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- <text id=93TT0362>
- <title>
- Oct. 11, 1993: Tripped Up By Lies
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 11, 1993 How Life Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WACO, Page 39
- Tripped Up By Lies
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A report paints a devastating portrait of ATF's Waco planning--or, rather, the lack of it
- </p>
- <p>By HOWARD CHUA-EOAN--Reported by Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The elements are almost the stuff of comedy. Federal agents
- get wind of a surreptitious arms hoard. They then set up surveillance
- of a compound using 40-year-old agents passing as college students.
- Suddenly a raid on the compound is imminent--without a detailed
- plan on how to carry it out. A sketchy plan is then drawn up--and ignored. Meanwhile, the targets of the raid know something
- is up, and their watchers know that the targets know but still
- think surprise is a possibility. That's where the comedy turns
- to tragedy.
- </p>
- <p> "The decision to proceed was tragically wrong, not just in retrospect,
- but because of what the decision makers knew at the time." Thus
- concluded a devastating 220-page critique of the Bureau of Alcohol,
- Tobacco and Firearms issued by the Treasury Department last
- week. The Feb. 28 raid on David Koresh's compound in Waco, Texas,
- resulted in the death of four ATF agents and six cult members
- and led to a 51-day siege and a fiery conflagration that claimed
- the lives of 85 people, including at least 17 children. The
- bureau, the report said, not only handled a sensitive situation
- ineptly but tried to cover up its bumbling with lies and obfuscations.
- As the study coldly noted, "There may be occasions when pressing
- operational considerations--or legal constraints--prevent
- law-enforcement officials from being...completely candid
- in their public utterances. This was not one of them."
- </p>
- <p> After the report was released, Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen,
- whose department is in charge of ATF, announced the replacement
- of the agency's entire top management. Its boss, Stephen Higgins,
- who knew the report was going to be harsh, announced his retirement
- three days before. "It is now clear that those in charge in
- Texas realized they had lost the element of surprise before
- the raid began," Bentsen said. The field commanders made "inaccurate
- and disingenuous statements" to cover up their missteps, putting
- the blame on agents.
- </p>
- <p> ATF has had a tradition of going in with guns blazing. (For
- example, the legendary Eliot Ness and his Prohibition-era "Untouchables"
- were not FBI men, but rather direct predecessors of today's
- ATF agents.) The Branch Davidian saga was true to tradition.
- Little consideration was given to arresting David Koresh outside
- his Mount Carmel compound. Indeed, after its preliminary investigations,
- the ATF began preparing for what would be the biggest raid in
- its history. All it lacked was a plan--and the element of
- surprise. Even though a raid had been set for March 1, the mandatory
- documents for such a plan were not ready by Feb. 23. When acting
- Special Agent in Charge Darrell Dyer arrived from Kansas City
- and asked to see the paperwork, he found that none existed.
- In the next four days, Dyer and fellow agent William Krone drew
- up a plan--but it was never distributed. Meanwhile, Koresh
- was already suspicious, having noticed that the "college students"
- who had moved into a house near his 77-acre compound looked
- like people only a few years shy of their 25th reunion.
- </p>
- <p> On the day of the raid, an ambulance company hired by the ATF
- agents leaked word of "Operation Trojan Horse" to a local TV
- station, which then sent a cameraman to check on the situation.
- The cameraman asked a local postman, David Jones, for directions
- to the Koresh compound. He also told Jones about the raid. Jones,
- who happened to be David Koresh's brother-in-law, told his father
- about the impending operation, and the word reached Koresh.
- </p>
- <p> Koresh was leading a Bible session when he was tipped off. In
- attendance was Robert Rodriguez, an undercover ATF agent. Koresh
- was already suspicious of Rodriguez, but according to one surviving
- cult member had hoped to recruit him anyway. In a dramatic confrontation,
- said last week's report, Koresh, looking agitated, dropped his
- Bible and muttered the words "the kingdom of God." Then he said,
- "Neither the ATF team nor the National Guard will ever get me.
- They got me once and they'll never get me again." Looking out
- a window, he said, "They're coming, Robert. The time has come."
- </p>
- <p> Rodriguez immediately made an excuse to leave in order to warn
- the ATF team that there was no longer any hope of surprise.
- As he headed out the door, Koresh grabbed his hand and said,
- "Good luck, Robert." The agent immediately reported to his superior,
- ATF tactical coordinator Charles Sarabyn, who relayed word to
- Phillip Chojnacki, the agent in charge of the raid. "Sarabyn
- expressed his belief that the raid could still be executed successfully
- if they hurried," said the report. "Chojnacki responded, `Let's
- go.' " A number of agents informed the Treasury investigative
- panel that Sarabyn said things like "Get ready to go; they know
- we are coming."
- </p>
- <p> ATF obfuscation began almost immediately after the compound
- burned down. On March 3 Daniel Hartnett, associate director
- of law enforcement, told the press that though Rodriguez knew
- Koresh had received a phone call, the agent "did not realize
- this was a tip at the time." On March 29 Higgins said, "We would
- not have executed the plans if our supervisors had lost the
- element ((of surprise))."
- </p>
- <p> When the Texas Rangers asked to see the plans for the raid,
- Chojnacki, Sarabyn and Dyer revised the original documents,
- says the report, "to make it more thorough and complete." Last
- week Bentsen summoned Hartnett, Chojnacki and Sarabyn, along
- with Edward Daniel Conroy, the deputy director for law enforcement,
- and David Troy, chief of the intelligence division, and told
- them they were being removed from active service. The evidence
- against them had been found in their own internal records and
- the accounts of more than 60 agents in the field.
- </p>
- <p> ATF's future has already been much debated. Al Gore has asked
- that it be dismembered, its firearms division merged with the
- FBI and the remaining sections sent over to the IRS. But Bentsen
- believes he has solved ATF's problems with the change of management.
- He will talk merger if the FBI agrees to preserve ATF's special
- knowledge of firearms. Also, some say, he would like the FBI
- to cede to the Secret Service more financial investigations.
- That is unlikely to happen. While some reports indicate that
- a Justice Department report, expected this week, will rebuke
- lower- and mid-level FBI agents for the disastrous operation,
- sources have told Time that the criticisms will be relatively
- mild. In any case, the controversial question of mass suicide--and how carefully the FBI weighed it--is expected to be
- a large part of the report. The Treasury study indicated that
- the cult's self-destructive tendencies were already apparent
- in the first raid. Three of the cult fatalities were caused
- by gunshot wounds delivered at close range, indicating that
- they were suicides or executions.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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