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Linda Thompson Interview -- 2/11/94 -- Hour 1

From: Brian Redman (bigxc)
Date: Tue Jul 26 1994 - 03:29:24 PDT


[From an interview with Linda Thompson on the *For the People* 
radio show, Feb. 11, 1994. Host is Chuck Harder.]
 
CHUCK HARDER: Hello, hello. Hi, everybody! Hello there. Chuck 
Harder, *For The People*. Glad you are with us.
 
Today, by popular demand, attorney Linda Thompson is on with us. 
And she is the producer of the new tape, "Waco, the Big Lie 
Continues." We will be talking to her in just one second, uh... a 
couple of seconds, if you please.
 
We want to say "hello" to 2... no, make it 3 new stations that we 
have added today.
 
KURY, Brookings, Oregon. They run on our network 24 hours a day. 
And they are *on*.
 
And, we want to say "hello" to WTSJ. They're 1050 on the dial in 
Cincinnati, Ohio.
 
And WLSE, which is 1400 on the dial in Wallace, North Carolina.
 
All right? And we'll be saying "hello" to other stations that 
join us.
 
Now... to go to the phone here and talk to Linda Thompson. Linda, 
let's start out (for folks who did not hear our last broadcast): 
You are a Juris Doctor. Isn't that right?
 
LINDA THOMPSON: That's correct.
 
HARDER: That means "lawyer," folks.
 
THOMPSON: [Laughs] It means I have a doctoral degree in law.
 
HARDER: Right.
 
THOMPSON: Which actually means virtually nothing, 'cause they 
don't teach you anything in law school about the *real* law... 
but, anyway...
 
HARDER: O.K. Now... Uh, is this true?? That you're also a 
disabled Vietnam Conflict veteran?
 
THOMPSON: Yep.
 
HARDER: [Surprised] No kidding!
 
THOMPSON: No kidding.
 
HARDER: You got... what'd ya do? Get too close to a hand grenade?
 
THOMPSON: No. I wasn't in combat at all. No, I actually got 
injured in a training... during training exercise I hurt my back.
 
HARDER: Wow.
 
THOMPSON: ...couple things that ripped... All it really does 
effect-wise is, when I'm pregnant, I'm paralyzed.
 
HARDER: Oh my.
 
THOMPSON: But anyway, I've had 3 kids. They're healthy, fine. And 
it's just been fine.
 
HARDER: Now. Let me ask you a couple of questions here. First of 
all, let's explain that you got interested in the Waco matter, 
how? What caused you to get involved?
 
THOMPSON: It's a cumulation of 2 or 3 things. I think, 
predominantly, Randy Weaver's situation was my "battle cry." It 
was my "wake up call." Because I got involved in Randy Weaver's 
situation peripherally. We have a computer network, and our 
network was started because we were hearing things all over the 
country that were occurring that weren't being covered by the 
major television networks. And that appalled me. It was 
disturbing to me that *horrible* violations of people's 
Constitutional rights were not making the mainstream papers or 
networks. I began to be very suspicious of that.
 
Well with Weaver's situation, I called and talked to Chuck 
Stanloss(?) while it was going on. I got a copy of Randy Weaver's 
diary. And the cases that I have had -- my legal cases -- several 
of them have been what are called very "high profile," where you 
get international television coverage on the stories, and so 
forth. So I know a lot of these media people, and usually I can 
just pick up the phone and say, "Hey guys. We got a hot one 
here." And they would do a story "in a heartbeat." Well I 
couldn't get *anybody* to run Randy Weaver's diary! I couldn't 
get anybody to cover the Weaver story from any aspect except the 
"White Supremacist, Holed Up in Mountain Cabin, In Shoot-Out With 
the Feds." That was the version that they were telling... and it 
was not the truth!
 
HARDER: Yeah. You know why, don't you?
 
THOMPSON: Of course! But at the time I didn't.
 
HARDER: O.K. Why, do you feel, the reason is, today?
 
THOMPSON: The reason today is because our media is, our national 
broadcast media, is *absolutely* part and parcel of an overall 
plan to change America's law as we know it; to make us part of 
this "One World Government," "New World Order," business. And 
they're not going to tell the American public anything they need 
to know to stop it.
 
HARDER: O.K. What I see -- understand, I *did* work for NBC.
 
THOMPSON: Uh-hum. [Affirmative]
 
HARDER: And I *did* work for WMCA in New York. And I was in a 
deal, for awhile, where there was some big media money in it. And 
I learned very quickly what the "velvet hammer" was. And that's 
where you get the phone call from a director or some kind of a 
big "muckity-muck," and they say, "You know, we oughtta not be 
spending our time and energy on such-and-such a topic." Or, "Why 
would you want to give this guy a forum?" (Meaning, say, Ralph 
Nader.)
 
THOMPSON: Right.
 
HARDER: You know, "Can't we find something else to devote our 
energy to that's neutral?"
 
And you learn very quickly that giant corporations, that have the 
media outlets... And if you go to the Securities & Exchange 
Commission record, and you start looking at who owns the stock -- 
and I'm talking about enough big blocks of stock to have control 
-- you'll see that there's a roundtable. And at the roundtable 
sits David Rockefeller (the Chase [Bank]), Brown Brothers - 
Harriman, J.P. Morgan, and a number of other organizations like 
this... including General Electric. And of course they [General 
Electric] own NBC. And then you see the TCI money and the Liberty 
Media, and what have you. And it doesn't take too long to realize 
that "everybody owns everybody." That there's interlocking 
ownership.
 
