-Caveat Lector-

Film sequel continues charge of Waco cover-up
11/04/99
 <A HREF="http://www.dallasnews.com/specials/waco/1104waco1waco.htm">Film
sequel continues charge of Waco cover-up</A>
By David Jackson and Lee Hancock / The Dallas Morning News

WASHINGTON - Your typical movie premiere doesn't include allegations of
homicide by the federal government.

But that was the theme of Waco: A New Revelation, unveiled Wednesday to
reporters and researchers of the 1993 siege that ended in the fiery deaths of
more than 80 Branch Davidians.

Over a soundtrack of ominous synthesizer music, the two-hour film claims that
federal agents - possibly members of the super-secret Delta Force - gunned
down Branch Davidians during the fatal fire near Waco.

It also blamed the FBI for the fire, alleging a conspiracy and cover-up that
reaches all the way to President Clinton and first lady Hillary Rodham
Clinton.

Federal law enforcement officials dismissed the film as conspiracy mongering.

They cited evidence that the Branch Davidians set a suicide blaze and that no
FBI agents fired any shots during the final tear gas assault of April 19,
1993.

"We're not aware of anything that would change what we've said all along,"
FBI spokesman Tron Brekke said.

A spate of previous investigations also found no evidence of undue White
House influence.

Still, some of filmmaker Michael McNulty's findings have generated new
congressional investigations as well as a special investigation by former
Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., who did not attend the premiere.

While Mr. Danforth and congressional investigators declined to comment, the
Union Station premiere just blocks from Capitol Hill attracted a few members
of Congress.

"I don't visualize it as propaganda," said Rep. Cliff Stearns, R-Fla. "I
visualize it as an attempt to bring questions to the American people."

The film is a sequel to an effort called The Rules of Engagement. Despite an
Oscar nomination for best documentary and an Emmy for investigative
reporting, the movie drew fire for factual inaccuracies and garnered little
attention in Congress.

No formal release date has been set for the new movie, but it is expected to
be widely available by the end of the year.

The movie, using clips from FBI news conferences in 1993 and congressional
hearings in 1995, outlines what some Texas Rangers and law enforcement
officials call fault lines in the conduct of federal agencies.

They include:

* Six years of denials by Justice Department and FBI officials that flammable
tear gas was used during the final day. They reversed themselves only after
Mr. McNulty gained entry to the evidence locker, finding a shell casing from
a pyrotechnic tear gas grenade.

FBI officials said that, hours before the fire broke out, they used only two
of the military-style rounds in a failed effort to penetrate a concrete
bunker near the residential compound.

* The inconsistent approaches of FBI negotiators and tactical personnel.

Within minutes after negotiators promised not to cut off power to the
compound as a reward for progress in their negotiations, FBI tacticians cut
the electricity for good.

The film also emphasizes videotapes shot from airplanes above the compound on
the final day. They show flashes that some analysts call evidence of gunfire.

The FBI says they are reflected sunlight and noted that the infrared tape
does not reflect human beings behind the flashes.

Gunfire allegations

In discussing the gunfire allegations, the film features interviews with a
former CIA employee and a former special forces sergeant. The former CIA
employee, Gene Cullen, had told The Dallas Morning News several months ago
that he was in a March 1993 CIA meeting in which officials discussed the
deployment of more than 10 Delta Force soldiers to Waco.

He leveled far more serious charges in the film, claiming that he was a CIA
case officer and learned on an overseas mission that Delta soldiers had
exchanged gunfire with the Branch Davidians.

A government official familiar with Mr. Cullen, however, said he never worked
as a case officer but was employed by the agency's protective security arm.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, also said there are no
records of any March 1993 meeting at the CIA as described by Mr. Cullen.

"I would take everything he says with a large grain of salt," the official
said.

Other aspects of the Branch Davidian investigation are left out of Waco: A
New Revelation.

It makes little mention of the group's efforts to amass a huge arsenal of
guns, explosives and ammunition. That was the reason for the initial raid by
the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms on Feb. 28, 1993.

The film also does little more than hint at the group's unorthodox religious
practices. They included the dissolution of all marriages and the assignment
of all women in the compound to leader David Koresh.

Surviving Branch Davidians acknowledge that Mr. Koresh took girls as young as
12 as his "wives" and sexual partners.

The film also alleges that government agents somehow set off an explosive
device known as a "shape charge" on the top of a bunker deep inside the
compound.

Allegation discounted

Government investigators discount the allegation, noting that a shape charge
would have vaporized the iron bars clearly visible in photographs of the
rooftop bunker hole.

The film includes interviews with retired Air Force Gen. Ben Partin. He
became known in militia circles for alleging that secret government agents
triggered the Oklahoma City bombing with similar "shape charge" devices.
Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols are already serving time for the bombing,
which resulted in 168 deaths.

Before the screenings, the Libertarian Party distributed a press release
headlined, "As the Waco cover-up unravels, is it time to try Janet Reno for
murder?"

Mr. McNulty said he expects some critics to try to portray the new
documentary as right-wing advocacy, but "it's not about right and left."

"It's absolutely about right and wrong," he said.

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