Associated Press, Feb. 12, 2003
http://www.miami.com/
JOHN SOLOMON, Associated Press
WASHINGTON - A federal informant warns that white
separatists in Oklahoma are threatening "assassinations, bombings and
mass shootings." The FBI secretly interviews a witness familiar with a
plot to blow up the Alfred P. Murrah federal building. Other agents learn of
a book being circulated that promotes a truck bombing of a government
building.
The U.S. government obtained all of this intelligence
before Timothy
McVeigh detonated his truck bomb in 1995, but officials did not warn
federal buildings managers in Oklahoma, according to government documents
that detail miscommunications similar to those in the pre-Sept. 11
intelligence failures.
"It is the lack of coordination - intelligence going
one way, and then going into a black hole," said Robert Sanders, a
former top law enforcement official who reviewed documents obtained by The
Associated Press.
Those documents show two separate federal law enforcement
agencies had information before the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that
suggested white supremacists living nearby were
considering an attack on government buildings.
In fact, officials at FBI headquarters in Washington were
so worried that white separatists at the Elohim City compound in Muldrow,
Okla., might lash out on April 19, 1995 - the day Timothy McVeigh chose -
that a month earlier they questioned a reformed white supremacist familiar
with an earlier plot to bomb the same Murrah Building that McVeigh selected.
"I think their only real concern back then was
Elohim City," said Kerry Noble, the witness questioned by the FBI on
March 28, 1995, just three weeks before McVeigh detonated a truck bomb
outside the building and killed more than 160 people.
Noble told AP his FBI questioners appeared particularly
concerned about what Elohim City members might do on April 19 because one of
their heroes, Wayne Snell, was being executed that day, and another, James
Ellison, was returning to Oklahoma after ending parole in Florida.
FBI officials confirmed Noble's account.
Snell, Ellison and Noble had plotted to attack the Murrah
building in 1983 with plastic explosives and rocket launchers, according to
Noble and FBI officials. The plan never reached fruition, and the group was
arrested in 1985 after a siege with law enforcers in Arkansas.
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grasley,
R-Iowa, said Wednesday the information gathered by AP "is another
example of the problems federal law enforcement bureaucracies have with
connecting the dots, seeing the big picture, sharing information and
preventing attacks, whether it's domestic terrorists like militia groups or
foreign terrorists like the 19 hijackers."
The FBI wasn't alone in its concerns back in 1995,
according to thousands of pages of federal investigative memos and
handwritten notes obtained by AP.
In the days before he was executed for a 1980s murder of
a pawn broker, Snell began making threats from his Arkansas prison of a
bombing or explosion on April 19 to avenge his death, according to prison
and FBI officials. He also had contact in his last days with members of
Elohim City, who later took his remains back to their compound.
"Some of the corrections officers heard (Snell) in a
visitors' room talking with people, saying there would be a large explosion
or event of some type. He said the immediate reaction would be to blame it
on Middle Eastern types. This was prior," said Alan Ables, a former
Arkansas corrections official.
Jeff Rosenzweig, Snell's death-row attorney, said Tuesday
he does not believe his client knew of McVeigh's plot beforehand, but
"Snell tended to talk in apocalyptic terms and certainly, frankly, I
wouldn't doubt if Snell said something bad is going to happen."
Separately, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
had an informant inside Elohim City who had disclosed before the bombing
that white supremacists were "preparing for a war against U.S.
government." Other reports quoted members of the compound discussing
plans for "assassinations, bombings and mass shootings."
The government also had information suggesting that
compound members had detonated a 500-pound fertilizer bomb like the one
McVeigh would use and had visited Oklahoma City several times. The FBI could
never verify the detonation.
The ATF informant would tell the FBI shortly after
McVeigh's bombing that Elohim City members specifically discussed targeting
federal buildings in Oklahoma for "destruction through bombings."
She also reported that compound members were particularly interested in
April 19 as the two-year anniversary of the deadly ending of the Waco
siege.
But when ATF considered raiding Elohim City two months
before McVeigh struck, the then-FBI agent in charge in Oklahoma, Bob Ricks,
stopped the plan.
"I do remember I told them I didn't want another
Waco on our hands," Ricks said, comparing the danger of a raid on
Elohim City to the ill-fated ATF action on David Koresh's compound in Waco,
Texas, in 1993. "At the time, they hadn't told me everything they
apparently knew."
Neither the FBI nor the ATF passed on information or
misgivings to the agency that manages federal buildings in Oklahoma City.