THOMPSON: Yep.
 
HARDER: And interlocking boards of directors.
 
THOMPSON: And those same guys are the ones that control who gets 
picked for President...
 
HARDER: Right.
 
THOMPSON: ... many of the Congressional seats, and so forth. And 
yeah: When people say there's a global conspiracy -- they're 
right. This is exactly what you're describing.
 
HARDER: Well.
 
THOMPSON: Interlocking board of directors, and so forth, have a 
convergence of political views that has the effect of being a 
plan.
 
HARDER: All right, hang on. We'll be right back.
 
[...commercial break...]
 
CHUCK HARDER: Linda Thompson is our guest. She is an attorney.
 
And so, you got "cranked up" over this Waco thing because you 
realized that there was a press blackout. We realized that. As I 
said, from my personal experience I can tell you that right now, 
on national TV, here's what you see:
 
You see the Menendez trial. You hear the ongoings of the Lorena 
Bobbit, John Bobbit... You hear them get in a couple of shots at 
Ross Perot. You hear the Nancy Kerrigan/Tonya Harding...
 
And the reason you hear, essentially, Menendez, Bobbit and 
Harding is that those are what they call "neutral stories." In 
other words, they have enough human interest to command an 
audience, and it will be *perceived* as news. It's actually 
"info-tainment," is what it's really called in the industry. And 
because it does not impinge or effect any large corporation 
and/or government entity, it is "neutral."
 
And that's what you'll see on the nightly news. Nothing else.
 
LINDA THOMPSON: Pablum.
 
HARDER: Pablum. Exactly.
 
THOMPSON: Well you do see a little "something else," and that is 
agendas...
 
HARDER: Oh yeah.
 
THOMPSON: ...are government agendas. Because NBC, for instance, 
ran a week-long series of anti-gun propaganda. {1}. While Waco 
was going on and even *since* Waco's been on, we see such 
programs as, for instance, the one "Prime Time," the other night, 
"Waco, the Untold Story," where they only interviewed people that 
are disgruntled former members of the Branch Davidians or people 
that were not Koresh supporters that still live there, to tell 
the same old story that we've heard over and over again that is 
absolutely not true. Yet that is what they base the entire raid 
on, was the former, disgruntled members' story.
 
HARDER: Well it's very easy to find disgruntled employees at any 
company. But let's put it this way: Let's pretend for a moment 
that all that's correct. Let's, just for a moment, let me use a 
hypothesis here. Let's pretend that Koresh was a nut and that 
everything, indeed, was wrong. O.K.? Now the first question you 
have is, number one, Why did they launch an assault? It was not 
to serve a warrant but instead to make "dramatic entries into the 
building." Why is it that they did not serve the warrant? They 
instead, really, just simply launched a raid that would not have 
stopped if they [the BDs after the raid had begun] had come to 
the front door and said, "Hi! Nice day. Come on in." That's 
number one. That's the first question.
 
The second question, I think, is this: Once that had failed and 
blood had been shed, Why did they refuse all of the local people 
who knew the folks inside, and why did they refuse the mediators 
like the Bo Gritzes, who, whether you agree or disagree with Bo 
Gritz and all those other types of mediators...
 
THOMPSON: Gritz did not make an offer to go down there.
 
HARDER: Well he said, he said to us...
 
THOMPSON: He absolutely did not. We have him on tape saying he 
didn't.
 
HARDER: O.K. But, he told us he did.
 
THOMPSON: Then he's lying.
 
HARDER: Well, O.K. But let's pretend that the local sheriff... 
uh, the local sheriff, apparently, wanted to get involved. And 
they told him to stand back. Is that not true?
 
THOMPSON: No, that's not true.
 
HARDER: Well, we have...
 
THOMPSON: The local sheriff was "in it" up to his eyeballs. We've 
got film footage of the local sheriff down there all the time 
involved in it. In the interior road blocks and so forth, in 
fact, he's one of the people that you can see in the background 
in the footage of the ATF beating the snot out of one of the 
reporters.
 
HARDER: Well, we have a number of stories. And apparently we have 
a different set of stories than what you're telling me about, and 
I'm not arguing with you -- I'm telling you -- that apparently, 
local people wanted to mediate.
 
THOMPSON: A lot of people did, yeah. There was plenty of 
volunteers, theologians, people from all over the country 
volunteered.
 
HARDER: All right. And the government said to these people, "This 
is our show. Stay out." Is that correct?
 
THOMPSON: Well absolutely. You could tell that from everything 
that went on. They determined who was going to be allowed to even 
*report* about it, much less come in and do anything.
 
HARDER: So that, the comment here would be, from a legal 
standpoint, the government made no attempt to mitigate damages. 
There was no attempt to stop the troubles. Is that correct?
 
THOMPSON: Well, [sighs] from a legal perspective, no. Because you 
don't use mitigation of damages in a criminal case.
 
The government *exacerbated* the problem and absolutely didn't 
use any reasonable standard in what they did do.
 
HARDER: They made it worse.
 
THOMPSON: Yeah. They made it worse. And they intentionally made 
it worse. I mean, a "reasonable man standard" would apply here. 
That, What would a reasonable person do? You would try to do 
anything to *lessen* the tension, *lessen* the problem, uh, 
facilitate negotiations. You wouldn't try to exacerbate the 
situation... which is what they did.
 
