388 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
388 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
Anarchy: a journal of desire armed. #38, Fall 1993
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THE SAD TRUTH
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-includes FBI vs. the Branch Dividians, Messiah
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FBI vs. the Branch Davidians: Assembling an alternative
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understanding
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by Dina Fisher
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On April 19, 1993, live broadcasts of armored tanks and burning
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buildings flooded my TV screen. Flipping from station to station,
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I gathered that somewhere between 70 and 100 people were burning to
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death inside the buildings.
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The news reports cut back and forth between live footage of the
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fire and replays from earlier that day of a U.S. government tank
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repeatedly smashing into the buildings. I could see dark spots
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where huge holes had been ripped into the exterior walls. Over
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these blurred, grainy images, newscasters explained that up until
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several minutes before the fire started, the FBI had used a
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specially-equipped armored tank to inject massive amounts of tear
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gas into the buildings during the proceeding six hours.
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What I was watching looked to me exactly like a military attack
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on civilians. Tanks and gas are blatant military weapons, and it's
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not surprising that a building would burst into flames after a six-
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hour assault. As the fire began to die down and it became clear
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that there would be only a few survivors, I haltingly told my lover
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over the phone that the FBI had just killed dozens of people on
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national television.
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The site of the fire was a ranch on wind-swept prairie land
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several miles outside Waco, Texas. The dozen or so adjoining wooden
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structures there, which would burn to ash and rubble within only 30
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minutes, had been home to a tight-knit community of prophetic
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Christians called the Branch Davidians. The ranch and surrounding
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area had also recently become temporary home to an encampment of
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FBI agents and reporters focussing a slew of weapons and cameras on
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the residents inside.
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For seven weeks leading up to the fire, the Davidians had been
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surrounded in their home by hundreds of heavily armed FBI agents
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who circled the buildings with razor-sharp concertina wire and
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bombarded them at night with amplified sounds of rabbits being
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slaughtered. The FBI quickly moved in after a raid on the ranch by
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100 other federal agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
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Firearms (ATF) had erupted in a 45-minute gun battle. That initial
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raid on Feb. 28 left four ATF men and several Davidians dead. It
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too was recorded live and widely publicized by the news media.
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From that day on, the FBI and ATF labeled the people inside the
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buildings with terms that were repeated by reporters around the
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country. The words "apocalyptic" and "cult" became media catch-
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words. Another key word emerged when an ATF spokesman claimed only
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hours after the initial raid that mass "suicide" amongst the
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cultists was a clear possibility.
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On the day of the fire, in stark contrast with graphic visual
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images of the tank assault, the FBI claimed almost as soon as the
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flames started that the victims had in fact participated in a
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suicide pact and lit the fire themselves. Newscasters repeatedly
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used the word "suicide" during the live fire coverage. The next
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day, it was used nationwide in newspaper headlines, sub-heads, and
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text. The Chicago Sun-Times went so far as to use a direct FBI
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quote for a two-page-wide headline which read, "'Oh My God, They're
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Killing Themselves.'"
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While I was still on the phone watching the live fire coverage,
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one on-location reporter heatedly said that half the photographers
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watching the buildings through high-powered telephoto lenses didn't
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believe the suicide story. He described the FBI's claim as "one of
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the greatest hoaxes" ever played on the American public. The
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strength of conviction it must have taken for this man to clearly
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say what he believed on live television, despite professional
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consequences, was impressive. I was surprised by his admirable
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candor, but not by the content of his words.
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Having been involved in grassroots political groups for years, I
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was not naive about FBI tactics. I'd heard the Bureau implicated in
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everything from intimidating political activists to assassinating
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civil rights workers. On a more personal level, the alternative
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high school where I teach in Chicago was subjected to a surprise
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raid in June of 1983 when FBI agents and Chicago police took files
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and caused as much as $40,000 in damages. Members of Dr. Pedro
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Albizu Campos High School say that absurd FBI claims about the
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building being used as a bomb factory were the pretext for the
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raid. Teachers say the school was actually targeted in an attempt
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to destroy its credibility among Puerto Ricans because it was
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exposing Puerto Rican students to alternative ideas about colonial-
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ism and radical independence movements. The FBI was eventually
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forced to publicly issue a statement distancing the school's name
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from terrorism, but stolen files were never returned and the
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damages never paid for.
