Rudolph To Plead Guilty

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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7433630/

Plea bargain allows alleged Olympic bomber to evade death penalty

he Associated Press
Updated: 7:49 p.m. ET April 8, 2005

MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Eric Rudolph has agreed to plead guilty to carrying out the deadly bombing at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and setting off three other blasts in a deal that allows the anti-government extremist to escape the death penalty, the Justice Department said Friday.

“The many victims of Eric Rudolph’s terrorist attacks ... can rest assured that Rudolph will spend the rest of his life behind bars,†Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said in a statement from Washington.

Rudolph, 38, is scheduled to admit his guilt Wednesday in court. The plea deal calls for four consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole. Rudolph had faced a possible death sentence.

As part of the deal, Rudolph provided authorities with the location of more than 250 pounds of dynamite buried in the mountains of North Carolina. Family members of bombing victims said they were angry that Rudolph will not get the death penalty but said they grudgingly went along with the deal in part to protect others from the explosives.

Defense lawyer Bill Bowen did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

Rudolph, thought to be a follower of a white supremacist religion that is anti-abortion, anti-gay and anti-Semitic, was charged with carrying out a series of blasts in Georgia and Alabama in the late 1990s that killed two people and injured more than 120.

Escape into the mountains
One woman was killed and more than 100 people were injured in the Olympic blast, caused by a bomb in a knapsack that sent nails and screws ripping through a packed crowd that had gathered to watch a rock concert. In the next two years, he allegedly set off bombs at a lesbian nightclub in Atlanta and at two abortion clinics — one in Birmingham and one in Atlanta. The Birmingham attack killed an off-duty police officer and maimed a nurse.

Rudolph then slipped away into the mountains of western North Carolina, where the former soldier used survivalist techniques to live off the land for more than five years — all while being on the FBI’s list of 10 Most Wanted fugitives. Then in May 2003 he was captured after being seen scavenging for food near a grocery store trash bin in Murphy, N.C.

Linda Bourgeois, administrator at the Birmingham abortion clinic, said a couple of employees “jumped up and down and screamed†in excitement over the news of the plea deal. “We think it’s a victory for all women everywhere,†she said.

But Jeff Lyons, whose wife was left blind in one eye in the Alabama bombing, said he and his wife were “extremely disappointed†in the life sentences. “As they say, let the punishment fit the crime. That was a death sentence,†he said.

Plea bargain allows discovery of explosives
Lyons said he understood prosecutors’ reasons for agreeing to a plea deal since Rudolph directed them to explosives — something that likely would not have happened had the case gone to trial. The government said some of the explosives were found “relatively near populated areas.â€

The hidden explosives included a fully constructed bomb with a detonator; the Justice Department said the explosives were located and safely disposed of.

The husband and daughter of Alice Hawthorne of Albany, Ga., who was killed in the Olympics bombing, said they reluctantly went along with the deal to make sure others don’t get hurt.

Husband John Hawthorne and daughter Fallon Stubbs said in a statement that they “would not want their unwillingness to support a plea bargain to result in the loss of life and/or serious injury to unsuspecting citizens who may come across the explosives.â€

Rudolph became an almost mythic figure to some residents of western North Carolina during a manhunt across 550,000 acres of Appalachian wilderness that at one time involved 200 agents. Many mocked the government’s inability to root him out. He inspired two country-western songs and a top-selling T-shirt that bore the words “Run Rudolph Run.†A $1 million reward offer from the government went unclaimed.

‘Caged for the rest of his life’
Investigators suspect that sympathizers in the countryside may have assisted Rudolph during his time on the run.

Charles Stone, a retired Georgia Bureau of Investigation agent who helped oversee the Rudolph bombing probe, said a life sentence may be a more fitting punishment for a man who thrived in the outdoors.

“He’ll be caged for the rest of his life, and from a retribution aspect, that’s probably worse than a death sentence for him,†Stone said.

After the Olympic bombing, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that security guard Richard Jewell was being investigated in the bombing. But he was cleared by the FBI three months later and eventually filed a civil lawsuit against the newspaper that is still pending.

Final vindication
Jewell’s attorney said Friday that the plea deal should be a final vindication. “One does not have to speculate a great deal to imagine how he will feel when he does receive this final and total vindication,†attorney L. Lin Wood said.

Justice Department officials chose the Birmingham bombing as the one to try first, and then-Attorney General John Ashcroft decided to seek the death penalty if Rudolph was convicted. Right after Rudolph’s capture, Ashcroft predicted the Alabama trial would be “elatively short and straightforward.â€

Jury selection in the Birmingham bombing case began this week
 
“He’ll be caged for the rest of his life, and from a retribution aspect, that’s probably worse than a death sentence for him,†Stone said.

Obviously not since he pled to four consecutive life sentences to avoid the death penalty.

How is it that scum like this are taken alive and Randy Weaver's wife and son are dead? :fire:
 
It costs more to keep someone in prison for a year than it would to send a deserving young person to virtually any college in the nation for the same period.

Is this creature worth the cost?
 
And what of Richard Jewell?

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/sports/jewell_10-28.html

While the government can tell you that I am an innocent man, the government’s letter cannot give me back my good name, or my reputation. The difficult task of trying to restore my reputation begins today as I try to tell you something about the Richard Jewell that you do not know. I am a citizen with rights, just like everybody else. I am a human being, with feelings, just like everybody else. In its rush to show the world how quickly it could get is man, the FBI trampled on my rights as a citizen. In its rush for the headline that the hero was the bomber, the media cared nothing for my feelings as a human being. In their mad rush to fulfill their own personal agendas, the FBI and the media almost destroyed me and my mother.

If guilty, Eric Rudolph deserves to swing. He's confessed, so I'll take that as a guilty, and I'll accept the life-without-parole sentence as adequate. But this is an outstanding reminder of why we need to reserve judgement until the jury is in. That goes for druggies and bangers as well as cops, and I think we all know the stories I'm talking about.
 
What of Richard Jewell?

LE must check out all credible leads, and investigate suspects. What the press does is beyond the control of the government. You know that thing called the 1st Amendment?

A careful read of the link below, shows that a leak to the press, resulted in the press going after Jewell. Jewell himself then began making statements to the media, furthering the speculation.

http://www.crimelibrary.com/terrorists_spies/terrorists/eric_rudolph/2.html?sect=22

Anyone know how Richard's life has progressed since 1996?
Jewell got a job with a police force in Luthersville, Georgia, in November 1997. Luthersville is a small town some 50 miles south of Atlanta. In May 1998 he helped unblock the airway of a choking baby brought to the Luthersville Police Department by the infant's frantic parents.
Seems as if he's doing OK and his good name has survived the incident.
 
Didn't Richard Jewell file suit and win against some press organizations after it was known that he was innocent? Hope so-too bad it wasn't enough to bankrupt some of these rag writers :cuss:
 
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