HARDER: Well, you know, certainly, if they did to the people... 
if they did to me, at my home... If I woke up tomorrow and my 
home was surrounded by these people in black stocking caps, and 
they had guns, and they had searchlights, and blaring noise, and 
what have you -- I mean, I must tell you: I certainly would not 
be inclined to go out the front door and put my hands up. 'Cause 
I would know for sure they would kill me.
 
THOMPSON: Well in the final report from the Department of 
Justice, they admit that when people *did* come out, they "flash- 
banged" them with grenades. They threw grenades at anybody that 
came out. And on March 24th, Bob Ricks [FBI Spokesman] announced 
at the press conference that anybody that came out would be shot.
 
And we weren't told these things. This is a very frustrating part 
of dealing with explaining Waco, 'cause first I have to explain 
to people, "What you heard was not true," and "Here's how I know 
it's not true." We spend a lot of time undoing the damage that 
the government did with its own propaganda. You know, convincing 
people of this false story that they presented, you know, that 
"The Branch Davidians won't negotiate and they won't come out." 
Well the fact is, the government wasn't trying to negotiate. And 
when they *did* try to come out, they did things to 'em. Horrible 
things.
 
HARDER: And we do, we have, or you have I should say, somehow on 
record, Bob Ricks saying he's going to shoot 'em?
 
THOMPSON: He announced that anyone -- this came out across the AP 
[Associated Press] wire services, and it was on the press 
conference -- he said that anyone who came out would be 
considered a threat to the agents and would be shot.
 
HARDER: Well then how would you end this thing peaceably, if...
 
THOMPSON: Exactly.
 
HARDER: ...if you won't let them come out, how do you end it 
peaceably?
 
THOMPSON: They weren't intending to. I don't believe the 
government had any intention of letting those people out 
peaceably. They were also telling the people inside that, 
initially, if they let the children out and then they came out 
themselves, that they would not be charged, they would not be 
arrested, their children wouldn't be put in foster homes. And yet 
the first people that came out were some of the children with two 
elderly ladies, Annette Richards and Catherine Madison. Both of 
those old women were arrested.
 
HARDER: ...and put in chains...
 
THOMPSON: And they were not charged. They were held as 
*witnesses*, and yet they were shackled hand and foot, put in the 
jail, transported back and forth like common criminals, and they 
held a *secret* arraignment of these women. They wouldn't allow 
'em out of custody. That was unbelievable, to me. That was 
another in a series of unbelievable things that occurred in this.
 
HARDER: This is frightening stuff. Linda Thompson and I will be 
right back. Folks, listen carefully.
 
[...commercial break...]
 
CHUCK HARDER: Our guest is Linda Thompson.
 
So now Linda, where we're at here is... By the way, let me just 
mention again to the folks that the name of this tape is "Waco, 
the Big Lie Continues"?
 
LINDA THOMPSON: Uh-hum. [Affirmative] "Waco II" is the simplest 
way...
 
HARDER: Yeah.
 
THOMPSON: ...to call it. Everybody's calling it "Waco II."
 
HARDER: All right. And again, if you want to get a copy call 1- 
800-888-9999. If busy, keep trying. It's $19.95 and shipping and 
handling.
 
Um, let's continue on here. And, and let's now go to... uh, Bob 
Ricks has said, "Anybody who comes out is going to be shot." Uh, 
I don't remember seeing that in the press. Of course, my life has 
been a blur. But, uh, did the press pick that up?
 
THOMPSON: Yeah. It came across the AP [Associated Press] wires. 
But it was not widely disseminated.
 
HARDER: O.K.
 
THOMPSON: You didn't hear it on ABC, CBS, CNN and so forth. And 
of course, we're listening with, you know, "jaded ears" at that 
point. We, we are specifically listening for things like that. So 
we caught it, we kept it, and yes, they said it. They can't get 
out of that.
 
And in the Department of Justice report they *admit* that they 
threw grenades at 'em if they came out. It says it very plainly 
in there. In fact, I think they admit, uh, the part about Bob 
Ricks saying that, in the report... But can't remember that one 
specifically. But I do remember, they admit "flash-bang" grenades 
being thrown at the people.
 
Uh, they admit that they were... basically, they've admitted -- 
in the Department of Justice and ATF reports -- they've admitted 
everything in "Waco I" except for the flame-throwing tank. And 
they lied to try to explain that one. They do not try to claim 
that the tank that you see in "Waco I" with the flames coming out 
of it is not real. They did have an expert from the University of 
Maryland analyze it, and one at Fort Harrison. We've had an FBI 
forensics expert analyze it. *No one* has tried to claim that we 
altered the tape, or that it's not flame {2}. They've tried to 
explain it away by saying they don't know what it is. And they 
said... Janet Reno stood up and said, [mimicking Reno] "Well we 
had CEV-I and CEV-II out there." (Now she's referring to the 
tanks: "Combat Engineer Vehicle," that's what CEV stands for.) 
[mimicking Reno] "We had CEV-I and CEV-II out there. And the 
investigators have inspected those. And they don't have any 
equipment to shoot flames. And there's no charring on them." As 
if that's an explanation.
 
Well on page 49 of the Department of Justice report it says CEV- 
II broke down and the tank crew got another tank that was not 
equipped to inject tear gas. She also does not mention the other, 
almost dozen, tanks that were out there *besides* CEV-I and II.
 
