*Student Disciplined for Bomb Manual* ----------------------------------- Collinsville Herald-Journal 3/21/93-Pg. 7-A Martin Richter Three Collinsville High School Students were disciplined after one was caught reading a bomb-makeing manual in class-a chilling reminder of just how easy information on bomb makeing is to come by. The proliferation of such information has been a topic of conversation in the wake of the bombing of the Trade Center in New York.In published reports,investigatorshave said they found bom-making manuals in apartments of suspects raided after the bombing. Collinsville Det. Bob Vecchetti who handled the case,said a 16-year-old student who recently transferred to CHS from out of state had gotten the information from a computer network and brought it here. "That's what the one teenager said.",Vachetti said."He likes computers,and he found the printout,and he printed out the literature." "The three just handed them from one to the other,just for reading material.The third kid brought it to school and was caught with it." Vechetti said it appeared that the three students had no intention of building a bomb,and had the information mainly out of curiosity. "Basicly we gave them a lectureon why they shouldn't readthat type of material,"he said."that's the wrong kind of curosity,in my opinion." He said the information was "a pretty good sized pamphlet" containing at least 20 different catagories of bombs. Police Chief John Swindlee said he has always been concerned about how easy it is to obtain information on bomb makeing. "From past experiance,i know that type of thing is easily available in bookstores,"Swindle said."I don't think it's very difficult to get a book on it...I don't like to see books like `The Anarchist Cookbook' where they into detail on how to hurt people." But he added that haveing such information is not against the law. "There's nothing we can do locally,with the First Amendment,"he said. The world Trade Center blast has reminded Americans that they arn't immune to terrorism in the United States.While Collinsville obviosly is not high on terrorisms' list of targets,Swindle said it isn't inconceivable that there could someday be an incident in this area. "Our biggest danger,I would think,would be that we would accidently come on contact with these people,with the interstate highways and the motels here- maybe stop them for something like that,"Swindle said. Swindle recalled an incident a year or two agoin which a powerfull pipe bomb was used to blow up some mailboxes here.And he remembered responding to a suicide at a local motel when he was still a detective, when a small box wit ha button on it was found next to the body. "Fortunately i didn't press the button,"Swindle said."It was rigged to a pipe bomb under the bed. (END)