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Texas man angry with IRS crashes plane into office

By JIM VERTUNO, Associated Press Writer Jim Vertuno, Associated Press Writer

58 mins ago

AUSTIN, Texas A software engineer who crashed his plane into a Texas office

building containing nearly 200 Internal Revenue Service employees, killing

himself and at least one worker, apparently left behind an irate

anti-government manifesto but offered little other hint of his intentions

before the attack.

The Red Cross said the wife of A. Joseph Stack III planned to contact media and

answer questions Friday, a day after law enforcement officials, speaking on

condition of anonymity because the investigation was ongoing, said her husband

apparently set fire to their house and posted his rambling screed on the Web

before launching his suicide attack.

It was unclear what she might discuss.

"He didn't rant about anything," said Pam Parker, an Austin attorney whose

husband played in a band with Stack. "He wasn't obsessed with the government or

any of that. ... Not a loner, not off in a corner. He had friends and

conversation and ordinary stuff."

But in the self-described "rant" dated Thursday and signed "Joe Stack

(1956-2010)," the author fumed about the IRS and wrote, "Nothing changes unless

there is a body count."

"I have had all I can stand," he wrote, adding: "I choose not to keep looking

over my shoulder at `big brother' while he strips my carcass."

The pilot took off in a four-seat, single engine Piper PA-28 from an airport in

Georgetown, about 30 miles from Austin. He flew low over the Austin skyline

before plowing into the side of the hulking black-glass building just before 10

a.m. Flames shot from the building, windows exploded and terrified workers

rushed to get out.

The Pentagon scrambled two F-16 fighter jets to patrol the skies over the

burning building before it became clear it was the act of a lone pilot, and

President Barack Obama was briefed.

"It felt like a bomb blew off," said Peggy Walker, an IRS revenue officer who

was sitting at her desk. "The ceiling caved in and windows blew in. We got up

and ran."

The entire outside of the second floor was gone on the side of the building

where the plane hit. Support beams were bent inward. Venetian blinds dangled

from blown-out windows, and large sections of the exterior were blackened with

soot. It was not immediately clear if any tax records were destroyed.

Emergency crews originally said people were missing inside the building, but

later recovered two bodies. Austin Fire Department Battalion Chief Palmer Buck

declined to discuss the identities of those found, but said authorities had now

"accounted for everybody."

At least 13 other people were injured, with two initially reported in critical

condition.

Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo said "heroic actions" by federal employees may

explain why the death toll was so low.

Andrew Jacobson, an IRS revenue officer who was on the second floor when the

plane hit with a "big whoomp" and then a second explosion, said about six

people couldn't use the stairwell because of smoke and debris. He found a metal

bar to break a window so the group could crawl out onto a concrete ledge, where

they were rescued by firefighters. His bloody hands were bandaged.

The FBI launched an investigation and Rep. Michael McCaul, a Republican from

Austin on the Homeland Security Committee, said the panel will take up the

issue of how to better protect buildings from attacks with planes.

The tirade posted Thursday on a Web site registered in Stack's name began: "If

you're reading this, you're no doubt asking yourself, `Why did this have to

happen?'"

He recounted his financial reverses, his difficulty finding work in Austin, and

at least two clashes with the IRS, one of them after he filed no return

because, he said, he had no income, the other after he failed to report his

wife Sheryl's income.

He railed against politicians, the Catholic Church, the "unthinkable

atrocities" committed by big business, and the government bailouts that

followed. He said he slowly came to the conclusion that "violence not only is

the answer, it is the only answer."

According to California state records, Stack had a troubled business history,

twice starting software companies in California that ultimately were suspended

by the state's tax board, one in 2000, the other in 2004. Also, his first wife

filed for bankruptcy in 1999, listing a debt to the IRS of nearly $126,000.

The blaze at Stack's home, a red-brick house on a tree-lined street in a

middle-class neighborhood six miles from the crash site, caved in the roof and

blew out the windows.

Elbert Hutchins, who lives one house away, said the house caught fire about

9:15 a.m. He said a woman and her daughter drove up to the house before

firefighters arrived.

"They both were very, very distraught," said Hutchins, a retiree who said he

didn't know the family well. "'That's our house!' they cried. `That's our

house!'"

Thursday was not the first time a tax protester went after an Austin IRS

building. In 1995, Charles Ray Polk plotted to bomb the IRS Austin Service

Center. He was released from prison in October of last year.

The tax protest movement has a long history in the U.S. and was a strong

component of anti-government sentiments that surged during the 1990s. That wave

culminated in the 1995 bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City that

killed 168 people. Several domestic extremists were later convicted in the

plot.