Posted on 11/01/2002 11:09:25 PM PST by JohnHuang2
A former Oklahoma City investigative reporter is standing by her assertion that Iraq had a hand in the OKC bombing seven years ago, despite recent criticism by a former investigator who assisted in the appeal of bomber Timothy McVeigh's conviction.
McVeigh investigator Cate McCauley, in a published report Wednesday, dismissed claims made by Jayna Davis that members of the Iraqi military were involved in the attack with McVeigh and Terry Nichols.
"This is perhaps the worst case of misinformation and pandering I have ever seen," McCauley told online news service CNSNews.com. "Davis' theories were dismissed long ago for very good reasons."
But in a rebuttal interview with WorldNetDaily this week, Davis defended her allegation with conviction, saying a mountain of evidence she has gathered thus far led to her conclusions that Baghdad had a hand in the April 19, 1995, attack on the Alfred P. Murrah Building.
Also, Davis who worked for KFOR-TV in Oklahoma City at the time of the bombing repeated an earlier claim that the FBI refused to take custody of evidence she said came from hundreds of pages of "public court records, police reports and statements from intelligence and law-enforcement sources" on the eve of OKC bombing co-conspirator Terry Nichols' trial in September 1997.
Included in that evidence were 22 witness statements, she told WND last year.
McCauley, in her interview, said the FBI refused to sign a notarized receipt for the evidence because after consulting department lawyers, it was decided the materials may not belong to her.
"When Ms. Davis walked off her job at KFOR in March 1997, she took her materials. The station sued her in order to retrieve what they considered their property," she said.
By then, however, Davis said her ownership of the evidence had already been established by a court of law.
"I didn't go running into the night with a bunch of tapes," she said. "I won that case. The judge ruled I was protecting my sources."
And, in an Oct. 29 letter to Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa. who has recently pledged to examine the charge that Iraq may be implicated in the bombing Davis said she "interviewed the witnesses and drafted the summary reports on my own time with my personal resources and computer equipment. ... Ownership of the documents the FBI refused to receive from me in 1997 was never in dispute before the court."
"I compiled the dossier after leaving the station," Davis wrote.
McCauley, a licensed private investigator who was appointed by the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado to assist with McVeigh's appeal, also charged that some of Davis' witnesses were bogus.
"There are witnesses who I'm aware of on that list who changed their testimony over time or, in the case of [a particular witness], were terribly traumatized and confused by the bombing," said McCauley. "If you go through the list of these witnesses, you will find things that have changed, or you will find people that are saying they had seen McVeigh when [he] was hundreds of miles away."
Davis said "at no time in the past seven years have my witnesses changed one word of their testimonies."
In fact, she said, some witnesses claim the FBI falsified some of their statements.
"I have in my possession several FBI interview statements formally known as '302s' that the witnesses contend contain falsified information that radically altered their positive identifications of Middle Eastern men in the commission of the terrorist strike on America's heartland," she said.
That's a pattern of behavior repeating itself among authorities and in some media. In the recent Washington-area sniper case, officials downplayed early reports that the suspects were "dark-skinned." And, writes Ann Coulter in her Wednesday column, the "mainstream media" is more focused on sniper suspect John Allen Muhammad's past as a Gulf War veteran than his radical Islam connections.
"Nearly all the Oklahoma residents who signed sworn affidavits never testified during the federal trials or before the Oklahoma County Grand Jury," Davis said. "The names of the majority of my witnesses have remained undisclosed to the public and the defense teams of the convicted bombers, debunking the notion that Ms. McCauley is remotely qualified to comment on the veracity of their stories."
Further, she said, "none of my evidence has ever been dismissed."
"The FBI has never gone in and done a legitimate investigation or called any of those witnesses," she said. One witness even had an appointment with the FBI, but agents "never came out to talk to him," Davis told WND.
"A prosecutor for Terry Nichols' federal trial told my attorney the Department of Justice did not want any more 'documents for discovery' that would have to be turned over to the defense teams," said Davis.
McCauley also says that a potential Iraqi suspect identified by Davis, Hussein Al-Hussaini, was actually identified later as Todd Bunting, an Army private who was at the Ryder rental office almost exactly 24 hours after McVeigh rented the truck used in the bombing.
