Erie bombing 'victim' was in on bank robbery (original) (raw)
Erie collar bombing case: Audio, previous stories, background info
Janet B. Campbell/Associated press, Erie Times-NewsMembers of the bomb squad check Brian Wells' body for more explosives on Aug. 28, 2003 in Erie, Pa., after a bomb strapped to his chest exploded and killed him.
Diehl-Armstrong believed that her father shortchanged her over money from her mother's estate. Agnes Diehl died in July 2000.
Barnes had offered about $125,000 to kill Harold Diehl. To come up with the money, Barnes, Rothstein and Diehl-Armstrong planned the robbery.
Wells, according to authorities, was drawn into the plot through Barnes, whom he knew through a prostitute who often used Barnes' home as a place to have sex with customers.
Wells believed the bomb was going to be a fake. He thought that if he were arrested by police with the fake bomb, he would simply say he was a hostage, police said.
Wells' brother, John, said his brother was not involved in the plot.
"Absolutely not," John Wells said. "Brian had nothing to do with this. Anyone who says otherwise is just trying to save their own skin."
About 1:30 p.m. Aug. 28, 2003, Brian Wells delivered two sausage and pepperoni pizzas to a secluded area where construction workers often toiled.
There, he met Rothstein, Barnes and Stockton, and they told him that the device was real. Wells tried to bolt, but they wrestled him to the ground and forced it on him. They gave him a nine-page letter that sent him on a scavenger hunt for clues that would get the device off his neck.
He robbed a branch of PNC Bank in the Summit Towne Center and found his first clue under a rock at a nearby McDonald's drive-through. He was headed for his second clue when police stopped him. They handcuffed him and made him sit in front of a patrol car until the bomb squad arrived.
The bomb went off at 3:18 p.m., killing Wells.