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10 years after Waco siege, police face another standoff (Gun Barrel City) - rehash of Waco debacle
The Dallas Morning News ^ | April 19, 2003 | By DAVE HIOTT / The Dallas Morning News

Posted on 04/19/2003 9:50:08 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP

10 years after Waco siege, police face another standoff


04/19/2003

By DAVE HIOTT / The Dallas Morning News

GUN BARREL CITY, Texas – Sheriff J.R. "Ronny" Brownlowe isn't ready for a showdown. Not like the one 10 years ago a few miles outside Waco.

On Saturday, survivors will mark the passing of a decade since at least 74 people died at the fiery end of the Branch Davidian siege. But for Sheriff Brownlowe's Henderson County deputies, it will only be another day in another standoff, now nearly three years old.

Militant fundamentalist John Joe Gray, 54, retreated to his 47 acres near Cedar Creek Lake about 40 miles southeast of Dallas after warrants were issued for his arrest in May 2000. Seven adults and three children are believed to be holed up on his property, hunting, fishing, planting gardens and patrolling the land with guns.

"The entire thing is not worth one of those children getting hurt," said Sheriff Brownlowe.

Patience may not always work, but Sheriff Brownlowe is willing to try. It's a lesson he and other law officers took from Waco, where those who lived through the 51-day siege still debate whether greater patience could have changed the outcome.

In the past decade the government's handing of the standoff has been held up as an example of how not to deal with militant groups. Negotiators and tactical leaders were sometimes at cross-purposes, especially when FBI commanders, smarting from the deaths of four federal agents during the Feb. 28 gunfight that started the standoff, opted to make a strong show of force to weaken the will of the Branch Davidians.

"I think there was a belief that if you put enough pressure on this group that has killed federal agents... then the psychic glue that holds them together will crack and they'll come in one by one two by two and surrender," said Clint Van Zandt, a lead FBI negotiator at Waco. "Had it worked we all would have said, 'Hooray.' "

It didn't work. The raid – to search the Mount Carmel compound for illegal weapons and arrest sect leader David Koresh on weapons charges – and the tough tactics which followed seemed to confirm the Branch Davidians' belief that they would face an apocalyptic ending in a battle with the government.

Ten Bradley fighting vehicles, two Abrams tanks and five other combat engineer vehicles were brought to the scene to counter the heavily armed sect members.

"How do you protect your agents against a 50 caliber rifle? You put them in a tank," said Danny Coulson, an FBI deputy assistant director at the time of the standoff. "It hurt to see FBI agents in tanks, but on the other hand, would you rather see an FBI agent with his head blown off?"

Breakdown of trust

Negotiators worked constant 12-hour shifts. Dozens of agents, including snipers, surrounded the property northeast of Waco.

Federal agents allowed Branch Davidians to retrieve their dead for burial, gave them medical supplies, milk and food, and even allowed the retrieval of Bible study materials left in a car.

At first, negotiators made steady progress in persuading Mr. Koresh to send out members of the sect, especially children.

On March 2, authorities arranged to have a 58-minute religious message by Mr. Koresh aired on the radio. But he reneged on a promise to surrender afterward, saying God told him to remain inside to write an interpretation of the Seven Seals mentioned in the Book of Revelation.

Trust began to break down.

Dr. Nancy Ammerman, a religion and sociology expert who co-authored a 1993 report to the Justice Department critical of how the FBI handled the standoff, said commanders failed to properly consider the depth of the Branch Davidians' beliefs.

"When they refer to the way Davidians talk as 'Bible babble' then you have to wonder about the level of respect," she said.

Mr. Van Zandt disagreed.

"I was on my phone multiple times calling back to my pastor in Virginia just bouncing ideas off him. ... I spent 2 ½ hours with Koresh one night one-on-one because he wanted to talk to someone who was a Christian."

Mr. Coulson said Mr. Koresh reneged on several promises of surrender. By March 23, 35 people had left the compound, but little trust remained. Only two more sect members would leave before April 19.

Determining tactics

Starving out the Branch Davidians was not an option. Officials believed they had a year's worth of food and plenty of water.

Tactical commanders rejected Mr. Van Zandt's idea to erect a tall fence around the compound and send the military hardware away.

"At a barricade situation like Waco or Ruby Ridge" where federal agents had been killed, "the people involved are anywhere from afraid to pumped up or empowered. ... We denied them the vision of tomorrow."

The FBI's Hostage Rescue Team was headed by Dick Rogers, who developed rules of engagement at Ruby Ridge, Idaho. That 11-day standoff in 1992 followed a gunfight in which a federal marshal and the 14-year-old son of separatist Randy Weaver were killed. Mr. Weaver's wife was shot by an FBI sniper while holding her baby and standing in the doorway of her home during the standoff.

Mr. Rogers has left the FBI and could not be reached for comment. As the standoff dragged on, he was ready to force a showdown with Mr. Koresh. "Being nice to him was playing right into his hands," Mr. Rogers has said.

