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It is
important to keep in mind that this whole trial business is a smoke screen. Most
of the people were already dead at the time of the fire. This is what they do
not want us to see even thought the evidence proves it. It is what David Koresh
said would happen. You should consider this heavily!
Andrew
From: "DjL" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://dallasnews.com/texas_southwest/26059_WACO03.html
FBI
plan not followed, Davidian lawyers say Judge told commanders' use of
tanks makes U.S. culpable for deaths in siege
02/03/2000
By
Lee Hancock / The Dallas Morning News
The FBI's two lead Waco
commanders violated a Washington-approved plan by ordering tanks to
begin demolishing the Branch Davidian compound in 1993, and thus
should be liable for the horrific tragedy that ensued, the sect's lawyers
argued Wednesday.
Their Wednesday plea in a Waco federal court lays
out a detailed case for how FBI commanders Jeffrey Jamar and Richard
Rogers within hours diverted from the plan authorized by top FBI
officials and approved by Attorney General Janet Reno. That written
plan allowed for demolition of the sect's embattled building only
after tear gas had been sprayed into it for 48 hours, but FBI tanks
began demolishing the rear of the building less than five
hours after the gassing began.
"The decisions made by
Rogers and Jamar were unauthorized, outside the scope of their
authority, unjustified by the circumstances, and caused or contributed to
the deaths of countless innocent children and some adults," the
plaintiff's motion argued.
The plaintiff's pleading came one day
after the Justice Department argued that legal limits on lawsuits
against federal agencies and officials should prevent the Branch
Davidians from putting the government on trial for its handling of the
1993 gassing operation, including its use of tanks. The government
argued that federal law prohibits using lawsuits
to "second-guess" the judgment calls of federal officials,
even if those decisions have tragic results.
The motions from
both sides come as Judge Smith prepares to make final decisions about the
size and scope of the sect's wrongful-death case.
He has set a trial
for mid-May on three major questions: Did federal agents use excessive
force in the raid that began the 1993 standoff, a botched operation
that disintegrated into a gunbattle that left four agents and several
sect members dead? Did federal agents shoot at the
Branch Davidians and prevent their escape when the compound caught
fire during the FBI's gas assault? And was the FBI negligent in
failing to prepare for the threat of a fire and for refusing to let
local firetrucks approach when a fire did erupt?
More than 80
Branch Davidians died in the fire, which began less than an hour after
FBI tanks rolled deep into the building on April 19,
1993. Government officials have argued that the sect was solely to
blame, noting that government arson investigators ruled that Branch
Davidians deliberately set the blaze.
In his decision last July
to allow the Branch Davidians' case to go to trial, Judge Smith
dismissed Agent Jamar, Agent Rogers and most other federal officials from
the lawsuit.
He left one defendant in the case: a hostage rescue team
sniper accused by the sect of firing at the compound during the April
19, 1993, tear-gas assault. The judge based that decision largely on the
statement of another FBI agent, who told investigators after the siege
that he heard shots fired from the position where the sniper was
assigned that day. The agent has since said he was misquoted, and
other agents in the area have said that the only gunfire they heard
came from the sect.
The sniper, FBI Agent Lon Horiuchi, has denied
firing a shot. Earlier this week, lawyers for the agent asked the
judge to dismiss him from the case for a lack of
evidence.
Lawyers for the sect have conceded that the agent will
probably be dismissed, despite recent revelations about evidence that
could support the gunfire claim. Texas Rangers issued a report last
fall that described how a dozen spent .308 shell casings had been
found after the incident in the house where Agent Horiuchi was
stationed.
The house had been used earlier by snipers from the Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms during the raid that began the standoff,
and federal officials have argued that the shell casings came from ATF
guns. The office of special counsel John Danforth is performing
forensic tests to determine which agency's guns were used.
The
two FBI commanders were among the large number of
federal officials dismissed from the lawsuit last summer.
If
the judge decides to reinstate them as defendants, it would be
the first time that either Agent Jamar, the FBI's on-scene Waco
commander, or Agent Rogers, head of the FBI's hostage rescue team,
have testified at a trial arising from the tragedy. Neither FBI nor
ATF commanders involved in the initial raid were called to testify at
the 1994 criminal trial of surviving Branch Davidians, in part because
prosecutors feared that defense lawyers would use them to put the
government on trial.
In Wednesday's pleading, the sect's lawyers
contended that Agents Jamar and Rogers should be reinstated as
defendants because they not only violated federal policy but the
sect's constitutional rights. The plaintiff's brief argued those
violations stripped the two men of normal federal legal protections that
severely limit civil lawsuits against federal officials
and agencies.
"The problem that the FBI has with calling use
of the tanks to destroy the building a judgment call: Those commanders
didn't have the authority to make that call. The attorney general of
the United States approved a plan, and that plan could not have been
clearer: Don't even consider demolishing the building until you've
gassed for 48 hours," lead sect lawyer
Mike Caddell said.
"Instead, these two cowboys Jamar and
Rogers, went off on their own without authorization, thumbed their
noses at the AG's plan and said, 'We know better than you,' " he
said.
Asked about the matter Wednesday, a spokesman for Ms. Reno
declined to comment. Agents Jamar and Rogers could not be reached for
comment.
Mr. Caddell's filing and a separate motion filed by another
attorney for the sect, former U.S. Attorney Ramsey Clark, also argued
that the two men should be put on trial because they were commanders
at the time that sect members allege gunfire was directed at the
compound.
Officials have denied for years that any FBI agents fired a
shot during the 51-day siege. But the sect's lawyers have argued that
infrared videotape shot by the FBI on April 19 captured repeated
rhythmic flashes that could have only come from gunfire.
Judge
Smith has authorized a court-supervised field test next month to try
to resolve the issue.
Mr. Caddell's motion focused on the
commanders' decision to send in tanks to demolish the rear of the
Branch Davidian compound.
He cited statements by senior FBI
negotiators and other behavioral experts who had explicitly warned
prior to the assault that sending in tanks guaranteed a violent response
and massive loss of life.
He also cited detailed internal agency
reports and congressional testimony in which senior FBI and Justice
Department officials said demolishing the building was thought too risky
to consider in the early stages of the tear-gas operation.
He
noted that Deputy FBI Director Floyd Clark told Congress a month after
the fire that officials had ruled out the idea of using tanks
to "systematically dismantle the
building."
"That didn't have a very good likelihood,
because on a number of occasions when we were maneuvering around the
building, removing the obstacles, the Davidians would appear in the
windows and hold the children up, refer to them as the Kevlar
kids," Mr. Clark testified in 1993. "So we had
to dismiss that."
The motion alleges that Agent Rogers
later tried to "cover up" violating the decision of his
superiors in Washington by telling Congress and the public that the
tanks had only tried "to clear a pathway" for spraying in more
gas.
But internal FBI documents show that Agent Rogers and his
lieutenants told bureau leaders that the tanks were on a demolition
operation. A proposal in which he and his lieutenants unsuccessfully
lobbied for plaques, medals and cash awards for the hostage rescue
team specifically praised two tank drivers for courage in carrying out
their "mission of slowly and methodically beginning the
dismantling" of the rear area of the compound.
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