Clifton, Eddington -
A man from Clifton is charged with terrorizing after authorities say he made a threatening comment at a post office in Eddington.
42-year-old Wayne Haskell could also face federal charges from the Postal Service.
Penobscot County Sheriff's Deputies say Haskell was upset about a package when he went into the post office Tuesday.
We're told he talked to a clerk there and then said he was "Going home to get an AR 15 and come back and shoot up the place."
Authorities were called to the post office, then tracked down Haskell at his house. No weapons were found.
Haskell was taken to jail, where he made bail.
The Postal Service is also investigating.
Clifton Man Accused of Making Threat in Eddington Post Office
-
Pittsfield Students Honor Men and Women Who Serve
-
Bar Harbor to Boston Air Service is Back
-
UMaine Unveils Floating Buoy to help with Offshore Wind Power
-
Battlefield Cross Memorial Ceremony to Take Place in Augusta
-
State Police Increase Patrols for Holiday Weekend
-
Bangor Police Hope Photo Helps Catch Copper Thief
-
Maine Criminal Justice Academy Graduation
-
KahBang Film Festival Announces Screen Selections
-
Are Electricity Maine's Radio Ads False or Misleading
-
Kyle Dube's Lawyer Wants Affidavits and Search Warrants Sealed
Breaking News from CBS
-
Frantic 911 calls reveal chaos in Okla., following tornado
One of the frightening emergency calls came from a man who said a daycare facility had been hit
-
Healthy 5-pound gorilla born at Ohio zoo
The baby gorilla arrived Thursday at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, joining 16 other gorillas there
-
Video: Listen: Desperate 911 calls from Moore, Oklahoma
Police in Moore, Oklahoma have released some of the 911 calls made on May 21, 2013 as a deadly tornado ripped through the city.
-
Judge: Ariz. sheriff's office profiles Latinos
Fed judge ruled that the office of America's self-proclaimed toughest sheriff, Joe Arpaio, systematically racially profiled Latinos
-
Video: 5/24: I-5 bridge collapses north of Seattle; "On the Road": Three siblings survive Okla. tornado
A section of the Riverside Bridge, which carries traffic along Interstate-5 near Seattle, collapsed after a truck hit an overhead beam, plunging vehicles into the Skagit River below; and "On the Road," Steve Hartman reports on three siblings who survived the Okla. tornado that destroyed their home and elementary school. But they said that's the only thing left in the house that matters is their dog. actually, change Riverside Bridge in the dek for "I-5"




