Jeffrey Don DetrixheThe Texas man is accused of trying to sell cyanide. On NewsOK: Read the affidavit against him.
What is cyanide?
•It is a compound used in electroplating, metallurgy, organic chemicals production, photographic developing, manufacturing of plastics, fumigation of ships and some mining processes.
How can you be exposed to it?
•Breathing air, drinking water, touching soil or eating foods that contain cyanide.
•Smoking cigarettes and breathing smoke-filled air during fires are major sources of cyanide exposure.
What is the possible health risk?
•Exposure to high levels of cyanide for a short time harms the brain and heart and can even cause coma and death.
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
What's next?
Kathy Colvin, press officer for the Northern District of Texas U.S. Attorney's office, said prosecutors will present the case against Jeffrey Don Detrixhe to a grand jury within the next 30 days.
Mark White of the FBI's Dallas office said one of the elements of the investigation is going to be tracing the source of the cyanide, which can be used in manufacturing, extracting gold alloy and pest extermination.
"The question is going to be how did they get it, because sodium cyanide is used in various things,” White said.
MUSKOGEE — A Texas man, who made his initial appearance in federal court Wednesday, had bragged earlier of trying to sell 100 pounds of cyanide briquettes and said he had enough of the deadly chemical to kill a city, court documents show.
He wanted to trade it for a pound of methamphetamine, the documents said.
The deal to sell the cyanide to an unknown buyer in Oklahoma City ultimately "fell through,” according to the affidavit, but the FBI worked with an informant to set up a sting operation to continue the investigation. The investigation culminated Monday when Jeffrey Don Detrixhe of Higgins, Texas, was arrested in southeast Oklahoma where he was planning to attend a funeral in the Holly Creek area north of Idabel. Earlier in the day, federal agents had raided his house in Texas and taken possession of a container of material suspected to be sodium cyanide.
Detrixhe, who has lived in Woodward and Shattuck and has strong family ties to Oklahoma, was arrested on a complaint of possession or transfer of a chemical weapon.
On Wednesday, he appeared in federal court in Muskogee where he was turned over to U.S. marshals to face possible charges in the Northern District of Texas. Federal prosecutors in Texas have 30 days to present the case to a grand jury.
Federal authorities first learned of Detrixhe's possible possession of cyanide in November from an inmate at the Potter County jail in Texas, who apparently was a friend of Detrixhe, according to an affidavit signed by FBI agentJohn Whitworth.
In late March, FBI agents asked the informant to tell Detrixhe that someone in the Aryan Brotherhood, a white supremacist organization, wanted to purchase the cyanide to use it against people.
In a taped conversation with the FBI informant, Detrixhe reportedly tells the informant "there's only one use of cyanide that I know of,” and that he had enough of it to "kill a city ... euthanize a whole village,” according to the affidavit.
Detrixhe goes on to explain that the briquettes look like small charcoal briquettes but are white. They can