"We never received any warning of a specific threat against the Murrah
building or any other building in Oklahoma," said Viki Reath, a
spokeswoman for the General Services Administration.
Federal investigators said that while they had concerns,
they had no information before April 19 about a specific target and had
never heard of McVeigh until his arrest, which made it impossible to issue a
useful warning.
"ATF, as it has said before, never had any
information or evidence beforehand about the attack on the Oklahoma City
building," ATF spokesman Andrew L. Lluberes said Tuesday.
Agents said they had misgivings about the credibility of
the ATF informant and investigated afterward whether McVeigh had received
help from Elohim City. They concluded there were no additional accomplices.
"We believe we conducted an exhaustive investigation
that pursued every possible lead and ran it to ground," FBI spokesman
Mike Kortan said. "We are confident that those who committed the crime
have been brought to justice."
Elohim City - "City of God" in Hebrew - is
about three hours east of Oklahoma City. The compound is dotted with
rudimentary buildings that were frequented by leaders of the white
supremacist movement in the 1990s.
The ATF agent who supervised the key informant inside
Elohim City disclosed in sealed court testimony in 1997 that she had
received information before McVeigh struck that federal buildings might be
at risk.
The informant, Carol Howe, mentioned "threats to
blow up federal buildings, didn't she?" a lawyer asked ATF agent Angela
Finley Gram in sealed testimony reviewed by AP.
"In general, yes," Gram answered.
"And that was before the Oklahoma City
bombing?" the lawyer asked.
"Yes," Gram answered. She said she considered
the threats "general militia rhetoric" used frequently by members
of Elohim City.
ATF documents show the informant provided to agents
fragments of practice explosives detonated by Elohim City members and had
suspicions about a possible target. "It is understood that ATF is the
main enemy of the people of EC," one report states. ATF offices were in
the building McVeigh struck.
Gram also disclosed that Howe provided, before McVeigh's
attack, a copy of "The
Turner Diaries," a book about a plot to blow up a federal building
with a truck bomb that was circulating around Elohim City. Prosecutors later
would contend the book inspired McVeigh's attack.
Dan Defenbaugh, the retired FBI agent who supervised the
Oklahoma City bombing investigation, said the FBI did not know about much of
what the ATF learned before the bombing. He added he doesn't recall ever
being told that his own Washington headquarters had debriefed Noble, the
former white supremacist, about the earlier Murrah bombing plot or the
suspicions of an attack on April 19.
"The biggest problem is we don't know what we
know," Defenbaugh said. "I blame most of it on antiquated
computers inside the bureau, which can't find information we need to have
for investigations."
McVeigh's own trial attorney suspected McVeigh had
received help from Elohim City, but the attorney failed to persuade a judge
to allow the theory at trial even after some of the ATF documents came to
light.
The documents show evidence of miscommunications not only
between the FBI and ATF but within the agencies themselves.
For instance, ATF officials had evidence that the leader
of the compound, Robert Millar, was among those inciting violence against
the government in the weeks before McVeigh struck.
Millar "gave a sermon soliciting violence against
the U.S. government," and "he brought forth his soldiers and
instructed them to take whatever action necessary against the U.S.
government," one ATF report from January 1995 said.
Millar made a trip to Oklahoma City about that time, and
on the day of McVeigh's bombing he traveled to Arkansas to comfort Snell
before his execution.
The ATF did not know that Millar was a source for the
FBI, someone who provided occasional information about the compound without
getting paid. That information came out two years later in court testimony
by an FBI agent.
The ATF also didn't know the FBI was looking into the
compound until an Oklahoma state trooper tipped the ATF in late February
1995 that the FBI also had an investigation on Elohim City.
Ricks said his FBI office in Oklahoma didn't have an
ongoing investigation, and he, like Defenbaugh, was unaware of the
Washington FBI debriefing of Noble about the earlier plot to blow up the
Murrah building.
Noble said as soon as McVeigh struck he became certain
there was a connection with the earlier plot.
"I don't see any other possibility, honestly. It is
not a coincidence that he picked April 19, and even if it was, to pick the
same building that we had picked? There are only a handful of people who
knew about that," Noble said.
FBI officials said they suspected Millar was initially
involved, but he cooperated with the investigation and eventually was ruled
out as a suspect.
Millar died in 2001. His former attorney, Kirk Lyons,
said he doubts his client had anything to do with McVeigh's attack, and
Millar's fiery rhetoric was aimed more at uniting members at his compound
than inciting violence. "He was trying to keep his followers
together," Lyons said.