Florida Man Accused of Planting Explosive at MacDill Air Force Base Flees to China — Sister Arrested as Investigation Deepens

The MacDill Bombing Plot: Inside the Manhunt for the Florida Fugitive Who Fled to China After Planting an IED at U.S. Military Headquarters

Florida man flees to China after planting IED at MacDill AFB; sister  arrested

In the quiet, high-security corridors of MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida—a facility that serves as the nerve center for U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) and U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM)—the unthinkable occurred. On March 10, 2026, a man identified as Alan Jiang allegedly bypassed security measures to plant a viable improvised explosive device (IED) outside the base’s visitor center. What followed was a cinematic escape, a frantic interstate cleanup, and an international manhunt that has left federal authorities fuming and the primary suspect a fugitive in the People’s Republic of China.

The gravity of the situation was laid bare by U.S. Attorney Greg Kehoe during a high-profile press conference involving the FBI, the Air Force Office of Special Investigations, and local law enforcement. MacDill is not just any military base; it is the headquarters for the very entities managing ongoing U.S. operations in the Middle East. Planting an explosive device at such a location is more than an act of domestic terrorism; it is a direct strike at the heart of American global security assets.

The timeline of the plot reveals a chilling level of premeditation. According to federal investigators, Alan Jiang placed the IED outside the visitor center on the evening of March 10. Minutes later, a cryptic 911 call was placed reporting a bomb on the base, though the caller refused to provide a specific location. This forced an exhaustive search of the sprawling base. While sensitive assets like the Central Command headquarters were immediately secured and searched, the device remained hidden in a secluded area near the visitor center for six days.

Brother, sister indicted in MacDill Air Force Base explosive incident

While the bomb sat ticking in secret, the Jiang family moved with calculated speed. On March 11, the day after the bomb was planted, Alan and his sister, Anne Marie Jiang, purchased one-way tickets to China. In a desperate attempt to cover their tracks, they took the SUV used to transport the bomb to a local CarMax, selling the vehicle just hours before fleeing. Despite their attempts to vacuum and professionally clean the vehicle, FBI forensic teams later discovered traces of IED residue and chemical components that matched the device found on the base.

The breakthrough in the case came on March 16, when an Air Force service member finally located the secluded device. The FBI’s bomb squad was called in to render the IED safe, later confirming that it was a highly professional and potentially deadly piece of hardware. Within 24 hours of the discovery, investigators used the digital footprint of the initial 911 call to trace the phone back to a purchase Alan Jiang made at a local Best Buy. Surveillance footage from the store showed Jiang buying the device and driving the SUV, providing the “smoking gun” federal agents needed to secure a search warrant for his home.

Inside the Jiang residence, agents found a workshop of terror. Components consistent with the IED at MacDill were scattered throughout the home. Perhaps most damning was the admission from Jiang’s mother and sister, who conceded to agents that Alan had openly told them he had planted the bomb. While Alan Jiang successfully boarded a flight from Tampa to China on March 12, his sister, Anne Marie, made the fateful decision to return to the United States on March 17. She was immediately intercepted by federal agents in Detroit and now faces up to 30 years in prison for her role as an accessory after the fact and for tampering with evidence.

Brother, sister indicted in connection to 'improvised explosive' found at MacDill  AFB - YouTube

Adding to the chaos of the week, a second, unrelated threat emerged. On March 18, as agents were still processing the Jiang crime scene, a man named Jonathan James Elder allegedly called the base to taunt officials about the “surprise” at the visitor center. Using explicit language and yelling “Tick, tick, tick,” Elder attempted to capitalize on the fear surrounding the bombing. He was quickly identified through cell site data and arrested at a care facility in Pinellas County. Though Elder is reported to have mental health difficulties, he has been charged with making explosive threats and faces 10 years in federal prison.

The MacDill investigation remains wide open. Alan Jiang currently faces 40 years in prison for attempted damage to government property and possession of a destructive device, though his extradition from China remains a complex diplomatic hurdle. Authorities are continuing to explore the motive behind the attack, looking into potential political extremist viewpoints or foreign affiliations, though no direct link to the Chinese government has been established at this time.

Siblings accused of bomb threat at MacDill AFB

This incident has prompted a rigorous review of security protocols at MacDill. The fact that a viable explosive device remained on-site for nearly a week has raised questions about the vulnerability of the visitor center compared to more “sensitive” internal assets. However, the message from the U.S. Attorney’s office is uncompromising: “If you threaten to harm somebody in the Middle District of Florida, you will be brought to task.” The swift coordination between the Joint Terrorism Task Force and local police has sent a clear signal that while a suspect may flee across an ocean, the digital and forensic evidence they leave behind will eventually lead to their undoing.