So these are the kinds of things that they do. And the reason 
that they're... when you see these public officials on TV, they 
are telling you truth in what they *say* because they're afraid 
of voice stress analysis. So when Janet Reno stood up and talked 
about "CEV-I and II," that much of it is true. But she's creating 
a false impression in your mind that she's addressing the tank 
that you see in our tape -- and she's not!
 
HARDER: In other words, it is an "error by omission" or a "lie by 
omission."
 
THOMPSON: Yeah. Smoke and mirrors.
 
HARDER: O.K.
 
THOMPSON: They're very good at it.
 
HARDER: All right. Now, what's going on with the trial right now? 
We don't see anything on the national press. Yes, we get wire 
services here. We do have some informants at the trial.
 
But we're gonna take a quick half-hour break here -- you know, 
break at the half-hour for our local stations for 3 minutes -- 
but when we come back, I'd like you to give us an idea of the 
following (and maybe if we just make a little note here): Number 
1, What has come out? What has the government admitted, number 1, 
so far at the trial? O.K.? What has the government admitted. Uh, 
we know already that they've admitted that had David Koresh met 
them at the front door and said, "Hi. Nice day, isn't it? What do 
ya got for me?", that the rest of the team still would have 
busted in. We know that, correct?
 
THOMPSON: That's absolutely right.
 
HARDER: O.K. So let's go over, when we come back, What has the 
government admitted? (Number 1.) And number 2, What's going on 
from your perspective? And what do you think will happen to this 
trial? And then, What's next?
 
Stay with us, everybody. We'll be right back with Linda Thompson.
 
[...commercial break...]
 
CHUCK HARDER: We're back. We're talking to Linda Thompson. She's 
an attorney. She is the producer of what we call "Waco II", 
"Waco, the Big Lie Continues".
 
Uh, now, what has the government admitted, Linda? What have they 
admitted in trial that you have solid evidence of that has not 
been out in the press?
 
LINDA THOMPSON: Well, we need to cover some of the background on 
the trial first to understand what's going on.
 
HARDER: O.K. Sure.
 
THOMPSON: Walter Smith is the judge. And this is going on in 
federal district court, which means it's a federal court as 
distinguished from Randy Weaver's situation.
 
Walter Smith was the judge in Waco. Now Dennis Greene is his 
magistrate. Now magistrates do not have the full power of a 
judge. They're usually picked by a judge; the judge picks his own 
magistrate.
 
Dennis Greene is the man who signed the search warrant 
originally, and has been working hand in hand with Bill 
Johnstone, who is the U.S. attorney there. Between them, they 
have a long record of having some of the highest rates of gun 
prosecutions of anyplace in the country, right in Waco, between 
Dennis Greene and Bill Johnstone.
 
Now Walter Smith, then, is the judge that sealed the search 
warrant originally. He is the man who had secret arraignments of 
the Branch Davidians (which is illegal. That's like the "star 
chamber" back in England.) When these people were brought in and 
arraigned, he held it in secret.
 
Walter Smith, in his first 7 orders about the Branch Davidians, 
back in March last year [i.e. in March 1993], called them 
criminals! Himself, in his order, he referred to these people as 
criminals. Now that is, by itself (as a defense attorney), was 
basis to get rid of Walter Smith as the judge in this case. So 
it's very, very odd that no one got him off this case with 
motions and arguments and so forth.
 
HARDER: Hang on a minute. Could it be that he put that in there 
so that if this thing goes one way or another, somebody can call 
for a mistrial or what have you?
 
THOMPSON: Possibly. But you've got a problem when the defense 
doesn't *challenge* it, it's not the basis for an appeal. Unless 
another attorney comes in and tries to use the fact that the 
attorneys themselves didn't challenge it. But anyway, it would 
[unclear] if somebody would have challenged it and lost, they 
could appeal it. But secondly, what else he did, he is the man... 
most of these Davidians have appointed attorneys... court- 
appointed attorneys that are paid by the government.
 
HARDER: Yeah?
 
THOMPSON: Yeah. And Walter Smith hand picked every one of those 
attorneys. So all of the attorneys have been picked by the judge. 
Then he cut their salaries in half. Now I can tell you: The 
appointed jobs do not pay very well. Very few successful 
attorneys, anymore, take appointed cases -- for no reason other 
than the fact that you *lose* money taking those cases because 
you've got to keep your office open while you're being paid this 
pittance of money to do a very complex case. So, by cutting the 
salaries in half, any of the attorneys that *were* inclined to be 
good and do their job couldn't.
 
Now then he transferred the case to San Antonio. That happens to 
be where the government's special prosecutor is from. And it also 
happens to be where the government's chief witness for the FBI, 
Jeff Jamar, is from. So that makes it very convenient for the 
government, less expensive, less hassle. And it causes a *lot* of 
trouble for the defense attorneys, who have to commute and 
essentially set up an office in San Antonio. Now they're going to 
have to fund their own expenses for all of that at the time that 
they're being paid virtually nothing!
 
Now doing any kind of defense on a case this complex is going to 
be *extremely* expensive because you've gotta pay a lot of 
people. You've gotta take depositions of a lot of witnesses. That 
costs about $400 to $1,000 apiece. There's a lot of time 
involved. You need a lot of assistants to do it. They don't have 
that available to 'em. They can't *do* a good job. Even if they 
want to, they can't.
 
HARDER: Well where's the American Civil Liberties Union in this?
 
