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facts about george metesky.html

28 Facts About George Metesky

facts about george metesky.html1.

Angry and resentful about events surrounding a workplace injury suffered years earlier, George Metesky planted at least 33 bombs, of which 22 exploded, injuring 15 people.

2.

George Metesky was apprehended in 1957 based on clues given in letters he wrote to a newspaper.

3.

George Metesky was found legally insane and committed to a state mental hospital.

4.

In 1931, George Metesky was working as a generator wiper at the company's Hell Gate generating plant when a boiler backfire produced a blast of hot gases.

5.

George Metesky developed a hatred for the company's attorneys and for the three co-workers whose testimony in his compensation case he believed was perjured in favor of the company.

6.

George Metesky's bombs were gunpowder-filled pipe bombs, ranging in size from 4 to 10 inches long and from 0.5 to 2 inches in diameter.

7.

Between 1940 and 1956, George Metesky planted at least 33 bombs, of which 22 exploded, injuring 15 people.

8.

George Metesky planted his first bomb on November 16,1940, leaving it on a window sill at the Consolidated Edison power plant at 170 West 64th Street in Manhattan.

9.

True to his word, George Metesky planted no bombs between 1941 and 1951, choosing instead to send letters and postcards to police stations, newspapers, private citizens and Con Edison.

10.

George Metesky often placed warning calls to the buildings where he had planted bombs, but would not specify the bomb's exact location.

11.

George Metesky wrote to newspapers warning that he planned to plant more.

12.

George Metesky bombed movie theaters, where he cut into seat upholstery and slipped his explosive devices inside.

13.

George Metesky next planted a bomb that exploded without injury in a phone booth at the Consolidated Edison headquarters building at 4 Irving Place.

14.

George Metesky mailed one bomb, which did not explode, to Consolidated Edison from White Plains, New York.

15.

George Metesky has been sending simulated bombs around the city the past few months.

16.

George Metesky listed all the locations where he had placed bombs that year, and seemed concerned that perhaps not all had been discovered.

17.

Police investigators who later reviewed the path that led them to George Metesky said that Con Edison had impeded the investigation for almost two years by repeatedly telling them that the records of employees whose services were terminated prior to 1940, the group George Metesky was in, had been destroyed.

18.

George Metesky led them to the garage workshop, where they found his lathe.

19.

George Metesky had answered the door in pajamas; after he was ordered to get dressed for the trip to Waterbury Police Headquarters, he reappeared wearing a double-breasted suit, buttoned.

20.

George Metesky told the arresting officers that he had been "gassed" in the Con Edison accident, had contracted tuberculosis as a result, and started planting bombs because he "got a bum deal".

21.

George Metesky explained that it was intended for the New York Coliseum.

22.

George Metesky was brought to the courtroom to hear the charges from Manhattan's Bellevue Hospital, where he had been undergoing psychiatric examination.

23.

George Metesky was unresponsive to psychiatric therapy, but was a model inmate and caused no trouble.

24.

George Metesky was visited regularly by his sisters and occasionally by Brussel, to whom he would point out that he had deliberately built his bombs not to kill anyone.

25.

Since George Metesky had been committed to Matteawan without a jury trial, he was transferred to the Creedmoor Psychiatric Center, a state hospital outside the correctional system.

26.

Doctors determined that he was harmless, and because he had already served two-thirds of the 25-year maximum sentence he would have received at trial, George Metesky was released on December 13,1973.

27.

George Metesky stated that, before he began planting his bombs,.

28.

George Metesky returned to his home in Waterbury, where he died 20 years later in 1994 at the age of 90.