Birges began plotting what would become the most sophisticated bombing attempt of its time.
He studied explosives, conducted homemade experiments, and recruited his sons and a few trusted associates to help him build an
“unmovable” bomb.
The device, weighing over 1,000 pounds, was placed inside a steel box laced with mercury tilt switches and anti-tampering triggers.
It was wheeled into the executive offices of Harvey’s under the guise of a repair delivery.
Alongside it was an extortion note demanding $3 million in exchange for instructions to disarm it.
Law enforcement quickly realized they were dealing with an unprecedented threat.
The FBI, ATF, and military explosive experts were called in to
assess the device.
As the clock ticked and evacuation protocols were executed,
Harvey’s and the surrounding area became a ghost town.
Despite extensive efforts to neutralize the bomb, it exploded on August 27, 1980, in the early morning hours—obliterating several floors of the casino and causing nearly $18 million in damage.
Remarkably, there were no fatalities due to the timely evacuation.
The blast sent shockwaves through the gaming industry and the nation.
Meanwhile, investigators followed a trail of evidence that
pointed to Birges.
Overconfident and unable to stay silent, he eventually revealed enough details to those around him that the FBI was able to make an arrest.
In the ensuing trial, prosecutors exposed the elaborate web of planning and coercion that led to the bombing.
Birges was sentenced to life in prison, where he died in 1996.
This meticulously researched account traces the events from Birges’s descent into obsession, to the terrifying hours leading up to the detonation, to the community’s struggle to recover from the psychological and economic impact.
It also examines the broader lessons in law enforcement response, bomb detection, and domestic terrorism prevention.
The Bomb Maker is not just a story about a bombing—it’s about the tension between control and chaos, the fragility of paradise, and the resilience of a community forced to stare down terror in its most unexpected form.
It explores how a single man’s vendetta became a national security emergency, and how a glittering casino town learned to rebuild after its darkest hour.
With vivid storytelling, firsthand accounts, and insider details from FBI archives and trial records, this true crime narrative is a chilling reminder of the damage one man can inflict—and the courage it takes
to move forward.
175 pages.