As the days dragged into weeks, the FBI cut off the electricity, used "flash bang" devices to set off loud but harmless explosions, blared music and recordings of the sounds of rabbits being slaughtered into the compound, and directed blinding spotlights at the building during the night.

The armored vehicles, which were disarmed, were driven around the site at all hours to keep the sect members off guard.

Mr. Rogers and negotiators were often at odds during the standoff. Mr. Van Zandt, like other negotiators, said both Waco and Ruby Ridge "put negotiators in conflict with tactical teams... in both cases tactical teams won out and they ended in a way government wished they wouldn't."

Mr. Rogers endorsed using tear gas to end the standoff.

He told Justice Department interviewers in 1993: "I have never commented to any investigators concerning negotiations because I don't view it as having a lot to do with the outcome at Waco. I think given enough time, any negotiator could get them out if there was no suicide, but what is enough time?"

Beginning of the end

The tear gas proposal went to Attorney General Janet Reno on April 12 although some outside experts and FBI agents worried that the sect might commit mass suicide. Concerned about the children because of sex abuse allegations against Mr. Koresh, Ms. Reno approved the plan on April 17 after several days of debate.

Mr. Van Zandt said FBI tactics used against the Branch Davidians had only brought the group closer together and limited the possibility of surrender. "Koresh was the core of a bomb," he said.

Although Mr. Koresh's mother, Bonnie Haldeman, said her son "never, never" believed in suicide, she acknowledged that "on a human level it would have been very hard for him" to surrender.

Beginning at 6 a.m. on April 19, loudspeakers ordered sect members to walk out and surrender. Armored vehicles began to ram the building, punching holes into the structure and inserting tear gas.

Bugging devices secretly inserted into the walls of the compound recorded Branch Davidians after the attack began and before the fire saying things such as, "Have you poured it yet?" and "David said we have to get the fuel on" and, the last statement recorded,"Let's keep that fire going."

Mr. Koresh chose suicide by fire rather than surrender. His prophecy of a final battle against the government was self-fulfilling.

"The Davidians started the fires," said Mr. Van Zandt. "The only question is, did the government put them in a position to facilitate that, and the answer is probably yes."

That lesson is not lost on Sheriff Brownlowe, still patiently awaiting Mr. Gray's surrender. The former member of an anti-government militia is wanted on felony charges after biting a state trooper and trying to grab his gun during a traffic stop. He now faces weapons charges, too.

The family has a well, but no running water. They have a small generator for limited power, but the electricity was cut off long ago.

"At some point in time that's got to get old," said Sheriff Brownlowe. "They're prisoners on their own property."

It may not be too late for Mr. Gray and his family, but the Branch Davidians are a dying religious sect.

Forensics specialists could never determine how many died from gunshot wounds inflicted by the Branch Davidians or from the roaring inferno. Some burned bodies were fused together and specialists could not differentiate between them. But the Branch Davidians say 74 died in the fire, including more than 20 children. And two unborn children are believed to have died.

"All these faces of Waco are like ghosts sliding past you one at a time," said Mr. Van Zandt. "You have to say, 'Was it foolhardy or was it not? Did you die for a good cause or die uselessly?' "

E-mail dhiott@dallasnews.com


Online at: http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dallas/tsw/stories/041903dntexwaco.6bdbe.html


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; US: Florida; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: branchdavidians; gunbarrelcity; policestandoff; texas; waco
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To: Fred Mertz
"What's a compound mean?"

A "compound" it what they call your home and outbuildings when they are trying to make you sound like a nut to the press. Anyone with a "compound" and an "arsenal" (which is what they call your legally-owned weapons, to further demonize you) can be killed on the spot.

Beware...if you have a home with a storage shed, you've got a "compound."
101 posted on 04/19/2003 11:53:33 AM PDT by Henrietta
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To: strela
... or wingnuts.

Are you judging folks on their appearance?

Y'all will have to excuse me while I go mow my compound for a few hours. ta-ta!

102 posted on 04/19/2003 11:53:59 AM PDT by Fred Mertz
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To: Henrietta
    he's already got his mind made up that Koresh and the women and children in the compound with him deserved to die

An erroneous and inaccurate portrayl of what I think or believe.

Of course, you would rather slander than discuss reasonably.

Meanwhile, the conclusions you have drawn are wrong, Henry.

103 posted on 04/19/2003 11:54:00 AM PDT by _Jim (w)
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To: Roscoe
Then it looks like he is guilty of speeding. If the troopers had simply issued a ticket for the speeding we'd have a different situation here. There were no felonies involved until the troopers decided to remove him from his vehicle. He responded improperly to be sure. But what reasonable suspicion did they have that he was guilty of more than speeding?
104 posted on 04/19/2003 11:55:41 AM PDT by Bloody Sam Roberts (®)
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To: tpaine
Thanks for the caution. But, I'm just a harmless, big ol' teddy bear (or stuffed Easter Bunny as the case may be).

(And besides that, if they didn't ban me for those bawdy lyrics to "The Moose Song" that I posted in another thread, the bar has to be set pretty high).

