Federal agents had devised plans to raid the Elohim City compound whose
member-agents were involved in planning the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah
Federal Building in Oklahoma City prior to the April 19, 1995, attack, but
decided against it weeks before the bombing occurred, WND has learned.
According to Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms documents provided
by Oklahoma City Bombing Investigation Committee head Charles Key, as well
as court documents, informant Carol Howe told her handler, ATF Agent Angela
Finley, about the Elohim City-based group's plans.
Building a case
Howe, then just 23, told Finley that she and others belonging to the
Elohim City community had even traveled to Oklahoma City to case the Murrah
Building, according to field reports written by Finley in February 1995 --
two months before the bombing.
In the course of her work for ATF, Howe met a
"German national", Andy Strassmeir, who at one time had been an officer in
the West German army but who was then in charge of security for Elohim City.
(Strassmeir is now known to be a JEW SPY /
mossad agent. Read William Cooper's document.... PLOT.htm -ed)
According to the committee's 500-page report on the OKC bombing, the ATF
had discovered Strassmeir's identity and that his travel visa to the U.S.
had expired. Not only was he a non-U.S. citizen, but his status had lapsed
into that of an illegal alien.
Yet Strassmeir, according to Howe, was in possession of firearms and
possibly explosives -- the firearms charge alone would have been enough to
warrant his arrest by the agency.
According to Key, Strassmeir had told Howe that the Elohim City group
needed to "take their war against the U.S. government to a higher level" and
begin attacks against government buildings and infrastructure.
Finley wrote in a Nov. 29, 1994, field report that Howe told her
Strassmeir had said "his plans [were] to forcibly act to destroy the U.S.
government with direct actions and operations, such as assassinations,
bombings and mass shootings. …"
"Howe also informed the ATF and higher-ups that Strassmeir was a big
weapons 'dealer' and what kinds of weapons he had, and he had some illegal
weapons," Key told WND in an interview yesterday.
As more damning evidence came in regarding Elohim City, Finley, on Feb.
7, 1995, along with other ATF officials, "flew with OHP [Oklahoma State
Patrol] pilot Ken Stafford over Elohim City" to take photographs and video
of the grounds and buildings, to gather intelligence that would assist in an
eventual raid of the complex to arrest Strassmeir and others plotting
government attacks.
"Finley was doing her job," Key said. "She was documenting all of this to
do a raid against Elohim City."
Later that month, on Feb. 22, 1995, Stafford told Finley that the FBI
also had an informant inside Elohim City with ATF's Howe, though neither
agency or informant knew of the existence or the operation of the other.
"Reading between the lines, you can imagine Finley's response," Key said.
After this discovery, Finley contacted her boss, ATF RAC (Resident Agent
in Charge) Dave Roberts, who then called U.S. Attorney for the Northern
Judicial District of Oklahoma Steve Lewis. He then suggested contacting the
FBI's agent in charge in Oklahoma City, Bob Ricks. (Editor's note: Ricks was
implicated as allegedly acting improperly during the Waco incident two years
earlier.)
On Feb. 23, Finley wrote in a field report that Roberts was contacted by
FBI officials who said Ricks "would be available during the week of February
27 through March 03 … to meet with ATF Special Agent in Charge Lester
Martz," to discuss what to do about Elohim City and its suspects.
By the end of that week, on Feb. 27, Finley wrote that she met with Howe
"to discuss future contact with members of Elohim City," but her report did
not say whether she told Howe the FBI also had an informant inside the
group.
Key told WND that documents show the raid that the ATF was planning
against Elohim City was called off after officials from that agency and the
FBI met.
"It's fair to speculate that the FBI got [the ATF] to call the raid off,
or told them to, or someone with higher authority did," Key said, "for
whatever reason."
"If they had not called that raid off, it alone may have stopped the
bombing of the Murrah building," Key said.
Howe, Key added, had told ATF and FBI officials that the Murrah building
itself was "on a list of federal buildings being targeted for bombing."
Feds charge Howe
In its report, the OKC bombing committee said that during the 1997 trial
of then-chief bombing suspect Timothy McVeigh, the defense planned to call
Howe to testify regarding information she had provided to the ATF showing
prior government knowledge of the bombing.
However, U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch granted the government
prosecutors' motion to prevent Howe from appearing. Justice Department
lawyers said her testimony was "irrelevant."
Shortly after McVeigh's trial but before OKC co-conspirator Terry
Nichols' trial later that same year, Howe was then brought up on charges by
federal prosecutors for possession of an illegal explosive device,
conspiracy to make a bomb threat and making a bomb threat, the committee
said.
Her attorney, Clark O. Brewster, argued that the federal government's
persecution of Howe for the very actions she had been employed to perform by
the ATF "was reprehensible and retaliatory."
During the July 1997 trial, Brewster questioned ATF Agent Finley about
the agency's use of Howe as an informant and about the assignments Finley
had given to Howe.
Finley admitted to employing Howe as an informant for $25 a day and that
she had asked Howe to perform a number of tasks. She testified that Howe had
reported that she and others from Elohim City had made trips to Oklahoma
City to reconnoiter the Murrah building. She then said she had accompanied
Howe the following day to OKC "so that Howe could identify the targeted
buildings for her."
FBI knowledge
Meanwhile, the committee's report said an unnamed FBI informant, in May
1994, had met with "two Arabs and several others -- one of whom looked like
Terry Nichols."
The same informant "reported the activities of the group" to the FBI
between "January and April 1995," the committee's report said.
That information "included a meeting at which terrorists presented
architectural drawings of the Murrah Building," while the informant was
assigned by the group "to obtain the names and addresses of federal judges."
"He went to Oklahoma City to assess security and check out the fifth
floor of the Murrah Building, and a few weeks later, a terrorist informed
[him] that a federal building would be bombed within the next few weeks,"
the report said.
During Howe's trial, ATF Agent Finley testified that the FBI, as well as
her agency, "had the information in advance of the bombing of the Murrah
building."
Howe was eventually acquitted of all charges.
Network drops Howe report
Shortly before Howe was charged by federal prosecutors, Key said, "some
in the major media" became aware of who she was and what she was doing for
the ATF.
NBC eventually ran a story about Howe and the Elohim City connection, as
did ABC. But, Key said, ABC was planning to follow up with a more in-depth
report focusing more on Howe's activities for the ATF, but "were
'encouraged' not to run it."
Key told WND that former ABC producer Roger Charles -- who later went to
work for Key's OKC bombing committee as an investigator -- said, "ABC had
interviewed an assistant Justice Department official up in Denver (where
McVeigh and Nichols were tried) by the name of Lisa Brown, who was working
for the main prosecution's team."
According to Key, Charles "and a number of other media were asking
questions about Howe." Previously, Justice Department officials had denied
knowing anything about Howe and said she had no role in the OKC
investigation or events leading up to the bombing.
But ABC "eventually got Brown to make an admission on film" that
government officials "did know about Howe," but that "she had nothing to do
with the case, that she wasn't any big deal," Key said.
"But they got this admission, so they [ABC] were going to put this second
piece together, coupled with some other information, that was primarily
about Carol Howe," Key said. "But they got pressure put on them not to run
it."
Key stated that the "pressure included threats and intimidation," but he
did not elaborate.