-Caveat Lector-

http://www.star-telegram.com/news/doc/1047/1:POLITICS71C/1:POLITICS71C091299.html

Updated: Sunday, Sep. 12, 1999 at 00:15 CDT

                       Military forces' role in Waco challenged

                       By Jennifer Autrey
                       Star-Telegram Staff Writer

                       The images of Bradley fighting vehicles punching
                       holes in the wooden compound of the Branch
                       Davidian sect and of helicopters hovering overhead
                       as the structure burned have become etched in
                       America's collective psyche.

                       The extent and legality of the military involvement in

                       the 51- day siege at the Mount Carmel compound
                       near Waco six years ago is expected to be a focus of
                       upcoming investigations into the fiery end of the
                       siege on April 19, 1993. The bodies of sect leader
                       David Koresh and about 80 of his followers were
                       recovered in the fire's remains. Among questions
                       surrounding the operation is how military personnel,
                       equipment and munitions were used and whether the
                       government had a role in setting the blaze that
                       consumed the compound. At the heart of the
                       questions about military involvement is the Posse
                       Comitatus Act, which prohibits the armed forces from
                       participating in civilian law enforcement operations.

                       Some issues expected to be examined are:

                       * The involvement of the Delta Force, an elite,
                       top-secret Army unit established to combat
                       terrorism. Some former government officials say the
                       Delta Force had a greater role in the operation than
                       the FBI acknowledges and, as a result, violated the
                       Posse Comitatus Act.

                       In a sworn affidavit, a former sergeant first class in

                       Army Special Forces said a noncommissioned officer
                       told him that the Delta Force's "B" Squadron had
                       been ordered to "take down" the Branch Davidians at
                       Mount Carmel.

                       * Whether federal officials used a 1990 change in the
                       Posse Comitatus Act -- allowing the use of the
                       military in anti-drug operations -- to assist the
                       Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and the FBI
                       in the Waco siege and assault.

                       When the ATF asked the military for help in staging
                       its initial raid of the compound on Feb. 28, 1993,
                       military officers said the ATF would have to
                       reimburse the Army for any assistance because there
                       was "no known drug nexus," according to Lt. Col. Lon
                       Walker, an Army liaison to the ATF.

                       Less than a month later, the ATF added "drug
                       activity" to the matters it was investigating in
regard
                       to the Branch Davidians, a move that a congressional
                       report called "deliberately misleading."

                       * Possible violations of Texas and Alabama state laws
                       prohibiting the use of National Guard personnel and
                       equipment against the Branch Davidians.

                       Texas law prohibits the use of the Texas National
                       Guard in civilian law enforcement unless there is a
                       clear drug connection. Alabama law says its National
                       Guard force has no authority outside state
                       boundaries.

                       National Guard personnel and equipment from both
                       states were used at Mount Carmel. A congressional
                       report has determined that those actions were taken
                       without proper authority.

                       Delta Force

                       Recent revelations indicate that the Delta Force had
                       a greater presence and a more active role in the final

                       assault on the Branch Davidians than FBI officials
                       have acknowledged. According to at least one
                       account, the Delta Force was there not to advise, but
                       to kill.

                       Steven Barry, a retired Special Forces sergeant who
                       sometimes trained members of the Delta Force,
                       gave a sworn affidavit to plaintiffs' attorneys in a
civil
                       suit brought by families of dead Branch Davidians.
                       The case is scheduled to go to trial in Waco on Oct.
                       18.

                       In the affidavit, Barry quoted a friend in the Delta
                       Force as saying the unit set up a tactical operations
                       center during the siege that was staffed by 10 to 20
                       soldiers.

                       Barry said another friend in the Delta Force told him
                       that the unit's "B" Squadron had been ordered to
                       "take down" Branch Davidians. Barry said he
                       understood from his experience in the Special Forces
                       that "take down" meant to kill people identified as
                       terrorists.

                       Barry isn't alone in these allegations.

                       Former CIA officer Gene Cullen has said in several
                       recent interviews that he learned through casual
                       conversations with Delta Force members that 10 of
                       the unit's commandos were present during the April
                       19, 1993, assault and may have participated.

                       Similarly, James B. Francis, commissioner of the
                       Texas Department of Public Safety, said "it is clear"
                       that members of the Delta Force were on the scene.
                       Initial reports indicated that three members were
                       present, but Francis said he is now being told that as

                       many as 10 were there.

                       "There is some evidence that might indicate that
                       they were more than observers," Francis said. "It is
                       fuzzy as to what their role was."

                       Francis said law enforcement officials and civilians
                       have provided first- and second-hand reports on
                       Delta Force activities. He declined to elaborate
                       further.

                       Evidence gathered after the Mount Carmel fire was in
                       the hands of Texas law enforcement officials until
                       U.S. District Judge Walter Smith Jr. ordered all
                       evidence surrendered to the federal clerk in Waco.

