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“Honestly, it was a souvenir,” said Adcock, 23, of the fragmentation grenade, flashbang grenade and military-grade flares. “Honestly, I thought the flare would be a fun Fourth of July. I didn’t realize how serious it was.”
Megan Wencel, Adcock’s 21-year-old fiancee, apologized Monday for hiding the explosives in woods near Adcock’s apartment.
“I know it was wrong for me to cover up something for him,” she added.
Adcock faced a maximum two-year prison sentence for taking a fragmentation grenade to North Carolina, his home state, and then returning with it to Columbus. Wencel faced a maximum six-month sentence for making false statements.
Authorities charged Adcock in January, a week before his scheduled deployment to Afghanistan. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mel Hyde said the charges stemmed from the December 2010 trip to North Carolina, where he asked someone to store the grenade.
That person refused, and Adcock returned to Columbus with the grenade, Hyde said.
In January, FBI agents received a message from Matthew D. Black, Adcock’s estranged brother-in-law, who claimed he’d seen Adcock with the grenade. He also claimed Adcock had blocks of C4 explosives and flashbang grenades in his apartment, court documents state.
Adcock initially denied having explosives and agreed to a search of his apartment, authorities said.
As agents drove to his apartment, Adcock called Wencel and asked her to hide the explosives.
Authorities found nothing inside the home, though they later checked nearby woods where they’d seen Wencel walking. That’s where they found the grenades and
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