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- <text id=94TT0496>
- <title>
- Mar. 07, 1994: Another Judgment Day
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 07, 1994 The Spy
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 45
- Another Judgment Day
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In San Antonio, a jury acquits 11 Branch Davidians of murder
- but finds five guilty of manslaughter
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Cary Cardwell/San Antonio and Richard Woodbury/Houston
- </p>
- <p> However American juries may feel about some of the curious
- characters on the fringes of American life, they tend to reserve
- their real suspicion for the forces of law and order. That lesson
- was delivered again last Saturday in San Antonio, Texas, as
- 11 followers of cult leader David Koresh were acquitted of charges
- of murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the deaths of four
- federal agents a year ago this week. Jubilant defense attorneys
- slapped each other on the back. Did it not matter that five
- defendants faced prison terms as long as 10 years for manslaughter?
- Said Dan Cogdell, a key defense lawyer: "The conspiracy count
- was the government's sole reason for being here--the rest
- was window dressing--and they lost that across the board."
- </p>
- <p> The government side preferred to emphasize that manslaughter
- is not the same thing as justifiable homicide. "We are of course
- pleased that the jury agreed with so much of our evidence,"
- said chief prosecutor Ray Jahn. But U.S. District Judge Walter
- Smith Jr. instructed the jury to consider self-defense against
- the government agents as a justification for the Davidians'
- resort to gunfire, which may explain why only five of the 11
- were found guilty of manslaughter. Four were adjudged to be
- innocent on all counts, and two were convicted of weapons charges.
- Pressed to explain the jury's decision, Jahn said that perhaps
- the panel thought the cult members "who died were the actual
- conspirators and the [defendants] were merely tagalongs."
- </p>
- <p> In Washington, Attorney General Janet Reno, who ordered the
- final, fatal push on the compound on April 19, repeated the
- prosecution's interpretation. "The findings that these deaths
- [of the four agents] were not justified makes clear that the
- government had a responsibility to act," she said. The plans
- for the February attack were deficient, however, as the government
- has admitted. In September, the Treasury Department published
- a scathing report on the raid that described faulty planning,
- fouled-up communications and, worst of all, a fatal misjudgment
- by commanders of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms,
- who decided not to call off the attack even after they learned
- that they had lost the element of surprise. Last week Reno said,
- "One of the minor tragedies of Waco is we will never know what
- the right choices were." She added, "The ghost of Waco will
- be with me all of my life."
- </p>
- <p> Recognizing the challenge of proving any defendant had fired
- any of the fatal shots, prosecutors charged them with conspiracy
- to murder, in addition to murder. Conspiracy would require the
- jury to decide they had been involved in an agreement or a plan
- to ambush the agents. Calling more than 120 witnesses, including
- ATF agents, Texas Rangers and gun dealers, prosecutors tried
- to prove the 10 men and one woman on trial--three of whom
- were away from the compound on the day of the shooting--knew
- in advance of the impending ATF raid and were bent on killing
- federal officers.
- </p>
- <p> The government even argued that Koresh and his followers deliberately
- set the fires that consumed the compound in April in an attempt
- to kill officers in the inferno. To drive home the point, more
- than 30 ATF agents who were part of the February attack testified
- to their terror in what they repeatedly called "an ambush" in
- open terrain, as they were peppered by guns that included a .50-caliber rifle whose cartridges could pierce metal. "It was
- raining blood," said Special Agent Bernadette Griffin.
- </p>
- <p> The defense opened its case by playing a tape of a 911 emergency
- call placed from the compound as the shootout began. "Call them
- off--there are women and children in here!" cult member Wayne
- Martin told a dispatcher. It was a critical moment of drama
- that contradicted the government claim of Davidians eagerly
- awaiting a shoot-out. Just 11 witnesses were called by defense
- attorneys, who made their case largely through cross-examination
- of such prosecution witnesses as former cult member Kathryn
- Schroeder. She undermined the government's case by testifying
- that there was no plot to kill agents. Claims by ATF agents
- that they hadn't expected armed resistance from the Davidians
- were undercut by their testimony that they were told that day
- to mark their blood types on their necks--an ominous instruction
- they had never received before.
- </p>
- <p> "I'm so happy! Oh, my goodness!" Koresh's mother Bonnie Haldeman
- exclaimed when told of the verdict. "God bless them jurors!"
- Every day since their arrest, the Davidians have consulted their
- Bibles and the remembered teachings of Koresh, trying to determine
- how the trial fits in with his prophecies about the end of the
- world. In their view, it was not they who faced judgment in
- court but the law-enforcement establishment. To an extent, the
- jury proved them right.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-