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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

‘Tractor Man’ gets six years for threats

Associated Press

WASHINGTON – A tobacco farmer dubbed “Tractor Man” was sentenced Wednesday to six years in prison in connection with a March 2003 incident that brought traffic in the nation’s capital to a standstill.

Dwight Ware Watson, 51, of Whitakers, N.C., was handed the prison time for his conviction on charges of making a false threat to detonate explosives, and destruction of federal property.

“The city regarded you as a one-man weapon of mass destruction. You did terrify this city,” U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson told Watson.

On March 17, 2003, Watson drove his tractor into a shallow just west of the Washington Monument. For the next 47 hours he sat there, claiming to have “organophosphate bombs” in a metal box attached to a flatbed trailer that he towed to the scene.

U.S. Park Police closed several blocks of Constitution Avenue as Watson continued the standoff. Over four consecutive rush hours, traffic was backed up for miles in the District of Columbia and neighboring northern Virginia.

A search of Watson’s vehicles turned up a pair of aerosol insecticide cans and a practice grenade incapable of exploding.

Watson, who already has spent 15 months behind bars, stood silently and accepted the sentence from Jackson. That time will be credited toward his sentence.