<<http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20040311-030156-8181r>>

Outside View: Who is William Krar? 
By Jim Kessler
A UPI Outside View commentary
Published 3/14/2004 2:57 PM
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WASHINGTON, March 14 (UPI) -- Since his appointment as attorney general,
John Ashcroft's Washington office has issued 2,295 news releases. Not one
of them has mentioned the name William Joseph Krar.

Krar's attorney is saying it's all a misunderstanding, and Krar himself
is not talking, but his arrest by federal law enforcement in the small
town of Noonday, Texas, last April may have stopped the most devastating
terror attack on U.S. soil since Sept. 11.

Krar, who is affiliated with several anti-government, white supremacist
militia organizations, was apprehended after mailing a package containing
false U.N. credentials, Defense Intelligence Agency IDs, phony birth
certificates and a forged federal concealed weapons permit to a
co-conspirator in New Jersey.

The package came with a note that read, "We would hate to have this fall
into the wrong hands." It did. It was delivered to the incorrect address.

An alert citizen contacted the FBI, which led to the arrest of Krar and
the discovery of a mind-numbing weapons cache: fully automatic machine
guns, remote-controlled explosive devices disguised as briefcases, 60
pipe bombs, nearly 500,000 rounds of ammunition and enough pure sodium
cyanide "to kill everyone inside a 30,000 square foot building,"
according to federal authorities.

The arrest of Krar and two associates was the talk of the town in little
Noonday, Texas, a sleepy community of about 500 people located 100 miles
southeast of Dallas. But outside of a few local news stories and a
handful of mentions in several national outlets, the William Krar arrest
is the proverbial tree that fell in the woods.

Even more astounding is the stony silence from the Ashcroft Justice
Department, which found at least 2,295 occasions to toot its own horn
that are apparently more newsworthy than the Krar arrest.

"We don't spend a lot of time thinking about how we announce our
activities," a Justice Department spokesman told the Fort Worth
Star-Telegram.

Really? This is from a Justice Department that averages two news releases
every day and has never been shy to march out every triumph over the
arrest or conviction of anyone remotely connected to overseas terror.

No, this Justice Department is obsessed with thinking about how they
announce their activities. And that is what is so intriguing about this
arrest and the conspicuous lack of comment from Ashcroft.

It is, to quote another famous crime fighter, reminiscent of "the curious
incident of the dog in the night-time." "The dog did nothing in the
night-time," said Inspector Gregory. "That was the curious incident,"
remarked Sherlock Holmes.

Is there a double standard at Justice between the public pronouncements
over arrests that fit our current stereotype of terrorists and those that
don't? It is a question deserving of an answer. As for William Krar and
his associates, who knows what they were planning? Perhaps they were
going to blow up the United Nations or release sodium cyanide poison in
the Pentagon. Perhaps they were ultimately going to do nothing -- just
stockpile weapons of mass destruction and pass coded communiqu�s to each
other bemoaning the Zionist occupation of the United States.

We don't know because William Krar is not talking. And neither is the
Justice Department.


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"I can't imagine that I'm going to be attacked for telling the truth. Why
would I be attacked for telling the truth?" Paul O'Neill, 60 Minutes 

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