THOMPSON: Well... That's another story. We'll get to them in a 
minute...
 
HARDER: All right.
 
THOMPSON: ...get down to San Antonio to do this trial and you've 
got seven... You've got the attorneys that were all picked by 
Walter Smith. Walter Smith is still on the case, even though he's 
transferred it to San Antonio, he is still the judge.
 
We get to trial. *He* picked the jury pool and he hand picked all 
the jurors. And then he kept the jurors anonymous. You can't know 
the identities of each of the jurors. No one can.
 
Then he put a gag order on all of the attorneys and he hand 
picked the press that would be allowed in to cover the story. 
He's only allowed 5 members of the press into the trial to cover 
the story. *We* know that 2 of those 5 are government. Three of 
them we don't know anything about, but we're not *hearing* 
anything so we can presume that they were picked for that reason 
-- you know, that they would not provide good [press] coverage, 
they would not talk this up, and they wouldn't reveal what's 
going on in the trial.
 
So before we even get to trial, what people should understand is 
this: This thing is fixed. It's rigged.
 
Now looking at it you could reasonably think, "Well it's rigged 
so they're sure to get a conviction." But that's not true either. 
Some of the people who are on trial are *not* Branch Davidians. 
They are government plants; they're agents that were already in 
Mount Carmel before the raid. You might remember some of the 
comments that were made afterwards by Ann Richards and Janet 
Reno, uh, that we should have agencies working together so we 
don't have a problem with one agency running up on another 
agency's undercover operation. This is what happened in Waco. You 
had agencies attacking Mount Carmel that didn't know the other 
agencies were already working undercover there.
 
HARDER: Um-hum. [Indicates he understands]
 
THOMPSON: So some of the people that were brought out, for 
instance, the day of the fire, were not Branch Davidians. They 
were, in fact, one agency's undercover operatives. That... Those 
people are on trial anyway because they can't afford to tell you, 
tell the American public, "These are agents." All right? They 
don't want their identity revealed.
 
Now what happens if you have a government agent and you put 'em 
on -- you know, an undercover agent like that -- you put 'em on 
trial. They're charged with a crime. They have the same 
protection as any defendant. They've got the 5th amendment right 
not to testify. They never have to admit they're agents. They 
never have to testify. And they're fine, as long as they're 
acquitted, right?
 
HARDER: Right.
 
THOMPSON: Now what we're seeing in this trial, that I think is 
very, very interesting, is the government is *throwing* the 
trial. For now, the only side of the story that has been 
presented has been the prosecution's case. You will *not* see 
a... Realize: The U.S. attorney has no surprises. There are... He 
does not put a witness on the stand he has not interviewed. He's 
going to know exactly what that witnesses testimony is going to 
be.
 
HARDER: Um-hum. [Indicates he understands]
 
THOMPSON: Now if you have one brain [cell] in your head, you do 
not put a witness on the stand that's gonna hurt your side. 
That's the other side's job. All right? You don't go lining up 
witnesses that get on the stand and tell things that are bad for 
you. And you certainly don't elicit that testimony yourself. And 
yet that's exactly what the government has done. They have put up 
witness after witness, *of their own*, that has said things like, 
"Well, yeah, we did shoot our own agents," "Yeah, well, we were 
gonna make this dynamic entry," "Yeah, we did lose the element of 
surprise."
 
Now. There's 2 reasons this is happening: (1) The government is 
throwing the trial. But (2) the only story that comes out that 
way is exactly the same story that we've got in the ATF final 
report and what we've heard in the media all along. It is damage 
control. Even though they appear to be making all these great 
admissions, they're not admitting anything more than they've 
already admitted. And they're making sure that the story stays 
the same in the process of the trial. And they're throwing the 
trial.
 
They're probably going to get convictions of the real Branch 
Davidians. The people that are acquitted are suspect. But I don't 
believe we're going to see convictions of the government agents 
in this trial. And I think that's the purpose of what's going on 
here and why there has been such extreme control.
 
HARDER: [Pause.... ] Wow!
 
Linda Thompson is a lawyer. She is with us. She's talking to us 
about what she knows about the Waco trial. She has provided... 
She has produced, I should say, a new videotape which is now 
[Feb. 11, 1994] just in the duplication stage, called "Waco, the 
Big Lie Continues," or "Waco II," if you please. It's available 
through us, if you want to call up 1-800-888-9999. We'll be right 
back.
 
[...commercial break...]
 
CHUCK HARDER: We are back. We're talking to Linda Thompson. She 
is an attorney. And she has been studying the Waco matter. She 
has produced a masterful videotape. (I saw the first one. The 
second one, I understand, is just a real, real eye-popper.)
 
Now Linda, you're telling me that the government is throwing the 
trial. What do you mean by "throwing" the trial? What will the 
outcome be?
 
LINDA THOMPSON: The outcome will be... The only damaging 
testimony has been against 2 people, Brad Branch and Livingstone 
Fagan, thus far. There has not been any damaging testimony 
against most of the other Branch Davidians. I think we're going 
to see acquittals of the majority of the Branch Davidians. And 
that is because the government is putting on witnesses that 
*hurt* the government, at least in the eyes of the jury.
 
HARDER: Uh-huh. [Indicates he understands]
 
THOMPSON: Because the government has been able to completely 
control the evidence available to the defense attorneys, for 
instance. There's nobody that's going to challenge, effectively, 
what is being presented. For instance, one glaring example of 
this, at the trial the other day... One of the ATF agents 
testified that they had moved the day of the raid up a day 
because the *Waco Herald-Tribune* was gonna come out with their 
articles on Saturday. And they moved the raid up to Sunday. And 
that they had planned to do the raid, originally, on Monday.
 