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Two years later the FBI was involved in an armed attack which
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killed 11 members of MOVE, a communal group of socially radical
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African-Americans. The circumstances of that attack bear a striking
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resemblance to the recent assault against the Davidians.
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On May 13, 1985, MOVE's main house in Philadelphia was burned to
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the ground, along with 60 other row houses on the block, after an
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especially flammable explosive covertly supplied by the FBI was
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detonated on the roof. The fire ended a day-long shoot out between
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several MOVE members inside and hundreds of Philadelphia cops
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surrounding the house outside. Burned, dismembered bodies of six
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adults and five children were found in the rubble, some containing
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bullets. MOVE members, too, were labeled in the media as suicidal
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cultists and accused by the government of burning their own home.
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Only two people inside the MOVE house that day survived: Ramona
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Africa, an adult, and Birdie Africa, a 13 year old boy.
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Almost eight years later, on the day after the Davidians' home was
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burned to the ground, an Associated Press article titled "Texas
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Flames Evoke Past Attacks" in the Chicago Sun-Times quoted Ramona
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Africa as saying "It's May 13th all over again...I hope it is an
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example for people...to stop hallucinating about the system they're
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dealing with and realize that this system is insane."
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Given the disparity between the term "suicide" and what I had seen
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on TV, my curiosity and healthy distrust of government agencies
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were aroused. Comments made by Ramona Africa and the admirable on-
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location reporter started me on a library investigation of events
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surrounding the attack on the Davidians.
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My investigation spanned eight weeks and included over 60
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newspaper articles from around the country. The majority of these
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were published between March 28 and May 28 in two Texas dailies,
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the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express News. For earlier
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newspaper accounts, I read microfilm articles from the Los Angeles
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Times and New York Times. Also included in my research were
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archival magazine articles about the 1985 MOVE bombing, plus one
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book by Margot Harry called Attention MOVE! This is America! and
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another called Burning Down the House, by John Anderson and Hilary
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Hevenor.
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One of the most striking points I learned about, and perhaps the
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most crucial to understanding information about the Davidians in
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the news media, was the degree to which the FBI seized control over
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information going in and out of the buildings where the Davidians
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were holed up during the 51-day siege.
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Almost immediately following the original raid, contact between
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the Davidians and people outside the FBI was severely limited when
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telephone service inside the buildings was disconnected and
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replaced by a direct line to federal agents.
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Similarly, members of the press were forced to move a minimum of
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two miles away from the site when the FBI arrived. Although the
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grainy, blurred quality of ensuing photographs and TV footage
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hinted at this fact, there was very little mention of it by the
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media. One of only two direct references I found to this was a
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paragraph in the Houston Chronicle which succinctly stated the
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significance of moving the press so far away. It quoted Paul Fatta,
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a Davidian who happened to be away form the ranch on the day of the
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initial raid, as saying, "When the media was pushed way back more
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than two miles down the road, the FBI could say and do anything
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they wanted, and the whole world was just getting the information
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they were giving." The same article also said Fatta believed the
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FBI had intentionally set the fire to flush the Davidians out.
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During the second week of the siege, the Davidians began hanging
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large bedsheet banners out of windows in an effort to communicate
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with the world beyond the FBI. Two of these messages were, "God
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Help Us We Want the Press," and "Rodney King We Understand." The
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following week, after FBI spokesmen publicly accused the group's
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religious leader, David Koresh, of effectively halting negotiations
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for surrender, the Davidians displayed another banner that read,
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"FBI Broke Negotiations, We Want Press."
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As far as I could tell, the only direct press contact permitted
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to the Davidians came within two days of the initial raid, when
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Koresh was allowed to air a 25-minute live interview and a 58-
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minute taped sermon on a Texas radio station.
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After this, the only communication the Davidians were allowed
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outside the FBI (that I know of) was several face-to-face meetings
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and closely monitored phone conversations with attorney Dick De
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Guerin, who was hired by Koresh's mother. Another attorney for the
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Davidians, Jack Zimmerman, was also present during some negotiation
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sessions, but was sometimes not permitted by the FBI to speak.
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Concerned relatives and friends were at no time allowed to speak
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with the people inside.
