Visit the Bookstore
If you are interested in this subject here are some other Related Articles topics you might find worthwhile.
Did Coronado violate a federal law in demonstrating how to construct an incendiary device?
Doctoral student who let Coronado stay at his home claimed he had right to keep any discussions with Coronado secret.
For once, Coronado is right -- more animal rights extremists should be under indictment or in prison.
Activists deny that tour featuring ELF and ALF activists has anything to do with those extremist groups.
Federal complaint issued against animal rights terrorist and journalist in dismantling of mountain lion trap.
Activist who arranged speech by Rodney Coronado the day of $50 million San Diego arson has his house raided by a Joint Terrorist Task Force investigating the fire.
Coronado says if he burns down a lab that's nonviolence; but if his opponents dare to quote him, that's intimidation and an attack on free speech.
ELF extremists pull off most expensive act of terrorism yet for their cause.
Convicted animal rights terrorist offers up his quasi-religious view of the sanctity of terrorism.
In Rodney's world, even rocks have rights.
Coronado thinks he and ALF/ELF terrorists will be heroes 100 years from now.
The Center's review of PETA's tax returns from 1995-2000 reveals a pattern of donations to animal rights and environmentalist extremists.
A court makes changes to Rodney Coronado's parole conditions to keep the convicted terrorist from his vocal campaign in support of animal rights terrorism.
Terrorists do not need to kill or injure people to create a climate of fear despite what Bill Clinton and the animal rights movement seem to think.
A convicted terrorist defends his chosen trade.