton Rouge on Saturday to speak at the National Conference of Black Mayors. Police said it was unclear whether Wargo was planning to carry out the alleged attack at that time.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Darrin Blackford, spokesman for the Secret Service, said the agency had no comment on the alleged threat or on security at Clinton's planned appearance in Baton Rouge on Saturday.

Clinton campaign spokesperson Mo Elleithee also had no comment.

LSU Police Chief Ricky Adams said Wargo, who is listed on LSU's Web site as a physics major, asked another student if he wanted to join him in committing arson, a "terrorist act" that he described as a "national event."

"He allegedly went on to say it was political and it involved Hillary Clinton," Adams said.

The classmate later learned Clinton had scheduled a Baton Rouge appearance. Police said the student reported Wargo to the university after a second conversation, in which Wargo allegedly made a second remark indicating he planned violence against Clinton.

‘Have you ever heard of a dead president?’
That remark "was something along the lines of, 'Have you ever heard of a dead president?'" Adams said. "That's language that should be of concern to anyone. Thank goodness the classmate reported it."

Police arrested Wargo in a traffic stop Thursday night. "He cooperated and did not resist," Adams said.

Officers searched Wargo's dormitory room and found documents that made the classmate's accusations appear credible, Adams said. He declined to give details, but said officers also seized Wargo's computer and marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

A call to Wargo's family's home in Shreveport was not immediately returned.

U.S. Attorney David Dugas said the Secret Service is also investigating.

"If they believe a federal crime has been committed, they'll refer it to our office and we'll consider it," Dugas said.

  Picking the president — the candidates
Click a name below to visit that candidate’s MSNBC page

Joe Biden                 • Sam Brownback     • Hillary Clinton          • Chris Dodd
John Edwards         • Rudy Giuliani           • Mike Gravel              • Duncan Hunter
Mike Huckabee        • Dennis Kucinich     • John McCain           • Barack Obama
Ron Paul                    • Bill Richardson      • Mitt Romney            • Tom Tancredo
Fred Thompson

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide