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Title: Why Ruby Ridge Still Matters
Source: CounterPunch
URL Source: https://www.counterpunch.org/2018/0 ... /why-ruby-ridge-still-matters/
Published: Jan 19, 2018
Author: James Bovard
Post Date: 2018-01-20 15:28:16 by X-15
Keywords: Ruby Ridge, Bush, FBI, Horiuchi
Views: 507
Comments: 10

After violence in Charlottesville last August, a Washington Post article asserted that alienated right-wingers had “sparked the deadly standoff in Ruby Ridge, Idaho” in 1992. Ruby Ridge has recently been invoked by many people to show the need for federal crackdowns on dangerous extremists. Unfortunately, the mainstream media has largely forgotten – or expunged – the federal misconduct and deception that permeated that showdown. But it is difficult to comprehend the fear that many Americans have of the government without reconsidering Ruby Ridge.

Randy Weaver and his family lived in an isolated cabin in the mountains of northern Idaho. Weaver was a white separatist who believed races should live apart; he had no record of violence against other races — or anyone else. An undercover federal agent targeted him and entrapped him into selling a sawed-off shotgun. The feds sought to pressure Weaver, who often indulged in anti-government bluster, to become an informant against the Aryan Nation, but he refused.

After Weaver was sent the wrong court date and (understandably) failed to show up, the feds used any and all means to take him down. Idaho lawyer David Nevin noted that U.S. “marshals called in military aerial reconnaissance and had photos studied by the Defense Mapping Agency. They prowled the woods around Weaver’s cabin with night-vision equipment. They had psychological profiles performed and installed $130,000 worth of long-range solar-powered spy cameras. They intercepted the Weavers’ mail. They even knew the menstrual cycle of Weaver’s teenage daughter, and planned an arrest scenario around it.”

On August 21, 1992, six U.S. Marshals outfitted in full camouflage and carrying machine guns trespassed onto the Weavers’ property. Three marshals circled close to the Weaver cabin and threw rocks to provoke the Weavers’ dogs. As Weaver’s 14-year old son, Sammy, and Kevin Harris, a 25-year old family friend living in the cabin, ran towards the barking, a marshal shot and killed a dog. Sammy Weaver fired in the direction those shots came from. As he was leaving the scene, a marshal shot him in the back and killed him. Harris responded by fatally shooting a federal marshal who had fired seven shots in the melee. (The U.S. Marshals Service later gave its highest valor awards to the marshals who carried out the ambush.)

The FBI decided that Weaver was such a bad person that the Constitution no longer applied. Snipers from the FBI Hostage Rescue Team were sent in the next day and ordered to shoot to kill any adult male outside the Weaver cabin. The rules of engagement epitomized federal overreach against citizens whom the government despised. A 1997 federal appeals court decision derided the rules as “a gross deviation from constitutional principles and a wholly unwarranted return to a lawless and arbitrary wild-west school of law enforcement.” A 2001 federal appeals court ruling noted that “a group of FBI agents formulated rules of engagement that permitted their colleagues to hide in the bushes and gun down men who posed no immediate threat. Such wartime rules are patently unconstitutional for a police action.”

On August 22, 1992, FBI sniper Lon Horiuchi shot Randy Weaver in the back after he stepped out of his cabin. As he struggled to return to his home, Horiuchi shot and killed Vicki Weaver, who was standing in the cabin door holding their 10-month old baby. A confidential 1994 Justice Department task force report was appalled that people were gunned down before receiving any warning: “The absence of a [surrender demand] subjected the Government to charges that it was setting Weaver up for attack.”

Weaver and Harris, who never fired any shots at FBI agents, surrendered after an 11-day siege. At their 1993 trial, federal prosecutors asserted that Weaver long conspired to have an armed confrontation with the government. The feds made the bizarre claim that his moving from Iowa to a spot near the Canadian border in 1985 was part of that plot. U.S. Marshal Dave Hunt, in later congressional testimony, repeatedly stressed that Weaver had criticized the federal government as a “lawless government.” Did federal agents feel compelled to silence any citizen who publicly proclaimed that the government is lawless?

