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Man dead after plowing armored bulldozer through Colo. town, damaging nine buildings

Daily Staff Writer
In this image from television, law enforcement personnel investigate the scene where a bulldozer crashed into a metal warehouse in Granby, Colo. Friday June 4, 2004. A muffler shop owner reportedly angry at local government over a zoning dispute tore through town in an armored bulldozer, smashing buildings and firing shots as police tried to stop the slow-motion rampage. The bulldozer had come to a stop in the rubble of a metal warehouse. Officers clambered on top, apparently trying to talk to the man,whose condition was unknown. (AP Photo/KMGH-TV)
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By P. Solomon Banda

Associated Press WriterGRANBY – Friends said Marvin Heemeyer hadn’t been seen much lately, and now they know why: He was turning a bulldozer into an armor-plated vehicle that was impervious to SWAT team bullets.On Friday, the muffler shop owner drove his contraption through town and within two hours had knocked down or damaged nine buildings before the machine ground to a halt in the wreckage of a warehouse. He then apparently shot himself, said Grand County Sheriff Rod Johnson. No one else was injured.City officials said he was angry over a zoning dispute and fines for city code violations at his business in the town about 50 miles west of Denver.

On Saturday, crews used a crane to remove Heemeyer’s body from the improvised tank.His buddy Pete Mitchell said his friend was probably smiling when the vehicle, equipped with a TV camera for guidance, busted out of the side of a garage.”That’s the kind of guy he was,” Mitchell said, calling his friend “vindictive.”Heemeyer loved to weld, and this surely was his masterpiece, probably constructed over a several-month period, he said.



Town manager Tom Hale said Heemeyer was angry after losing a zoning dispute over land near his muffler shop. Heemeyer also had been fined $2,500 in a separate case for not having a septic tank and other city code violations at his business, Hale said.When he paid the fine, he enclosed a note with his check saying “Cowards,” Hale said.Heemeyer’s first target was a shop at the cement plant, which sat about 100 yards from where he built the amored-plated bulldozer. He also damaged a newspaper office, town hall-library, bank, hardware store and a utility office.Nothing had seemed out of the ordinary at his corrugated-metal building, where he kept cars, snowmobiles, boats, and now it seems a bulldozer. Mitchell said Heemeyer hadn’t been seen much of late.

His skills as a welder were legendary, Mitchell said.”He could change a muffler by himself in 20 minutes,” Mitchell said. “No wasted motion. He knew what he was doing.”Investigators believe he spent several months planning and building the quarter- to half-inch concrete box that no police bullet could penetrate. Described by some witnesses as resembling a large trash bin, up close police could see the details of Heemeyer’s handiwork, hydraulic lines and a radiator. Heemeyer had installed TV cameras connected to three monitors so he could see where he was going.”How he built this was amazing,” said Grand County Commissioner James Newberry. “This was a very intelligent man. Once you saw the way his workshop was set up it’s possible.”

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After blasting the box three times police discovered hinges that allowed them to pull out an air conditioning unit and get into the box. Crews had to use a crane to remove Heemeyer’s body. Police initially believed he had welded himself shut.Once inside, investigators discovered four weapons, a .50 caliber rifle, two military style assault rifles and a handgun.The time of death was under investigation. Officers heard a shot fired from inside the box around 4 p.m. Friday. His death was confirmed about early Saturday morning, and the body removed later Saturday.


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