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With such tight control over information and communication,
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government officials were able to make a series of unsubstantiated
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accusations and block any response from the Davidians. Much of the
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mainstream news media, having access to little material outside FBI
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and ATF statements, repeated these accusations daily. Emerging in
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the media was an image of the Davidians as suicidal, child-mo-
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lesting cult members led by a madman fanatically bent on
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stockpiling weapons and explosives for a final confrontation with
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the U.S. government.
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The Davidians were also specifically accused of converting semi-
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automatic weapons to fully automatic capacity. While the Davidians
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supposedly obtained this equipment with relative ease from an
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Illinois-based company in the weapons trade, it is illegal to
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actually make the conversions without governmental approval. This
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was the official explanation given for the February raid by the
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ATF, whose mandate it is to regulate arms flow within the U.S. The
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ATF additionally accused the Davidians of shooting first in the gun
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battle on the day of the February raid.
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Many of these accusations have been seriously challenged by
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almost everyone=FEapart from government agents=FEwho was directly
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involved during the siege, including attorneys De Guerin and
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Zimmerman as well as the nine survivors who managed to escape from
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the burning buildings.
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De Guerin in particular has been an outspoken critic of FBI and
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ATF behavior in the case, saying that the government is conducting
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"a massive cover-up, a white wash" of its actions.
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Approximately five weeks after the fire, De Guerin publicly
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released a lengthy tape-recorded telephone conversation he had with
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Koresh before the FBI disconnected the lines on the afternoon
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following the ATF raid. The Houston Chronicle reported that Koresh
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sounded tired on the tape due to being seriously wounded, but
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seemed agitated by government comments to the media: "They said we
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were throwing grenades at them, I mean, for crying out loud...you
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can't believe anything they tell you." The Chronicle stated also
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that Koresh sounded especially irritated by government suggestions
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that the Davidians were considering mass suicide, saying, "That's
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not even sane, it irks me."
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The accusation that the Davidians were suicidal was also refuted
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after the fire by several of the survivors including Renos Avraam,
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Jaime Castillo, Derek Lovelock and others. Louis Aliniz, a Houston
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man who slipped past the FBI and into the buildings during the
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siege, said he was convinced the Davidians hadn't committed
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suicide, due to their religious beliefs. He left the ranch two days
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before the fire.
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Survivors also reportedly told De Guerin that those on the inside
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couldn't get out because some were blocked by fire and smoke, while
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others were completely immobilized by massive amounts of gas pumped
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in by the FBI. Survivor Jaime Castillo, in similar statements,
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refuted accusations that Koresh had used death threats to prevent
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people form fleeing the fire. Castillo said he personally had been
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afraid to leave the buildings because of the imminent danger he
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perceived from the FBI's attack.
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Under the assumption that the government did not want an armed
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confrontation with the Davidians, the ATF's action in the initial
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February 28 raid was widely criticized in the media as being poorly
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planned. More recently, the Bureau's official statements about
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events leading up to and during the raid have been discredited by
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a series of contradictory statements and outright lies.
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The ATF originally justified the raid by claiming that it was the
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only way to serve Koresh with arrest and search warrants because he
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never left the ranch. But preachers, merchants and other townspeo-
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ple said in newspaper accounts that Koresh had been regularly seen
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purchasing goods in town.
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The Bureau also claimed to have conducted the raid as soon as
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agents obtained evidence of illegal activity. Federal court
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affidavits by ATF officials later contradicted this. Agents
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allegedly discovered eight months prior to the raid that the
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Davidians might be illegally converting weapons. The Houston
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Chronicle reported that in the meantime, spies were planted in and
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around the Davidian's home while 130 ATF agents spent several
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months preparing for the attack.
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Through a series of disclosures by high ranking ATF officials
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during Congressional hearings and legal testimony, it was also
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brought to light that the Bureau carried out the raid with
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supervisors' full knowledge that the Davidians had been tipped off
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by a telephone call. The ATF spy who had infiltrated and lived on
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the ranch, Robert Rodriguez, reported the telephone call back to
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the Bureau and advised that the surprise raid be canceled. ATF
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director Stephen Higgins also admitted that the Bureau invited six
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local press members and two from CBS news to attend the raid,
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ensuring national media coverage.
