BROWNSVILLE, Minn. – On a recent afternoon in this small river town, a caravan of federal agents veered off the main drag, down a dirt road that leads into a valley of brown fields and farmland. They pulled up to a white house, tottering with age and isolated by hills and state forest land, where they'd come to arrest a man they say has been building explosives here for years.
Kenneth Miller, 58, faces felony charges for allegedly manufacturing, dealing and transporting highly combustible explosive material recovered that day. Agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives also found three guns in the home, which Miller is forbidden from possessing due to his felony record, according to the criminal complaint. Miller's attorney declined to comment on the case.
Miller didn't do much to hide his business, Lightning Pyrotechnics. He has claimed to sell explosive products to big-name clients: the NFL, air shows, Hollywood movies, the military and foreign militaries.
Yet it was a national magazine article in Popular Science that led the ATF to Miller's secluded home that March day, according to a warrant recently unsealed.
In May — 10 months before the ATF raid — special agent Sara Thomas came across a headline on the New York-based magazine's website: "This pyrotechnics expert turned his Minnesota backyard into a DIY fireworks testing ground."
The article portrayed Miller as a mad scientist who harvests industrial material to build 50-pound rockets and magnesium fireworks that burn at 4,000 degrees and blow craters into his farmland.
It featured photographs of Miller shooting red flares off the hood of his pickup truck into the night sky and packing powdered chemicals in a nearby shack he used as a makeshift laboratory. It said Miller's smoke bombs are used as car-crash effects in action movies, including the blockbuster "Transformers" franchise. "His personal pyrotechnic experiments don't belong on the 50-yard-line or in anyone's backyard," reads the article.
Authorities tell a darker story about Miller. They say past felony convictions for building explosives in the 1980s prohibits him from touching these materials.