Inside the modest Welsh bungalow the place considered one of America’s most wished evaded the FBI after occurring the run for 21 years

New pictures reveal a glimpse inside a modest Welsh bungalow where one of America’s most-wanted fugitives hid from the FBI.

Animal rights activist Daniel Andreas San Diego spent 21 years on the run before he was tracked down to the house in November 2024. 

The 46-year-old was accused by the US Government of planting three nail bombs across California in 2003 and 2024 aimed at companies linked to animal testing. 

No one was injured in the blasts. 

After fleeing California with a $250,000 (£199,000) bounty on his head, San Diego spent years travelling between a series of undisclosed locations. 

In 2023, he bought the bungalow in the quiet hamlet of Maenan near Llanrwst, North Wales – telling neighbours he was an IT worker called Danny Webb. 

He was arrested there a year later and is currently awaiting extradition to the US.  

In his absence, the ‘tucked away’ three-bedroom house has been put on auction for a guide price of £300,000.

San Diego fled to the Welsh countryside and bought this isolated hillside bungalow 

The minimalist home hid Daniel Andreas San Diego for the last year of his two decades on the run 

San Diego, 46, (pictured) was among the FBI’s ‘most wanted terrorists’ following two bombings in the area of San Francisco in August 2003

San Diego was linked to a group called the Animal Liberation Brigade, who took credit for a number of bombings on corporations with ties to animal testing.

The first two bombings in 2003 targeted the Chiron biotechnology corporation in Emeryville. 

The following year, another bomb wrapped with nails to produce shrapnel was detonated at the Shaklee Corporation in Pleasanton, California.

Again, no one was injured and the Animal Liberation Brigade again claimed responsibility. 

Both targets were linked with Huntingdon Life Sciences, an animal-testing laboratory which had its headquarters in Cambridgeshire in the UK. 

San Diego was arrested and quizzed by police in America but went on the run after being released.

His fingerprints were later found on bomb-making equipment.

He became the first domestic terror suspect on the FBI’s most wanted list and was described as ‘armed and dangerous’.

The bureau highlighted his talents ‘as a computer specialist’ and offered a $250,000 reward for his capture.

He moved to the UK and lived under the alias Danny Webb – who was supposedly born in Ireland and eight months older than San Diego was in reality. 

The lounge inside the home, with a log burner and a hole in the back wall

The secluded home is only accessible via a single track lane followed by a dirt road and offers views across the Conwy Valley – and the main road into the hamlet

He has been allegedly linked to a bombing in Emeryville at a biotechnology corporation (Pictured in 2003)

In September 2003, a bomb wrapped in nails blew up at a nutritional products corporation in Pleasanton, however no one was injured, according to the FBI (Pictured: Emergency response in Emeryville in 2003)

Tucked away on a hillside in the countryside, San Diego found his perfect hideout in North Wales. 

Isolated from nearby houses and accessible only from a 1.5 mile single-track road and a steep dirt track, the criminal would have found it easy to keep a low profile.

The hillside home gave him views across the Conwy Valley and a vantage point to see the A470, the only main road in and out of the hamlet.

The property had three bedrooms, a lounge and a kitchen-dining room, though San Diego is unlikely to have entertained too much company during his time there.

Previous owner Aled Evans, said the home was the ideal location ‘if you wanted to keep your head down’, having sold it to San Diego for £15,000 more than the asking price.

He said: ‘He was quite excited because there was a big woodland at the back, he was into his mountain biking and that’s what sold it to him, apparently.

‘It sounded like the ideal place he wanted – but he wanted it for other reasons.’

San Diego had featured five times on the Fox programme America’s Most Wanted before he was eventually arrested in November 2024.

The National Crime Agency, alongside North Wales Police, took the fugitive into custody near Conwy.

He is currently being held at HMP Belmarsh in London and facing extradition to the USA.

The alleged terrorist was found in a rural property near a woodland in the area of Conwy

Daniel Andreas San Diego pictured throughout the years on the top,alongside several computer touch-ups showing what he could possibly look like as the FBI hunted him

Assistant Director of the Counterterrorism Division Michael J. Heimbach announcing that San Diego had been arrested 

The FBI said the 46-year-old was known to follow a vegan diet and would not eat meat or food containing animal products.

He was also known as a skilled sailor and had travelled internationally, the bureau said.

San Diego also had numerous tattoos, which may have been ‘significantly altered or covered with new tattoos’, the agency said.

In the centre of his chest one tattoo had a round image of burning hillsides alongside the words ‘it only takes a spark’.

The ex-computer network specialist also had tattoos of burning and collapsing buildings on his abdomen and lower back, as well as a single leafless tree on his lower back.

FBI Director Christopher Wray said: ‘There’s a right way and a wrong way to express your views in our country, and turning to violence and destruction of property is not the right way.

‘Daniel San Diego’s arrest after more than 20 years… shows that no matter how long it takes, the FBI will find you and hold you accountable.’

An NCA spokesperson said of his address: ‘On Monday 25 November 2024, officers from the National Crime Agency, supported by colleagues from Counter Terrorism Policing and North Wales Police, arrested Daniel Andreas San Diego, aged 46, in the Conwy area of Wales, at the request of the US authorities.’

In February, Westminster magistrates ruled that he could be extradited to the US.

The Home Secretary will make a final decision, which is expected to be a formality.