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On Tuesday, the bomb squad was dispatched after someone left a black suitcase on a subway platform near Penn Station with a front page of bin Laden stuffed in a side pocket. The bag contained nothing but clothing, probably belonging to a homeless man. That scenario played out differently on May 1, 2010, when a street vendor in Times Square pointed out an SUV belching smoke to an officer on horseback. The officer called in a report of a car fire, flagged down other officers and started evacuating the area. When firefighters broke the car's side and back windows, they discovered the SUV's sinister contents: three propane tanks, two gallon containers of gasoline and a load of fertilizer, with fireworks and some cheap alarm clocks as a trigger. The homemade device later dismantled by the bomb squad turned out to be too crude to do harm. But the scare closed Times Square for several hours and set off a frantic search for the would-be bomber. The Pakistani-born Shahzad was quickly captured and, calling himself a Muslim solider, eventually pleaded guilty. He's serving a life sentence. Police say in the immediate aftermath of the failed car bomb attempt last year, a caller reported seeing two gas cans in the back of a car, Shahzad-style, parked in Manhattan's East Village. The bomb squad was alerted before the car owner turned up with a simple explanation: He needed the gas to mow his mother's lawn.
[Associated
Press;
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