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Prosecutors: Revenge pushed Ark. doctor to bombing

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[July 30, 2010]  LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) -- Prosecutors insist that a doctor accused of masterminding a bombing that disfigured the Arkansas State Medical Board chairman was a weapons fanatic bent on avenging the restriction of his medical license.

That image, built over three weeks of trial testimony, will be challenged Friday as Dr. Randeep Mann's attorneys begin their defense, likely noting that no forensic evidence or witnesses link Mann to the bomb that exploded at Dr. Trent Pierce's home in West Memphis.

Fingerprints found on bomb fragments don't match Mann. He has an alibi. And an eyewitness said the man she saw near Pierce's car before the homemade bomb went off in his driveway wasn't the man who's now on trial in a Little Rock courtroom.

Defense attorney Jack Lassiter has said prosecutors "cobbled together" their theory about the February 2009 bombing and the "circumstances could be rearranged to reach another theory."

But what prosecutors do have is a potential motive: revenge.

Mann lost his right to prescribe addictive narcotics after the state medical board heard complaints about the fatal overdoses of several of his patients. At the time of the bombing, the board was investigating whether Mann continued to distribute controlled substances after its decision, which could have led to Mann losing his medical license.

And there's his access to weapons. Mann immediately drew suspicions because of his million-dollar collection of guns and other weapons, including two launchers he sometimes used to fire practice grenades into the lake behind his home.

The bomb used in the attack was made from an MK3A2 hand grenade duct-taped to a spare tire.

Prosecutors acknowledged in their opening statement that they couldn't prove Mann planted the bomb, and they haven't charged anyone with aiding Mann in the attack.

"You won't hear any person say they saw him," prosecutor Karen Whatley told jurors.

But they have plenty of circumstantial evidence. A grenades manual was found in Mann's home, a friend said Mann told him he wished he could kill board members, and Mann once e-mailed a photo of Pierce to his brother. A jail inmate testified that Mann offered him $50,000 to kill Pierce.

"This case is not complicated. It is a case about a man ... who was intent on harming someone else based on what he had available to him," Whatley said.

Felecia Epps, a law professor at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, said it's unusual but certainly not unprecedented for juries to convict defendants with little or no forensic evidence. She said prosecutors have moved slowly during the trial, trying to build their case "bit by bit."

"If you took (the evidence) in isolation, they sounded as if they didn't show a lot about the case -- in some instances barely relevant. If you add them all together, they add them up to something," Epps said. "When prosecutors have cases like this, the jury's the one who has to be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt and they may not be willing to make the inferences they're being asked to make."

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Pierce, his face scarred and embedded with bits of tire, testified this week that he lost an eye, his sense of smell, teeth and some hearing in the attack Feb. 4, 2009.

Mann was arrested a month later, but not initially for the bombing. It came after a municipal worker found a cache of grenades in the woods near Mann's home, and investigators later found more than 100 guns in his house including two that prosecutors said were unregistered.

Mann was a licensed federal firearms dealer, and defense attorneys say all of his weapons were legally registered. But prosecutors said he was not authorized to possess the grenades.

A tire was also found during the search of his home, in a bathroom's stand-up shower. Mann's wife said he was cleaning the tire, part of maintaining his prized car collection, but federal agents said it was bizarre and suspicious.

Prosecutors ultimately won an indictment alleging Mann planned the bombing to retaliate against Pierce because of his position on the medical board.

Witnesses said the grenades found near Mann's home were different from the one used in the bombing, but prosecutors are relying on testimony that Mann was a weapons nut who could have easily acquired an MK3A2 grenade.

Mann's longtime friend, Gerald Riley, told jurors that Mann repeatedly complained about the medical board, once saying he wanted to "kill those (expletive)." Gerald Riley also said Mann wondered aloud whether the bombing was justified.

Riley said Mann asked him, "Did you ever think that the explosion, the bombing, did exactly what it was supposed to do? It was supposed to make the person suffer."

Mann is charged with the bombing and with possessing unregistered grenades and several illegal firearms. His wife, Sangeeta Mann, is being tried for allegedly lying to a grand jury and obstructing the investigation. Both have pleaded not guilty.

Mann faces up to life in prison if convicted on the bombing charge.

[Associated Press; By JILL ZEMAN BLEED]

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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