SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : The Truth about Waco -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gao seng who wrote (396)9/3/1999 2:52:00 AM
From: James F. Hopkins  Respond to of 1449
 
Thanx; Again..; Janet Reno wants you to know she is peeved. It's
not exactly every day that the attorney general
sends U.S. Marshals around to seize evidence being
held at FBI headquarters. And by doing just that on Wednesday Reno signaled her anger that the bureau
had kept her in the dark over the existence of tapes
proving that federal agents had fired potentially
incendiary CS gas canisters into the Branch
Davidian compound at Waco. The tapes, which
reportedly contain the voices of agents asking their
field commanders for — and being granted —
permission to fire the ordnance into the compound
several hours before the outbreak of the blaze that
left 80 people dead, have been held by the FBI for
six years. Of course, the dramatic seizure of the
tapes may have been purely theatrical, since it was
the FBI that drew Ms. Reno's attention to their
existence last week following the revelation that —
counter to FBI denials — such ordnance had been
used at Waco.

Reno's public slap-down of the FBI is most likely an
attempt to inoculate the Justice Department from the
growing political fallout over the government's
misrepresentation of events at Waco. The
high-profile nature of the move is meant to
emphasize that Justice hadn't been properly briefed
by the FBI and thus was not culpable for the six-year
delay. But it won't mean the end of the Justice
Department's troubles. Even though the attorney
general is reportedly in the process of establishing
an independent investigation, she'll have plenty of
competition from probes by the Senate Judiciary
Committee, the House Government Reform and
Oversight Committee and a congressional
über-inquiry proposed by House Judiciary Committee
chairman Henry Hyde. In addition, the Texas
Rangers are about to complete their own inquiry,
which may also challenge aspects of the federal
government's official story. Six years after the
tragedy, the fires of Waco are burning again — and
this time, Washington may get burned.

-- TONY KARON