But Davis countered that at no time did KFOR-TV uncover any evidence that placed Al-Hussaini with Timothy McVeigh at the Junction City, Kan., Ryder rental business, where the bomb truck was leased.
"Therefore," Davis said, "there was no opportunity for him to be erroneously identified as Todd Bunting."
McCauley criticized Davis but refused to question Davis' motives.
"She's like a lot of people who got attached to a very small package of information and has convinced herself that this is right and this is just," McCauley told CNSNews.com "But they simply don't have all the information or, it seems, the discipline necessary to go through investigative material.
"You can't cling to things you want and ignore the things you don't like," said McCauley.
Davis was unfazed.
"Twenty-two witness affidavits supported by 2,500 page of corroborative evidence is hardly a 'very small package of information,'" she said.
"McCauley is wholly unqualified to criticize the complexities of the investigative dossier because she has never reviewed it."
Specter also buys into Davis' theories.
In an Oct. 4 letter to FBI Director Robert Mueller III and U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, the senior Pennsylvania senator asked why the Justice Department had yet to address allegations that Iraq may have had a hand in the OKC bombing as well as the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
"It is my understanding that my staff has contacted both the FBI and Justice Department requesting a briefing on the issues raised by these allegations, and these requests have been rebuffed," wrote Specter. "It is also my understanding that such a briefing was offered to former CIA Director Robert J. Woolsey Jr., but that he declined the FBI's offer."
"I would appreciate your comments on whether these allegations warrant further investigation," he said.
As of last week, Specter's office had yet to receive a response. Calls to his office yesterday were not returned.
Jayna Davis' rebuttal of lightweigh McCauley is a slam dunk.
This investigation will stay closed to protect people at the top.
Time to move on, old news, nothing to see here, you people get going now.
Though I am not in a position to investigate this, and I am not some conspiracy nut, but I have always been of the opinion that Islamic terrorists had a hand in it. Maybe not the only hand, but a hand nonetheless.
He certainly is! I talked with Jayna yesterday evening, so I knew this was coming, yet JH2 beat me to the punch -- and with a full set of link anchors to boot! From what I've seen, JH2 may hold the title of "Top FR Poster"! Good work, JohnHuang2!
And yes, Jayna "nailed Cate's feet to the floor" with this one! (As I expected...)
TXnMA (No Longer!!!)
TXnMA (No Longer!!!)
--------------------------------------------------------
In my opinion, this is a significant statement by Jayna Davis. I have not read this from her before.Is she suggesting members of the FBI knowingly conspired to cover up for participants in mass murder? If true, wouldn't that be a criminal conspiracy involving the FBI? That sounds very close to being "anti-government" to me.
Or is it only "anti-government" when someone else states the obvious, the FBI participated in a criminal conspiracy to cover up for participants in the mass murder of 168 innocent Americans, including children.
Stating the obvious does not mean you "hate" your government, it simply means you love the truth more.
U.S. Postal Employee Testifies for Grand Jury - TV Reporter Disavows Conspiracy
Through her attorney, Tim McCoy, former KFOR reporter Davis disavowed some of the bombing conspiracy theories that have been reported.
"She also wants to make it perfectly clear that after her two-year exhaustive investigation, she has turned up no credible evidence that supports the theory that the federal government had sufficient prior warnings to prevent the bombing," McCoy said.
Stating the obvious does not mean you "hate" your government, it simply means you love the truth more.
----------------
I couldn't agree more, Sir! In a previous comment on the thread about McCauley's attack on Davis, I wrote:
"After all my years of investigation, I assumed that Susan Otto was referring to Clinton/Reno's de facto conversion of the FBI from the FB of Investigation into the FB of Prosecution and/or the FB of Prevarication. Or worse, as in the cases of Waco and Ruby Ridge, into the FB of Execution."
I do not consider that statement to be "anti-government" or "anti-American", in the least. Since Congress is not living up to its responsibility for keeping Federal agencies (specifically, the FBI and the BATF) in line with the law, IMHO, it is the duty of concerned and knowledgeable citizens to do all they can to keep such bureaucracies from running wild and trampling the Constitution.
It is, after all, OUR government and its agencies that is running amok. Since our employed representatives are not doing their republican duty, we Citizens, as the final employers, are duty-bound to exercise our democratic authority to make sure that both representatives and hirelings alike respect, uphold and defend our Constitution!
TXnMA (No Longer!!!)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.