That's not true. The [search] warrant was applied for on the 
24th. It expired on the 28th, which was Sunday. And that is the 
day the raid was done, was the 28th. They could not have had any 
other plan to do it on Monday because the warrant would have 
already been expired on Monday.
 
Now this is an example of a little bit of nonsense that they have 
come up with to help bolster their story. You know, that they 
"lost the element of surprise." The claim of losing the element 
of surprise is in itself a lie. But it's being told, not for the 
purpose of admitting that the government is a bunch of bumbling 
boobs, but to reinforce the idea that the Branch Davidians were 
*waiting* for them. When you say you "lost the element of 
surprise," what are you essentially saying -- the Branch 
Davidians had an opportunity to prepare. And that's what they're 
claiming. That is their story: "The Branch Davidians were waiting 
on us. Yes, our guys screwed up. They lost the element of 
surprise." That's the government's official story. And this is 
the kind of evidence that they're putting on, with a series of 
these little "admissions": "Yes, we probably shot our own guys," 
"Yes, we lost the element of surprise," and so forth.
 
And that is what they're doing at trial, is presenting this 
preconceived story, all of which *is*  *a*  *lie*. But they're 
making sure that just that version comes out. There's nobody 
there to effectively challenge it. It's going to go straight down 
the way they've told it in the ATF final report. And at the same 
time, the government is making sure that they release just enough 
bad information against themselves that there will be acquittals. 
And you would not do that... I mean, the prosecution does not put 
on witnesses that *hurt* their case, unless they're throwing the 
trial -- and that's what they're doing.
 
HARDER: All right. Why would they want acquittals?
 
THOMPSON: Because some of these people on trial are government 
agents. They're not Branch Davidians.
 
And they're caught in a crack. They cannot reveal to the American 
public that they've got government agents that are on trial. 
Because those were undercover agents. They were plants. They were 
people that you're not supposed to know are not Branch Davidians.
 
HARDER: So they're in a "catch-22".
 
THOMPSON: Well it's not really a "catch-22". It's really pretty 
clever because they can use these same people to convict the ones 
they need to convict, and yet use their own testimony of agents 
that get up on the stand to give away just enough information to 
*acquit* the ones they want acquitted. For instance, if you've 
got somebody on the stand says, "Well I didn't see this guy with 
a gun," and "He didn't do anything," while you've got another one 
getting on the stand pointing a finger at a specific one, you can 
tell who they're targeting. They're intending to get convictions 
of a few of them and acquittals of others by the direct 
testimony. They're manipulating this trial very effectively.
 
HARDER: I'm surprised that nobody moved to sever any of these 
people. [CN -- By this, "sever", I think is meant to move for a 
separate trial for a particular defendant.]
 
THOMPSON: Well I think they did, actually. There was one attorney 
(that is not appointed) and he did move to sever. And the motion 
was denied. That would be the basis for an appeal.
 
But there's a lot of things that I would have expected to see 
from the defense attorneys that has not occurred. Such as 
*endless* fights over the evidence. For instance, they should 
have been entitled to all... All this stuff is filmed; every bit 
of it was filmed...
 
HARDER: Right.
 
THOMPSON: ...top to bottom, inside-out. They should have been 
entitled to those videos. They haven't been able to get 'em. And 
rather than allow it to proceed to trial without that evidence, 
my personal preference would have been to go on and appeal it 
right then. You can get what's called an "interlocutory appeal," 
*demand* that you get this evidence. Because you're entitled to 
it. By law you are entitled to anything that tends to prove that 
your client is not guilty. We know from one of the pictures that 
*is* available and has been shown at trial -- in fact it's in our 
video... It's a picture of the front door. That is absolutely 
good for the Branch Davidians because it shows that the ATF is 
standing there shooting at the front door. There's no one at any 
of the front windows. This is a dead-on picture. You'll see it in 
"Waco II". It's not in "Waco I". But it's a picture of the front 
door; no one at any of the windows. The front door is cracked 
open; it opens inward. And the ATF has said, "The Branch 
Davidians were at all the windows. They shot out through the 
front door with such force that it bowed the door." You can't bow 
a door that's open. You know, if it opens inward, the force of 
bullets coming from inside would have slammed the door shut...
 
HARDER: Right.
 
THOMPSON: ...before it bowed the door.
 
Well the door's open, there's a lot of bullet holes in it. 
They're all from the outside. There's not a single Branch 
Davidian at any of the windows. And there's only *one* window 
that's even broken -- and that's the window that ATF is shooting 
into.
 
But the most *damning* pieces of evidence is that there's a 
little child out front, as all this is going on, and then we've 
got video footage that shows them taking another child, in a 
little black body bag, to an ambulance. So they killed kids that 
first day.
 
Now we've got proof that the first shots were fired by the 
overhead helicopter; not by the Branch Davidians and not by ATF, 
but by the helicopter that flew over and fired into the roof 
where the women and children were. And they killed kids in there 
too!
 
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    [CN Editor -- Now seems like a good time to insert the 
    following section from the Report of the Committee for 
    Waco Justice. Excerpts only.]
 
