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Prosecutors allege that the bombs, mailed from a suburban Chicago post office in 2007, were real and would have exploded had all the wires been attached. One package was sent to an address in Denver and another to Kansas City, Mo. Federal prosecutor Patrick Pope said Friday that the bombs could have brought down a plane while in the postal system and the 17 people who received extortion letters from Tomkins were "terrorized." He argued for a sentence of 42 to 45 years. That is 12 to 15 more years than the mandatory minimum of 30 years. ___ Information from: Chicago Sun-Times,
http://www.suntimes.com/
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