                       Government attorneys have indicated in some court
                       documents that as many as 10 "classified" military
                       personnel were present, said Houston attorney Mike
                       Caddell, who filed the wrongful death lawsuit on
                       behalf of about 100 people, mostly relatives of dead
                       Branch Davidians.

                       "We've been told that there were 10 military
                       personnel, but they won't tell us who they were," he
                       said.

                       Caddell said government attorneys were asked to
                       answer questions in connection with the lawsuit. One
                       of the questions asked for a list of all military
                       personnel who were at Mount Carmel.

                       Government officials listed Army medical personnel,
                       the Texas National Guard and 10 others whose
                       identity they said is classified information, Caddell
                       said.

                       Army Col. Bill Darley, a Defense Department
                       spokesman, said the Pentagon has stated that it had
                       only three Special Operations personnel at Mount
                       Carmel and he has seen nothing to refute that
                       statement. Two soldiers were present during most of
                       the siege to maintain high-tech equipment, he said.
                       Another was there when the compound burned, but
                       only as an observer, he said.

                       "We had a presence there for support only," Darley
                       said. "All other allegations appear to us to be
                       unfounded and without basis in fact."

                       That distinction is crucial, according to federal law.

                       If what Barry and Cullen say is true, military
                       personnel may have violated the Posse Comitatus
                       Act, which forbids use of military personnel in
civilian
                       law enforcement except in special cases approved by
                       Congress.

                       The prohibition applies only to direct participation
by
                       soldiers in an arrest, search or seizure. Soldiers may

                       train civilian law enforcement agents or provide
                       military vehicles and munitions.

                       A congressional report determined that all members
                       of the military were present only as observers and
                       that no violation of the act had occurred. The report,

                       "Investigation into the Activities of Federal Law
                       Enforcement Agencies Toward the Branch Davidians,"
                       was issued in August 1996 by the House Government
                       Reform and Oversight Committee and the House
                       Judiciary Committee after their 1995 hearings.

                       Darley said Pentagon policy prevented him from
                       discussing further any of its "special missions units"

                       such as Delta Force.

                       Drug ruse?

                       Some evidence suggests that the ATF created a ruse
                       about the possibility of illegal drug manufacturing at

                       Mount Carmel to obtain free military assistance for
                       its Feb. 28, 1993, raid, which left four ATF agents
                       dead and more than 20 wounded.

                       As early as November 1992, ATF agents were
                       discussing the need for military support with Walker,
                       the agency's Defense Department liaison, according
                       to Treasury Department documents. The ATF is part
                       of the Treasury Department.

                       But there was a problem.

                       In a meeting with the ATF on Dec. 4, 1992, Walker
                       informed the agency that it would have to pay the
                       military for the use of its equipment because the
                       military could waive the charges only in anti-drug
                       operations.

                       At the meeting, Walker jotted a handwritten note
                       that said: "There was no known drug nexus,"
                       according to the Treasury Department documents.

                       The bill would have been considerable. The military
                       assistance at Waco cost about $1 million, according
                       to a General Accounting Office report released Aug.
                       26. About 90 percent of the cost was incurred by the
                       Texas National Guard and U.S. Army, the report
                       said.

                       That military personnel can play a greater role
                       assisting civilian law enforcement in drug
                       investigations is a significant exception to the Posse

                       Comitatus Act, passed as part of the 1990
                       Department of Defense Authorization Act to help fight
                       illegal drug importation.

                       Before the end of December 1992, the ATF was
                       investigating "suspicion of drug activity" at the
                       Branch Davidian compound, according to the
                       Treasury Department report.

                       That addition to the points of investigation
apparently
                       was based on a Dec. 16, 1992, facsimile from Marc
                       Breault in Australia, who suggested that a
                       methamphetamine lab had once been seen on
                       Branch Davidian premises. Congressional
                       investigators later determined that Breault was a
                       former Branch Davidian who had left the sect on bad
                       terms.

                       Former Branch Davidians said Koresh had discovered
                       the lab when he arrived at Mount Carmel and had
                       telephoned the McLennan County Sheriff's
                       Department to report it and to ask that deputies
                       confiscate it, but no one ever came, the
                       congressional report said. The building Breault said
                       the lab was in burned down three years before the
                       ATF raid, the report also said.

                       David Kopel, a former Colorado assistant attorney
                       general and now a researcher for the Independence
                       Institute, a conservative think tank in Colorado, said

                       he was not surprised by the ATF's decision to add
                       "drug activity" component to the investigation.

                       "All the military wants is the word `drugs,"' Kopel
                       said. "Nobody cares if it's true."

                       However, the initial application for a warrant to
                       search the compound included nothing about
                       suspected drug violations. After agents failed to
                       serve the warrant on Feb. 28, 1993, the day of the
                       aborted first assault, they applied for another
                       warrant and expanded its scope. That warrant also
                       made no mention of drugs.