ALLEGATIONS AGENTS SHOT INDISCRIMINATELY AND FROM HELICOPTERS
(Section 13, BATF-Treasury section of report)
 
The Treasury report states that BATF agents "returned fire when 
possible, but conserved their ammunition. They also fired only 
when they saw an individual engage in a threatening action, such 
as pointing a weapon." (TDR:101)  However, Branch Davidians claim 
BATF agents fired indiscriminately, including through walls, and 
that helicopters sprayed the building with bullets. News video 
tapes clearly show agents exercising little control over their 
firing as they fire over vehicles with little or no view of what 
they were shooting at. Both BATF Director Higgins at an April 2nd 
Congressional hearing and Treasury Secretary Bentsen during the 
September 1993 Treasury Department press conference denied 
allegations that agents fired indiscriminately. {3}.
 
(a) Bullet Evidence in Doors, Walls and Roof
Branch Davidians, and attorneys Dick DeGuerin and Jack Zimmerman 
who visited Mount Carmel during the siege, insist that there was 
extensive evidence that BATF agents shot indiscriminately through 
Mount Carmel Center's front door, walls and roof. They were very 
concerned with preserving this evidence of an out-of-control 
assault.
 
The *New York Times* reported, "both lawyers clearly believed 
that helicopters flying over the compound during the raid had 
fired into upper floors of the main building from above." {4}. 
Except for half the front door, all this evidence was destroyed 
by the April 19 tank rammings, the fire, and the bulldozing of 
still burning walls into the rubble.
 
(b) Wayne Martin Allegations on 911 Tape
Wayne Martin and an unidentified Branch Davidian complain 
frantically to Lieutenant Lynch 15 minutes after the start of the 
raid about the continuing gun fire from BATF agents, even as they 
themselves withhold fire. Nearly continuous gunfire can be heard 
in the background of the tape.
 
    MARTIN: Another chopper with more people; more guns 
    going off. They're firing. That's them, not us.
    UNIDENTIFIED DAVIDIAN: There's a chopper with more of 
    them.
    LYNCH: What!?
    DAVIDIAN: Another chopper with more people and more guns 
    going off. Here they come!
 
(d) Catherine Matteson Allegation
"I seen (sic) those trailers drive up. I was downstairs. I 
thought it strange, but I figured they were delivering firewood 
or something. I picked up the Sunday paper and went upstairs to 
my room, and started reading. When next, bullets came through the 
roof. I could hear the helicopters overhead, I got under my bed." 
{5}.
 
(e) Children's Pictures of Bullets Through Roof
A story about psychologist Bruce D. Perry's interviews with 
Branch Davidian children who left Mount Carmel after the raid 
mentions, "Still another child created a picture of a house 
beneath a rainbow. When Perry asked, 'Is there anything else?' 
the child calmly added bullet holes in the roof. That was an 
allusion to the Feb. 28 shootout with federal agents that marked 
the beginning of a 51-day standoff and left the compound near 
Waco scarred with bullet holes." {6}. A May 19, 1993 *Newsweek* 
story shows this picture with the caption, "A girl drew her 
home's dotted roof. 'Bullets,' she said."
 
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HARDER: We're talking about helicopter gunships firing against 
American citizens. [CN Editor -- Yes, *and* indiscriminately 
*and* at children.]
 
THOMPSON: Yeah, absolutely. And the thing is, in the ATF report, 
they do very deceitful things. They say that... [music signalling a 
break begins to be audible]... oh, sorry.
 
HARDER: All right. Let's do a short break here. This almost 
sounds like George Orwell stuff. We'll be right back.
 
[...commercial break...]
 
CHUCK HARDER: Linda Thompson is with us. And we're talking about 
the Waco trial. So what we've got right now is the government not 
looking so good.
 
Go ahead, where we left off.
 
LINDA THOMPSON: Well we were with them throwing the trial, I 
think.
 
HARDER: Yep.
 
THOMPSON: What we have got, and what should have been available 
to the defense, is a whole lot of things that are absolute proof 
that when the government says that they "lost the element of 
surprise," *that* is a lie within a lie. Because they're not... 
They give you the impression that they're admitting something by 
saying that and admitting their guys are boobs. But what they're 
doing is they're saying, "Well, yeah, we're incompetent, we're 
stupid, we screwed up." There's a big difference between making 
an honest mistake and intentional murder. And that's what they're 
doing. They're getting out of intentional murder by appearing to 
admit to stupidity.
 
But what they did *was* intentional murder. There's not anything 
in their plan that had any provision for somebody to go up to 
that front door and knock on the front door. There's no provision 
in the battle plan, originally, at all. None. And they pretty 
much have admitted *that* in court, too.
 
But they... And they also admitted that David Koresh *did* come 
to the front door, he *did* open the door, he *did* say, "What's 
goin' on?" -- and they began firing at him! Now they've 
*admitted* these things.
 
HARDER: Now, has it been admitted in court that the helicopter 
gunships fired first?
 
THOMPSON: No. That has not and I doubt it will be, because, you 
see, this is what they're covering up.
 
HARDER: All right. How can that be proven?
 
THOMPSON: That can be proven by several things. First of all, in 
the ATF final report, the investigators (of that final report) do 
several deceitful things. One is that they criticize the ATF for 
not using customs helicopters that would have had firepower. Now 
that creates the impression that ATF had helicopters that 
*didn't* have firepower, right? And that's the purpose of the 
"critique," is to give you the impression they did not have 
firepower in those helicopters. Fact is, they did. We have a 
picture of one of the helicopters that has a .308 machine gun 
mounted in it. And that is going to be... that *is* in "Waco II." 
It's a close-up of the helicopter with the .308 machine gun in 
it.
 
