Bennett Dicarlo, a 28-year-old employee for the ground handling company Servisair, was booked yesterday for possession of a destructive device near an aircraft. He was being held on USD 1 million bail.
Dicarlo took the dry ice from a plane and placed it in an employee restroom Sunday night and another device that was found on a tarmac outside the international terminal, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation who wasn't authorised to speak publicly.
No one was injured in either incident, although some flights were delayed Sunday.
The incidents could be the work of a disgruntled employee due to an internal labour dispute, said Los Angeles Police Department Deputy Chief Michael Downing, who heads the department's counter-terrorism and special operations bureau.
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Swissport has recently agreed to acquire Servisair and the transaction is expected to close by the end of the year.
An afterhours message seeking comment from Servisair was not immediately returned.
The bombs were made by putting dry ice in 567-gram plastic bottles and could have caused serious injury to anyone in close proximity, Downing said.
One device exploded in an employee men's room Sunday night in Terminal 2. Remnants of an exploded bottle also were found that night on the tarmac area near the Tom Bradley International Terminal, but an employee threw it away. The same employee found an unexploded bottle Monday evening and then reported what he had found the previous day.
Dry ice is widely used by vendors to keep food fresh.