105 posted on 04/19/2003 11:55:53 AM PDT by strela ("... he's a spy and a girl delighter")
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To: Henrietta

What, me nuts?

106 posted on 04/19/2003 11:56:07 AM PDT by Roscoe
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To: thoughtomator
10 years later and they're still debating whether they did the right thing? Here's a hint... if you're going after US citizens with tanks, chances are you've exceeded your Constitutional authority!

----------------------

Uh, especially when the guy you are pretending to be out to arrest can be seen routinely walking around the streets of local towns.

107 posted on 04/19/2003 11:57:41 AM PDT by RLK
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To: Bloody Sam Roberts
"He refused an order to get out of the car, police said, and bit the hand of a trooper who tried to remove him."

Then it looks like he is guilty of speeding.

Wow.

108 posted on 04/19/2003 11:58:11 AM PDT by Roscoe
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To: MeeknMing
I just hope the BATF stay the hell out of it. Let Texas take care of it.
109 posted on 04/19/2003 11:58:30 AM PDT by Dan from Michigan ("I have two guns. One for each of ya." - Doc Holliday)
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To: _Jim
"It is a FACT that the Feds did not try a less dangerous way to arrest Koresh.

THEN you should have an EASY time proving it. Cite or shut."

The PROOF is that the FBI didn't say in their numerous reports on the incident, "Well, we tried to arrest him outside of the compound, and when we did, it didn't work, and thus-and-such happened." The absence of such a report is proof that it did not happen.

Unless the Feds are just lying...but why would they do that? You'd think that if they had tried it, they would have trumpeted that fact very, very loudly, as 'proof' that their assualt on the "compound" was reasonable, in light of their inability to arrest him earlier.
110 posted on 04/19/2003 11:58:41 AM PDT by Henrietta
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To: Fifth Business
. Koresh was known to be in town frequently shopping, so he could have been picked up at any time without a struggle.

Hearsy and anecdotal.

This in no way justifies Howell's resonse the day of the raid.

It *also* does not address the level of resistance he would be expected to put up - *if/when* arrested on the street.

WHAT you're involving yourself now is pure speculation with 20/20 hindsight of what *did* transpire.

It may also be called 'wishful thinking' in full retrospect - and doesn't change the way things *did* turn out NOR relieve anybody of responsibility for their actions (e.g. Koresh's choice to fight when the BATF knocked on the door).

111 posted on 04/19/2003 11:58:46 AM PDT by _Jim (x)
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To: Fred Mertz
Why didn't he pop the 'evil' Koresh in the head

I don't *even* get your point on this.

112 posted on 04/19/2003 11:59:43 AM PDT by _Jim (x)
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To: Fred Mertz
Are you judging folks on their appearance?

Not at all. I judge them by their actions:

Then, last Christmas Eve, Gray was charged with two felonies -- assaulting a law officer and removing a law officer's weapon -- following an altercation with two state troopers who stopped a car, in which he was a passenger, for speeding near Palestine.

Gray was carrying a pistol in a shoulder holster, and several rifles were in the car. He refused an order to get out of the car, police said, and bit the hand of a trooper who tried to remove him.

113 posted on 04/19/2003 12:00:15 PM PDT by strela ("... he's a spy and a girl delighter")
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To: _Jim
What's speculative? If they had managed to arrest him peacefully outside of the compound, they would not have had the opportunity to play with their ninja gear.

I see nothing speculative about that...
114 posted on 04/19/2003 12:01:26 PM PDT by Henrietta
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To: Henrietta
The PROOF is that the FBI didn't say in their numerous reports on the incident, "Well, we tried to arrest him

Histrory re-write in progress.

Howell was under investigation by the BATF - and the warrant was being served by the BATF.

115 posted on 04/19/2003 12:01:55 PM PDT by _Jim (x)
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To: arthurus
Rules of Engagement were very simple in both cases. Extermination is to occur if the target breathes. And level the property.

-------------

Congratulations, you broke the code.

116 posted on 04/19/2003 12:02:04 PM PDT by RLK
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To: Fred Mertz
Don't confuse _Jim with logic, Fred. His head will explode.
117 posted on 04/19/2003 12:02:29 PM PDT by Henrietta
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To: nanny
I just skimmed the article, but what is the arrest warrant for? I would like to know - it seems I have read about it, but have forgotten what his transgression was. Do you know?

---------------------------------

In their hurry to start the festivities nobody brought one.

118 posted on 04/19/2003 12:03:22 PM PDT by RLK
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To: Henrietta
I see nothing speculative about that...

Would coulda shoulda - ALL speculative 'wishing' in light of 20/20 hindsight.

119 posted on 04/19/2003 12:03:37 PM PDT by _Jim (x)
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To: Henrietta
Beware...if you have a home with a storage shed, you've got a "compound."

I own an studio apartment adjacent to my condo. Can I be a compound too?

120 posted on 04/19/2003 12:04:01 PM PDT by Fifth Business
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