An Idaho jury found Weaver not guilty of almost all charges and ruled that Harris’s shooting of the U.S. Marshal was self-defense. Federal Judge Edward Lodge released a lengthy list detailing the Justice Department’s and FBI’s misconduct and fabrication of evidence in the case.

In January 1995, FBI chief Louis Freeh announced that the FBI had completed its self-investigation, which effectively confirmed that the bureau was still immaculate. Writing in the Wall Street Journal and Washington Times, I bashed that ruling and the continuing cover-up. Freeh responded by denouncing my “misleading or patently false conclusions” and “inflammatory and unfounded allegations.”

In the summer of 1995, the FBI and Justice Department’s elaborate cover-up unraveled. (I acquired a copy of a damning 542-page confidential Justice Department report on Ruby Ridge and highlighted its findings in the Wall Street Journal.) A top FBI official was sent to prison for destroying key evidence. The feds in 1995 paid the Weaver family $3 million to settle their wrongful-death lawsuit.

When Boundary County, Idaho, sought in 1998 to prosecute the FBI sniper who killed Vicki Weaver, the Clinton administration torpedoed their lawsuit by invoking the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution (which blocks local and state governments from challenging federal power). Seth Waxman, the Solicitor General of the United States, absolved the FBI agent because “Federal law-enforcement officials are privileged to do what would otherwise be unlawful if done by a private citizen.” Federal judge Alex Kozinski was dumbfounded by Waxman’s claim, asking, “`If the Constitution does not provide limitations for federal agents’ actions, then what does?” Waxman did not have a good answer but, despite Kozinski’s eloquent dissent, the federal appeals court rode to the rescue of the FBI killer.

Most of the media coverage nowadays forgets that in the 1990s, Ruby Ridge was not simply a right-wing cause: the American Civil Liberties Union joined the National Rifle Association in condemning federal misconduct. CounterPunch’s Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair also slammed federal abuses at Ruby Ridge.

Fear of another round of Ruby Ridge-style executions haunts many anti-government protestors, especially out West. In the 2014 Nevada showdown between federal agencies and ranchers, the Bundy family faced federal conspiracy charges (among other charges) because they summoned militia to defend them after claiming FBI snipers had surrounded their ranch. The FBI spent three years denying that their snipers were on the scene around the Bundy property, and Justice Department lawyers perennially scoffed at this claim. Late last year, the feds were forced to admit that snipers were there before the confrontation spun almost out of control. Federal judge Gloria Navarro denounced prosecutors’ “flagrant misconduct” and dismissed all charges. After the case was thrown out of court, Ammon Bundy reviled the feds: “They basically came to kill our family, they surrounded us with snipers. And then they wanted to lie about it all like none of it happened. And they were caught.” The mission of the snipers around the ranch was unclear – or unproven – but it is understandable that their targets did not assume they had benign intent.

The specter of Ruby Ridge also drove the prosecution’s tactics in the Bundy case. A Justice Department brief last month revealed that prosecutors dreaded jury nullification – “not guilty” verdicts due to government abuses. That spurred prosecutors to suppress or wrongfully withhold thousands of pages of evidence that profoundly undermined the federal case. “They feared jury nullification, they got judge nullification,” as one online commenter quipped.

Political denunciations of extremism are no substitute for compelling federal agencies to obey the law and the Constitution. As long as many Americans believe that FBI snipers have a license to kill, they will assume the worst when federal agents are deployed. And as long as the Justice Department prattles about the privileges of federal agents to act unlawfully, the government deserves all the cynicism it reaps.


Poster Comment:

Has anybody seen Lon Horiuchi?? That bastard has a death sentence, with no expiration date, hanging over his head.

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#1. To: X-15 (#0)

The U.S. