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- <text id=90TT0012>
- <title>
- Jan. 01, 1990: Murder By Mail
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 01, 1990 Man Of The Decade:Mikhail Gorbachev
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 33
- Murder by Mail
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Parcel bombs kill a federal judge and a civil rights lawyer
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson/Reported by Elaine Shannon/Washington and
- Don Winbush/Atlanta
- </p>
- <p> On the cold, overcast afternoon of Dec. 16, federal appeals
- court Judge Robert Vance received a package at his
- white-columned house in Mountain Brook, Ala., a Birmingham
- suburb. The return address indicated that the parcel had been
- mailed by Vance's old friend Senior Judge Lewis R. Morgan, who
- knew of Vance's passion for animals. "I guess Judge Morgan sent
- me some more of those horse magazines," Vance told his wife
- Helen. But as Vance eagerly opened the shoe box-size parcel, it
- exploded. Vance was killed instantly; his wife was seriously
- injured.
- </p>
- <p> Two days later two more parcel bombs appeared. One
- detonated in Savannah, killing Robert E. Robinson, an attorney
- and alderman. In Atlanta, police disarmed another lethal
- package; it was addressed to the Court of Appeals for the
- Eleventh Circuit, on which Vance served. In Jacksonville, Fla.,
- local N.A.A.C.P. president Willye Dennis was in such a hurry to
- leave the office that she did not have time to unwrap a package
- that had just been delivered. Hearing the next morning of
- Robinson's death, she remembered the unopened box and called the
- sheriff's office, which discovered inside it a bomb made with
- nails and smokeless powder.
- </p>
- <p> In the search for a motive for the deadly mailings, many
- feared that Colombian cocaine dealers had opened a new front in
- their counteroffensive against the war on drugs by targeting the
- Eleventh Circuit, which handles many drug cases. Later a
- different but equally appalling rationale began to emerge:
- racial hatred.
- </p>
- <p> White supremacists may have been angered at rulings by
- Vance in highly publicized federal court cases. He had joined
- in decisions that upheld the murder conviction of a member of
- the Aryan Brotherhood and allowed the prosecution to present
- evidence that led to the convictions of Ku Klux Klansmen
- involved in a bloody 1979 confrontation with blacks in Decatur,
- Ala. In September Vance wrote a bluntly worded reversal of a
- lower-court ruling that had lifted an 18-year-old desegregation
- order from the Duval County, Fla., schools. The plaintiff in
- that case was the Jacksonville branch of the N.A.A.C.P. Robinson
- had played a part in a failed N.A.A.C.P. challenge to a school
- desegregation plan for Savannah.
- </p>
- <p> As chairman of the Alabama Democratic Party from 1966 to
- 1977, the jovial, imposing (6 ft. 3 in.) Vance was the epitome
- of the moderate Southerner intent on expanding the rights of
- blacks. Vance successfully integrated the party, in the process
- helping to remove from its seal the white rooster that had long
- served as a symbol of white supremacy. In 1968 he led the first
- racially mixed state delegation to the Democratic National
- Convention in Chicago. As a lawyer, Vance shocked the tight-knit
- legal community by breaking a gentlemen's agreement to keep
- blacks off juries in Birmingham. President Jimmy Carter
- fulfilled Vance's lifelong ambition by nominating him to the
- federal bench in 1977. He became part of the Eleventh Circuit
- four years later.
- </p>
- <p> According to investigators, all four bombs appear to have
- been made with smokeless powder, easily purchased at any gun
- store, and packed with nails that spray like shrapnel when the
- devices explode. All were wrapped in brown paper and twine with
- neatly typed red-bordered labels. All carried plausible return
- addresses. Three were deposited in mailboxes in Georgia (the
- fourth had a smudged postmark) with more postage than necessary,
- apparently so that the sender could avoid a face-to-face
- transaction with a clerk at a post office counter. The package
- intended for Vance may have been sent to his house to elude
- detection devices at the federal courthouse.
- </p>
- <p> The bombings were a throwback to an earlier era of violent
- resistance to desegregation. During the 1960s the homes of so
- many Birmingham civil rights activists were bombed that the city
- came to be known as "Bombingham." According to Klanwatch, a
- Montgomery-based organization that tracks such incidents, the
- past two years have brought 100 racially motivated shootings
- and assaults, eleven murders and 60 cross burnings in 40 states
- and the District of Columbia. The N.A.A.C.P. has suffered
- several attacks. The organization's national headquarters in
- Baltimore has been hit by mysterious gunfire twice since July,
- and last August a parcel containing a tear-gas bomb exploded in
- its Atlanta office; more than a dozen employees were injured.
- </p>
- <p> In a nation that prides itself on the peaceful resolution
- of its deepest conflicts, the murder of a judge is an
- especially horrifying act. Vance is only the third federal judge
- to be murdered in this century. Attorney General Dick Thornburgh
- is making finding the killer the FBI's No. 1 priority. The
- sooner the mystery is solved, the better. At week's end another
- bomb went off, injuring Maryland state circuit court Judge John
- P. Corderman in his Hagerstown apartment. Whether that bombing
- was connected to the earlier blasts had not yet been
- established.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-