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- <text id=94TT0014>
- <title>
- Jan. 10, 1994: Death On Delivery
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 10, 1994 Las Vegas:The New All-American City
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 24
- Death On Delivery
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>On the third day of Christmas, a spurned lover sends lethal
- gifts to a family that did not want him
- </p>
- <p>By David Van Biema--Reported by Barbara Burke/New York
- </p>
- <p> Chris Santella was feeding his infant daughter last Tuesday
- evening in the living room of his town house in Rochester, New
- York, when he heard the boom. "It was like someone slammed a
- door hard enough so that it shook the house," he explained.
- At first he thought it was his water heater blowing up. When
- no gushers of water followed, he waited until the child was
- asleep before looking out his door and catching sight of the
- blasted-out window in a town house 25 ft. away, the one rented
- by a woman named Pamela Lazore-Lanza. A bomb had gone off, killing
- Lazore-Lanza and a male friend. The bomb was one of four such
- devices that exploded almost simultaneously in different parts
- of western New York, killing five people and hanging a necklace
- of terror along 250 miles of the New York-Canada border.
- </p>
- <p> The shirtbox-size bombs, delivered by mail or private courier,
- were packaged in brown cardboard and wrapped with tape. Several
- bore the return address of an iron-and-metal company in Pennsylvania.
- In each was a fishing-tackle box. When the latch was opened,
- it connected an electrical circuit and set off several pounds
- of dynamite surrounded by shrapnel. One bomb killed Eleanor
- Fowler, 56, in West Valley, near Buffalo. Another was opened
- by her husband Robert, 38, at his job in an armored-car garage
- in nearby Cheektowaga; it killed him and a co-worker. A third
- blew up Lazore-Lanza and her friend; she was Eleanor Fowler's
- daughter from an earlier marriage. And on the St. Regis Indian
- Reservation near the state's northern tip, an exploding package
- lacerated the legs of Lazore-Lanza's uncle, William Lazore.
- Identical parcels were sent to the Fowlers' daughter Lucille
- and her boyfriend but were detonated safely by authorities.
- All four explosions occurred within 90 minutes. It was as if
- someone was tracing the Fowler family tree--in fire and blood.
- </p>
- <p> At first some New Yorkers feared terrorism or a random killer.
- But by Wednesday evening, when police arrested Michael Stevens,
- 53, and Earl Figley, 56, the grudge began to seem very specific.
- Stevens' girlfriend is a woman named Brenda Lazore Chevere.
- The injured William Lazore is her uncle; the dead included her
- mother, her stepfather and her sister--all apparently victims
- of a man they seem to have ostracized.
- </p>
- <p> Chevere met Stevens and moved in with him soon after he got
- out of jail in 1989. He had served 20 months for overselling
- ads in store coupon books under the alias David Creditford--"a con man who thought he was smarter than anyone else," a defense
- attorney recalled to New York Newsday. Stevens reputedly suffered
- from emotional instability--at his 1987 trial he launched
- into a speech about Jimmy Cagney. More seriously, in 1992 local
- merchants Susan Katz and John Spinelli filed a police complaint
- when, they say, after nine months of harassment that included
- cruising their block and stealing their garbage, Stevens threatened
- to burn their business down.
- </p>
- <p> Stevens and Chevere, 31, have a two-year-old son. Recently,
- however, Chevere seems to have soured on Stevens, for which
- he apparently blamed her family. Local newspapers said last
- week that his relations with them, especially her mother, had
- nose-dived. He was reportedly resentful of being excluded from
- Thanksgiving and Christmas festivities.
- </p>
- <p> Figley, the older suspect, had boarded at Stevens' house, drunk
- with him at a bar called McGhan's, and was regarded locally
- as a harmless layabout under his younger friend's sway. Last
- June, Stevens sent Figley on a deadly errand to Mount Vernon,
- Kentucky, police say. There, under the name Leslie V. Milbury,
- Figley bought 55 lbs. of Power Prime dynamite. (Government officials
- later noted pointedly that explosives can be sold over the counter
- as easily as guns could before the Brady Bill.) Back in New
- York, the two used around 48 sticks' worth to craft last week's
- bombs, according to the federal complaint charging both men
- with transportation of explosives across state lines with intent
- to kill or maim, an offense punishable by death.
- </p>
- <p> Had Stevens been planning the murders for half a year? Or were
- the fatal packages originally intended for some other purpose?
- One person who would doubtless add many questions of her own
- was, understandably, quiet. Reached by reporters at the house
- she shared with Stevens, Brenda Chevere excused herself from
- talking. "I've had a day," she said. "I've lost most of my
- family."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-