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1993-03-02
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PART 1 of 2 PARTS
03/02/1993 WACO, Texas (AP) -- The leader of an armed religious
cult announced he would surrender Tuesday to end a bloody siege that
has resulted in at least six deaths.
"I, David Koresh, agree upon the broadcasting of this tape to
come out peacefully with all the people immediately," he said in a
taped statement. The 58-minute statement was broadcast on two radio
stations at the request of the FBI.
Three prison buses left Texas State Technical College complex for
the compound within two minutes after Koresh's speech started. The
school has served as a staging ground since the standoff began.
The statement raised hopes for a quick end to a 51-hour siege
that began in a bloody shootout Sunday morning as federal agents
sought to serve federal firearms violations warrants on Koresh,
leader of the Branch Davidian cult.
"I'm sure you're all aware of how I'm involved in a very serious
thing right now ...," Koresh said. "I am really concerned about the
lives of my brethren here and also really concerned even greater
about the lives of all those in this world."
On Sunday, a raid by about 100 agents of the federal Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms erupted in gun battles that killed
four agents and two cult followers, one reportedly Koresh's
2-year-old daughter. The agents had a search warrant and an arrest
warrant, citing federal firearms violations.
It wasn't the first time that a radio station was involved in the
siege. Koresh began letting children out late Sunday after a station
agreed to broadcast a statement by him.
Tuesday morning, eight more children left the compound, bringing
the number of children released to 16. Two women also left, the
first adults to voluntarily leave the compound.
Also Tuesday morning, a blue, military-type bus pulled toward the
compound and police cleared the road where reporters had parked
vehicles. A Humvee utility vehicle, police wagon and tarp-covered
utility truck also drove to the site, and at least eight ambulances,
with lights flashing, parked nearby.
Reporters were kept two miles away from the site 10 miles east of
Waco.
A senior administration source in Washington said an end to
the bloody siege could be imminent.
"It's looking better. It looks like they will be able to
negotiate," the official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said.
"We think it is imminent."
"I think what they're doing now is trying to get as many hostages
out as they can, then try to negotiate with them to get them out,"
the official said.
Koresh, the 33-year-old messianic leader of the sect who says he
is Jesus Christ, told a radio station he had been gravely wounded
Sunday. As of early Tuesday, Koresh had not been publicly heard from
since 2 a.m. Monday, but the ATF reported talking to him early
Tuesday.