                       The congressional report states that the Feb. 28 raid
                       should have been conducted differently if there was a
                       real concern about the prospect of a clandestine
                       methamphetamine lab on the premises. Because
                       such labs usually contain explosive and toxic
                       chemicals, standard procedure calls for the arrest of
                       lab operators away from their laboratories. Koresh
                       was regularly seen in Waco and could easily have
                       been apprehended, officials have said.

                       "All those justifying stories have kind of gone up in
                       smoke: drug use, machine guns, child abuse," said
                       Daniel Polsby, a professor at George Mason
                       University's law school who specializes in
                       constitutional law.

                       The congressional committees eventually determined
                       that the "ATF misled the Defense Department as to
                       the existence of a drug nexus in order to obtain
                       non-reimbursable support."

                       Darley, the Pentagon spokesman, said he wouldn't
                       comment on any conclusions reached by Congress.
                       But he said the Pentagon concurs with an Aug. 26
                       General Accounting Office report, which determined
                       that the approval of military counterdrug support
                       was reasonable and authorized.

                       National Guard involvement

                       The use of Texas and Alabama National Guard units
                       at Mount Carmel may have violated laws in both
                       states and perhaps the U.S. Constitution.

                       Convincing state officials that drugs were involved in

                       the Branch Davidian investigation was crucial to
                       involvement of the Texas National Guard.

                       The Posse Comitatus Act does not prohibit use of
                       state National Guard personnel for local law
                       enforcement, but Texas law does. State law allows
                       the use of its National Guard helicopters for law
                       enforcement only if there is a evidence of drug
                       violations.

                       On Dec. 11, 1992, ATF Special Agent Jose Viegra met
                       with representatives of Gov. Ann Richards' office to
                       discuss the role of the military in any potential ATF
                       action against the Branch Davidians, Treasury
                       Department documents show.

                       Viegra was told he could not make use of Operation
                       Alliance, which serves as a clearinghouse for several
                       agencies involved in drug investigations along the
                       Southwest border, unless there was a drug
                       component.

                       Three days later, according to a Treasury
                       Department memorandum, Operation Alliance
                       officials received a facsimile from the ATF requesting

                       assistance from the Texas Counterdrug Program,
                       which included the National Guard.

                       Lt. Col. William Pettit, Texas National Guard
                       coordinator of the Texas Counterdrug Task Force,
                       signed off on the request. The ATF fax made no
                       reference to suspected drug violations in the
                       compound, casting Pettit's approval in doubt,
                       according to the congressional report.

                       After the Feb. 28 raid, ATF Deputy Director Daniel
                       Hartnett wrote Gov. Richards a letter on March 27,
                       1993, denying allegations that Mount Carmel did not
                       have the necessary drug activity to justify the Texas
                       National Guard's involvement.

                       "Please let me assure you that nothing could be
                       further from the truth," Hartnett wrote.

                       Hartnett wrote that 11 sect members "have some
                       prior drug involvement, some with arrests for
                       possession and trafficking." However, when ATF
                       agents were interviewed by Treasury Department
                       officials in a post-siege review, they said that only
                       one Branch Davidian had a drug conviction, the
                       congressional report said.

                       The use of the Texas National Guard isn't the only
                       questionable Guard involvement.

                       The ATF also used the Alabama National Guard for
                       aerial photography on Jan. 14, 1993. That task was
                       authorized by a "memorandum of agreement"
                       between the adjutants general of the Texas National
                       Guard and the Alabama National Guard.

                       According to Texas law, the National Guard from
                       another state cannot be used without approval of the
                       Texas governor. Alabama state law says that its
                       National Guard has no authority to conduct
                       operations outside the state.

                       National Guard personnel said in a post-raid Guard
                       investigation that Gov. Richards did not approve the
                       use of the Alabama National Guard. Military
                       documents released to Congress during its 1995
                       hearings indicated that Richards was unaware of the
                       extent of the Texas National Guard's involvement
                       until after the Feb. 28 raid, the congressional report

                       said. Neither Richards nor members of her staff at
                       the time could not be reached to comment last week.

                       Use of the Alabama National Guard may also have
                       violated the U.S. Constitution, the congressional
                       report said, although that issue was outside the
                       scope of the congressional investigation.

                       The Constitution specifically prohibits states from
                       entering into treaties without congressional consent.
                       The National Guard Bureau takes the position that
                       use of the National Guard for law enforcement
                       purposes across state lines is therefore strictly
                       prohibited.

                       "Thus, it appears that the Alabama National Guard
                       entered and conducted military operations in Texas
                       without the proper authority to do so," the
                       congressional report said.

                       Staff writer Gabrielle Crist contributed to this
report.

                       Jennifer Autrey, (817) 548-5476
                       Send comments to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

                       Tomorrow: Despite government denials, one agent's
                       statement says that the FBI fired shots on April 19,
                       1993, court records show.

--
-----------------------
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is
distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior
interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and
educational purposes only. For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
-----------------------

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance�not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to