Indictment: Franklin man, partner inspired by Boston bombings to build ‘crater makers’ for militia

Ryan D. King.

Ryan D. King.

Two men accused of having unregistered explosives as part of an Ohio militia, including one from Franklin, discussed the Boston Marathon bombings of 2013 as an example of the kinds of bombs they were making, according to a federal indictment unsealed on Monday.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Ohio unsealed an indictment by a federal grand jury that accuses Ryan D. King, 37, of Franklin, and Randy D. Goodman, 53, of Ripley, Ohio, of violating the National Firearms Act. Both men were charged with two counts of possessing unregistered explosive devices.

King and Goodman, both members of the United Sheepdogs of Ohio militia group, were arrested Monday, officials said. According to the federal indictment, there are at least 12 members of this militia group living throughout the Southern District of Ohio.

In January 2019, King and Goodman allegedly tested their “crater makers” at Goodman’s home in Ripley. They discussed construction and ignition methods in detail. Goodman referenced the Boston Marathon as an example of a remote detonation system that worked.

They discussed which methods would be most lethal, according to the indictment.

For example, Goodman asked, “Do we know how they built the pressure cookers for the Boston bombers…we are talking the same concept…,” the indictment said.

MORE: Middletown woman caught on nanny cam facing child abuse charge

King added, “If you really want explosions you would bury these in the driveway, so they go up and out. We can build land mines, I’ve already built them before, you know that.”

On Monday morning, Franklin police blocked off a portion of a street as FBI agents searched King’s home in the 700-block of South Main Street, according to Franklin police Chief Russ Whitman.

Both defendants had initial appearances at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati when the indictment was unsealed, according to Jennifer Thornton, spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney’s Office. She said both men are scheduled for a detention hearing at 1:30 p.m. today for detention hearings. The men are being held in the Butler County Jail.

According to the indictment, King and Goodman established a small subset of the militia group and referred to it as the “Special Projects Team.” The defendants advocated that this Team construct, use and stockpile explosives they called “crater makers.”

The defendants allegedly conspired to possess and possessed destructive devices in violation of the National Firearms Act, specifically, bombs and parts necessary to make pipe bombs, the indictment said.

About the Author