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All along, government spokesmen contended that the Davidians fired
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first during the raid, setting off the gun battle that would leave
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four agents dead and 16 others wounded. The Bureau claimed that,
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having been warned the agents were coming, the Davidians had time
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to set up a surprise ambush.
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Several people who participated in the gun battle, however,
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including anonymous ATF agents, Koresh, and Davidian survivor
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Castillo, were listed in newspapers as having said that the first
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shots were fired by ATF men.
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Koresh was quoted on March 1 in the Los Angeles Times as saying,
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"They fired on us first...the bullets started coming into the
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door." In the taped telephone conversation with De Guerin, Koresh
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said that the ATF's guns were "cocked and locked" as agents jumped
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out of cattle trucks.
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Weeks later, after the deadly fire, De Guerin said he wanted to
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keep the federal agents out of the ruins of the burned buildings.
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"It's in the ATF's interest to jimmy up the crime scene to make it
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seem like they were justified in going in like the marines," he
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said.=20
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In mid-May, 12 bulldozers hired by the federal government leveled
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the ruins. At that time, nobody outside law enforcement officials
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had been permitted near the crime scene since federal search
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warrants were still in effect. The closest that reporters would be
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allowed before the bulldozing, was 200 yards away, were they were
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escorted as a group by government agents. Zimmerman was quoted as
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saying, "I guess what it does, it forever prevents any checking on
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the ATF's rendition, that the fire was intentionally set" by the
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Davidians.
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Jeff Kearney, lawyer to Castillo, declined to publicly state in
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the Houston Chronicle that the fire was part of an intentional
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government plan. He did say that the fact the buildings burned "is
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a benefit to the government...These government agents can say
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whatever they want, and there is little physical evidence to
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dispute that. I felt they knew that if that building was damaged,
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burned or destroyed it would be to their benefit."
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The Houston Chronicle reported that the Waco fire trucks en route
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to fight the fire were held at an FBI checkpoint several miles from
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the buildings and that firefighters were ordered not to talk to
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reporters. By the time the trucks arrived, the blaze was out of
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control.
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Although the heads of 12 corpses could not be recovered after the
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fire, the charred bodies of the 12 youngest children were found in
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their mothers' arms.
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As of the end of my investigation, I had found no mention of any
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government agency clearly stating whether or not the Davidians
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possessed illegal weapons. The Texas Rangers released a list of
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weapons retrieved in the ruins, but ambiguous language made it
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impossible to discern whether any of these were automatic.
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I was able to find almost no information about the Davidians'
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political beliefs other than a few intriguing details. Listed in
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the original search warrant, which prompted the entire siege, was
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a video critical of the ATF and writings which detailed Koresh's
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alleged hatred for law enforcement.
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MEMO TO GOD (for future reference)
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WE PRAY
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YOU, DO NOT
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SEND
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THE MESSIAH
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UNLESS
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THE
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MESSIAH
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IS
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NICE
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THE MESSIAH
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OBEYS
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AMERICAN LAWS
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and
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THE MESSIAH
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CO-OPERATES WITH THE FBI
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In order to rationalize events in Waco, a lot of rhetoric has been
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drawn from pop psychology. Koresh was "psychopathic," "sick,"
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"suffered from paranoid delusions."
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There was also a kind of theologization of Koresh, so that he was
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spoken of as if he was Satan: the fires which consumed him were the
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flames of Hell. Not the flames of a burning home. This kind of
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rhetoric, on the covers of magazines and on TV, suggests they
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defeated the Devil down in Texas. But nobody defeated Satan. There
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was no Satan in Waco. There were people.
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We never penetrate the facades placed before us, representing the
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"truth" of Waco. Nowhere have I seen any serious discussion of the
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consequences if Koresh really was the messiah. I am not advocating
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this view. But if you're Christian, ask yourself why you did not
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ask: Could this man be the messiah? Must the True Messiah abide by
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the laws of an imperfect nation-state? Does resistance to the FBI
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prove a man or woman is not the True Messiah? Now, very few people
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believe in a Coming Age. If there really is a "God," and if this
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God "sent" a divine incarnation to live among us, to usher in a
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milleniumn of perfect peace, would that Messiabh get good press? Or
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would we simply kill him?
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Something to think about, now that a man is dead. -E.R.
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