The return of WacoReno's admission could set off the conspiracy buffs, but the
culprit may be a sloppy FBI bureaucracyBy Howard Chua-Eoan
August 30, 1999
Web posted at: 12:00 p.m. EDT (1600 GMT)
Once it was easy to pass over a story like David Thibodeau's. He
says he saw the shiny thing embedded in a wall of the chapel in
the Branch Davidian compound, where he took refuge with fellow
believers. It was the middle of a lull between government
tear-gas assaults, and in the calm, Thibodeau studied the thing.
"It was the size of a Coke can," he says. "Silver, stainless
steel in color. There were three fins on the back. It was some
kind of projectile." Before he could look more closely, however,
the screech of tanks started up again. Chaos ensued. Then fire.
Thibodeau's tale of the wayward rocket is one of many now
rekindling David Koresh's Waco--especially after a week in which
other suddenly identified flying objects have turned this piece
of rural Texas into Janet Reno's Area 51, a place full of things
she did not know existed.
Angry and embarrassed, the Attorney General admitted last week
that it appears the FBI fired pyrotechnic military tear-gas
rounds during the showdown with the Branch Davidians on April 19,
1993. For years, she and the bureau had denied that such "hot"
devices were used, an allegation made by conspiracy buffs who
believe the feds set fire to the compound. Reno said last
week--and most evidence indicates--the grenades were launched too
early in the day and landed too far away to cause the fires. But,
she added, "I did not want those [hot grenades] used. I asked for
and received assurances that they were not incendiary." She
confessed the news did not help her credibility and promised
another probe, most likely overseen by an outside legal expert,
into a controversy she thought she had put behind her. "She is
not a person who screams or throws things," says a Justice
Department official, "but she is doing the functional equivalent
of throwing a Ming vase."
The use of military tear-gas rounds had actually been noted in a
number of documents amassed by the FBI and other law-enforcement
officers over the years, but no officials realized they were
technically--and thus figuratively--"hot" until the press started
calling around a month ago. Reno's foes are already sharpening
their barbs. House Republicans like Dan Burton, who have seen her
as Clinton's protector through various scandal probes, have
always relished pitting her against her rival, FBI director Louis
Freeh. Though overlooking the troublesome pyrotechnic fact is
actually the fault of Freeh's bureau, watch for the G.O.P. to
place the blame on Reno. Already the longest-serving Attorney
General since 1829, Reno is not likely to find much comfort from
Hill Democrats, who are tired of defending her over the years and
who found her performance last week to be less than inspiring.
Can more of the "truth" still be out there? The range of
truthmongers is broad. Thibodeau, for example, is one of nine
people who emerged from the compound alive on April 19 and is an
unnamed litigant in a class action, an excessive-force lawsuit in
Texas by survivors and victims' families. His memory of the
rocket in the chapel wall is part of his forthcoming book, A
Place Called Waco. Others argue that the tear gas, at the very
least, set the stage for an inadvertent inferno--a claim long
since dismissed as bad science by an independent investigation.
Meanwhile, Michael McNulty, a dogged FBI critic whose Waco
documentary was nominated for an Oscar in 1998, has teamed up
with Frederic Whitehurst, an FBI whistle blower, and is
reportedly working on a second film, Waco: A New Revelation. It
purportedly includes footage of an FBI helicopter opening fire on
the Davidians on April 19. The FBI has always claimed that its
agents never shot at the cultists and that it fielded additional
tear-gas-bearing Bradley tanks only when fired upon.
The trouble for Reno and the FBI is not so much with what's out
there as with the facts that may still be undetected and
undigested in their files. James B. Francis, civilian overseer of
the Texas department of public safety and thus head of the elite
Texas Rangers (regional rivals of the FBI), told TIME, "I have
known for some time that certain pieces of evidence may be
problematic to what the FBI public position has been." He has had
his department petition federal court to determine custody of the
tons of documentary and physical evidence gathered at the Branch
Davidian site, seeking to take it out of the unplumbable depths
of FBI bureaucracy and make it available to outside experts.
Francis was involved in another controversy last week when he
told the Dallas Morning News that Delta Force units--whose
existence the Pentagon is loath to confirm--may have taken part in
the siege, a violation of the law. The Pentagon conceded that
three Army personnel were in Waco on April 19 but only as
observers and technical advisers.
It was the Morning News' questions about persistent rumors of
pyrotechnic devices that led to a re-examination of the record
and Reno's admission. Until then, she and the FBI had said only
"cold" means had been used to disperse tear gas, and dismissed
the notion that heat-producing devices had been deployed. Among
those who made the denials was Danny Coulson, a senior official
at the operations center in Washington at the time and founder of
the FBI's hostage-rescue team (HRT). But shortly after once again
denying the story to the Dallas paper, he heard that the Texas
Rangers had taken a statement from an FBI employee saying that
military rounds had indeed been deployed. Now retired, Coulson
(whose book No Heroes: Inside the FBI's Secret Counter-Terror
Force was co-authored by TIME's Elaine Shannon) made inquiries
through his network of contacts. Says he: "I was made aware of
one photograph that depicted one of these devices in a puddle of
water" after it had been used. "I also learned that a news crew
had videotaped the incident and that it had occurred in the early
morning." Coulson, who says he was "gravely disappointed" by the
discovery, confirmed it to the Morning News last week.
Why use hot rounds? The FBI wanted to prevent the Davidians from
taking refuge in a concrete bunker, but a cold round fired
shortly after 6 a.m. bounced off the roof. According to a
document at the FBI's legal counsel's office dated February
1996--but that officials say they realized only last week was
significant--HRT agents asked to use M651 military rounds because
the heat they generate produces a vapor that provides greater
penetrating power. A yet unidentified FBI official on the ground
authorized the plan but did not report it to Washington. The two
M651 rounds ricocheted off the bunker and bounced uselessly into
a field.
An Administration official told TIME that notes submitted to
Congress just months after the debacle described a military gas
round used to "shoot gas into the bunker" and "some sort of
military round to be used in a concrete bunker." At that time,
however, no one knew enough to understand what those notes
meant--or the trouble they might later bring.
FBI and Justice officials remain convinced that the Davidians
ignited the fires that consumed Mount Carmel. They believe the
forensic evidence is overwhelming and is corroborated by
transcripts of bugged conversations among the Davidians. But last
week's admissions made it seem as if Reno, Justice and the FBI,
in bureau parlance, couldn't find a pie in a bakery. FBI director
Freeh, who took office 3 1/2 months after Waco, is declining to
talk to the press until the Waco incident is reinvestigated. He
apparently wants to make certain that nothing he says now will be
contradicted by nasty little truths that may still be out
there.
--Reported by Elaine Shannon, Sally Donnelly, Viveca Novak
and Mark Thompson/ Washington and Hilary Hylton/Austin
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Cover Date: September 6, 1999
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