Twelve of the rounds that were recovered from the upstairs room, 
where two of the agents were killed, were .308 rounds, just like 
the caliber of that weapon in the helicopter.
 
In the footage that we have -- and some of that is in "Waco I" -- 
when you see edits in the film, *we* didn't make those edits. 
They were made before they were released to the public. We found 
footage by getting it through sources such as England, where they 
got 'em before the government had time to do as much editing as 
they did later. You can hear the original machine gun fire sound. 
And that footage is in "Waco II," too. When those guys are 
running up the ladder, there's a *lot* of machine gun fire. When 
they're on the roof, you can hear the helicopter very close by -- 
then there's that glitch. What they edited out was the sound of 
the machine gun in the helicopter firing down into the roof.
 
Dick DeGuerin, the attorney that they let go in and out, said he 
*saw* the roof. It looked like swiss cheese.
 
Of the children that were allowed out, one of the kids drew a 
picture of a house, her house, and dotted it with bullet holes in 
the roof and explained to the psychiatrist that this was bullet 
holes in the roof. We've got footage of that.
 
Um, and the lady, Annetta Richards, that was in there with the 
children and came out with the children, was one of the people 
that said that helicopters fired in on 'em, into the roof.
 
On the 911 tapes, when the Branch Davidians called the police... 
Now that's another little bit of proof, all by itself. The fact 
that they were not firing for 20 minutes into that tape. They 
called the police and said, "There's a bunch of guys out here 
climbing in our windows and they're shooting at us!" They called 
the police. And in that tape, we've got all of the 911 tapes now 
and we've had the first seven transcribed...
 
HARDER: All right, hang on... Linda Thompson... You'll stay 
another hour?
 
THOMPSON: Sure.
 
HARDER: O.K. Ladies and gentlemen, we're gonna continue this 
conversation.
 
Linda Thompson is an attorney. [Harder gives info on how to get 
"Waco II."]
 
Thanks everybody. All the best. May God bless.
 
---------------------------<< Notes >>---------------------------
{1} It's not just a "week-long" series of anti-gun propaganda. 
The media has been giving us a *barrage* of anti-gun propaganda. 
For instance, constant stories about persons in various cities 
turning in their guns in exchange for sports tickets, cash, etc. 
Over and over, hoping perhaps to create a "bandwagon effect," we 
are seeing "responsible" citizens eagerly lined up at various 
gun reclamation centers.
   One hopeful sign in this is, the very fact that we are being 
deluged with propaganda of this type is a sign of a certain 
desperation on the part of the Establishment. It is as if they 
are in a hurry to get as many guns turned in as possible 
before... before... what? Before economic collapse? Before too 
many people wake up? -- CfD Editor.
 
{2} CfD Editor -- Linda Thompson's video showing a flame-throwing 
tank at the Branch Davidian compound has never been formally 
refuted -- not to my satisfaction. Yes, there has been 
scuttlebutt about some editing that was supposedly done wherein 
the flame-throwing tank footage is cut at a key juncture. However 
this scuttlebutt is not a satisfactory rebuttal in my opinion. It 
may be that the scuttlebutt was actually published somewhere -- 
somewhere that a CfD Editor could get a hold of same and read it.
 
Anyhoo... Question: *If* the flame-throwing tank footage has been 
shown to be something other than it appears to be, then why 
hasn't the establishment press jumped all over this? What a story 
that would make! Bring in Tom Brokaw to do a hatchet job on the 
NBC Nightly News. Headline: Linda Thompson Under Investigation 
for False Waco Claims. The story: "There have been many wild 
claims made by 'conservatives' and 'the religious right' about 
the Waco tragedy. None has been wilder than one made by Linda 
Thompson, an attorney with a group calling itself the 'American 
Justice Federation.' (Blah, blah, blah). But it turns out that 
this is *not* what it seems! It turns out that Linda Thompson 
*purposely* cut the tape at a key juncture! Now, the Department 
of Justice is looking into the possibility of bringing an 
indictment against Thompson for mail fraud. etc. etc." *If* it 
has been refuted, why isn't this story being jumped on?
 
Furthermore: I would want to hear what Linda Thompson had to say 
before I made any final judgement. Yes, Linda Thompson made a bad 
call on the "March on Washington" idea. However, it is 
distressing to see how quickly and unquestioningly she has been 
abandoned by her "supporters," for no other reason than (gasp!) 
she is not infallible.
 
{3} "Sect's Lawyers Dispute Gunfight Details," *New York Times*, 
April 5, 1993, A10 and transcript of September 30, 1993 Treasury 
Department press conference.
 
{4} *New York Times*, April 5, 1993, A10.
 
{5} Interview with Catherine Matteson, August 30, 1993, on file 
at Gun Owners of America.
 
{6} Sue Anne Pressley, May 5, 1993, A17. [*New York Times*(??)]
 
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*The Massacre of the Branch Davidians*. Report of the Committee 
for Waco Justice. Committee for Waco Justice, PO Box 33037, 
Washington, DC  20033. Phone: 202/986-1847 & 202/797-9877



 Brian Francis Redman    bigxc@prairienet.org    "The Big C"
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"Justice" = "Just us" = "History is written by the assassins."
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