BY Brenden AckermanMarch 13, 2026
2 months ago
BY 
 | March 13, 2026
2 months ago

New Jersey man pleads guilty after assembling over 100 explosive devices to target Catholic cathedral in D.C.

Louis Geri of Vineland, New Jersey, pleaded guilty to federal charges after attempting to bomb St. Matthew's Cathedral in Washington, D.C., during its annual Red Mass.

The U.S. Department of Justice announced last week that Geri pleaded guilty to a count of Hobbs Act extortion by wrongful use of force, violence, or fear and a count of possession of an unregistered firearm.

Geri had assembled more than 100 homemade explosive devices and sought to detonate them on the steps of the cathedral, according to the Christian Post. His sentencing hearing is scheduled for July 27. He faces a maximum of 20 years in prison on the extortion charge alone, with an additional five to 10 years for possession of a destructive device.

What Happened on October 5

On the early morning of October 5, the same day the high-profile annual Red Mass in honor of law enforcement officials was scheduled to take place, Metropolitan Police Department officials discovered Geri in a tent outside the church. He refused to follow their orders to move.

Then he escalated. Geri threatened to throw one of his explosive devices into the street, telling officers that "several of your people are going to die from one of these."

After establishing a barricade around the tent, law enforcement apprehended Geri when he emerged. What they found was staggering: more than 100 homemade explosive devices, assembled by one man, positioned outside a house of worship in the nation's capital.

The Demands

Geri didn't just bring bombs. He brought a list. His written demands included:

  • Hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments to himself and others
  • Extended accommodations at the Mayflower Hotel
  • An expatriation flight to Japan
  • Requests that the Supreme Court remove Arizona from the United States and declare it a "foreign enemy."

After his capture, Geri informed law enforcement that he wanted to use the devices to target not only St. Matthew's Cathedral but also the White House, the Washington Monument, the U.S. Capitol, and the U.S. Supreme Court. Five targets. Five pillars of American governance and faith, all in one man's crosshairs.

The Prosecution

U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeannine Pirro framed the case in exactly the terms it deserves:

"Threatening to detonate devices on the steps of a Catholic church — or any religious institution — is a violation not only of our way of life, but of the First Amendment right to the free exercise of religion."

"Terrorizing people of faith will result in serious consequences and significant prison time."

Geri's case was tried in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives and the Washington Field Office of the FBI assisted in the investigation. The guilty plea comes five months after Geri was arrested.

What This Story Tells Us

A man built over 100 explosive devices, hauled them to one of the most prominent Catholic churches in the United States, camped outside it on the morning of a mass honoring law enforcement, and threatened to kill police officers. That is not a mental health anecdote. That is domestic terrorism directed at a religious institution.

Now consider the coverage. Or rather, the lack of it. When attacks or threats target churches, synagogues, or other houses of worship, the media's interest tends to scale with how useful the perpetrator's identity is to a preferred narrative. A man with 100 bombs outside a Catholic cathedral should be front-page news for a week. For most outlets, it barely registered.

This asymmetry matters. Anti-religious violence in America is not theoretical. It is not a talking point manufactured by culture warriors. It is a man in a tent with a hundred bombs and a list of demands so deranged they read like a parody, except the explosives were real.

The Red Mass draws judges, attorneys, and public servants. It is a tradition rooted in the intersection of faith and civic life, exactly the kind of institution that a healthy society protects and a decaying one forgets about until something terrible happens. Law enforcement caught Geri before he could carry out his plan. The officers who approached that tent, knowing what was inside, did their jobs.

Pirro's words were pointed and deliberate. The First Amendment protects the free exercise of religion. That protection means nothing if people of faith must wonder whether their church will be standing when the service ends.

Geri will be sentenced on July 27. The law will have its say. But the silence from every corner that would have been screaming had this target been a mosque or a progressive nonprofit has already said plenty.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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