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How they caught him: Fingerprint led authorities to mail bomb suspect

"We see unbelievable work like this on TV and in Hollywood, but to see it up close in reality is something to behold," said FBI director Christopher Wray.
Image: Package bomb New York
A bomb disposal technician carries a package out of a U.S. Post Office facility at 52nd Street and 8th Avenue in Manhattan, on Oct. 26, 2018 in New York City.Drew Angerer / Getty Images

Authorities racing to find a suspect in the investigation into more than a dozen threatening packages sent to prominent Trump opponents got their break from a small but key clue: a single fingerprint.

The fingerprint was on one of the envelopes bearing explosives that had been sent to California Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters, FBI Director Christopher Wray said at a press conference on Friday, hours after law enforcement announced they had detained Cesar Sayoc, 56, an Aventura, Florida, man who had been arrested before. He is now being held at a federal detention center in downtown Miami.

The 2002 mug shot of Caesar Syoc when he made a bomb threat, in Miami.
The 2002 mug shot of Cesar Syoc when he made a bomb threat, in Miami.Miami-Dade Police Department

Multiple senior law enforcement sources told NBC News that Sayoc denied that he was behind the mail bomb campaign when investigators questioned him under the national security exception to the Miranda law following his detainment.

Regardless, his history of run-ins with the law meant he was in law enforcement's database — and when an initial lab analysis of the suspicious packages turned up a fingerprint on the parcel destined for Waters, investigators were able to confirm it was a match.

"This is phenomenal work with the greatest pressure under an incredibly tight time frame. We see unbelievable work like this on TV and in Hollywood, but to see it up close in reality is something to behold, and we are so proud for our team at the lab for their work in keeping people safe and helping to find the individual responsible," Wray said.

In addition to the fingerprint, Sayoc possibly left DNA on "a sample collected from a piece of the IED inside [Maxine] Waters package" and "from a piece of the IED inside the Obama" package, according to the criminal complaint written by FBI Special Agent David Brown.

The samples can be connected to Sayoc through DNA collected from him from an earlier arrest in Florida, officials said.

Friday’s arrest came at the end of a tense, days-long investigation that stretched across the country and involved numerous law enforcement agencies working together.

"Amazing work by FBI, ATF, NYC’s Joint Antiterrorism Task Force, NYPD, and law enforcement in Florida, California, New York, and across the country. One latent fingerprint and two DNA samples led to the arrest of Cesar Sayok for federal crimes that would put him away for decades," tweeted Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe.

The fingerprint discovery was further bolstered by other evidence, according to court documents filed in the case, which say misspellings on the addresses of the packages were consistent with misspellings on Sayoc's Twitter account.

Earlier Friday, New York Democratic governor, Andrew Cuomo, praised President Donald Trump for pledging "total coordination between state, local and federal resources — and he did that."

"This is a tough investigation. They handled it extraordinarily well," Cuomo told MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell.

But he warned the worst may not be over.

"I would not be surprised if there are additional packages. Just because he is caught doesn't mean he doesn't have other packages in route," Cuomo said. "Again, the good news is none of them have detonated. They're not fake bombs, that's propaganda, but they're not highly sophisticated devices either, so everyone should be on full alert."

It’s likely the packages contained a treasure trove of DNA and prints, retired ATF Special Agent In Charge Jim Cavanaugh told MSNBC earlier.

"On 10 unexploded bombs, that's going to be a fingerprint party," he said.

No one was hurt by any of the bombs, which Wray confirmed were "not hoax devices."

It is not clear what the motive was behind the packages, which came just two weeks before the midterm elections and all apparently targeted critics of the Trump administration.

Sayoc has been charged with five federal crimes and faces up to 48 years in prison. A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney's Office said Sayoc's first appearance in federal court will be on Monday in Miami before Magistrate Judge Edwin G. Torres at 2 p.m.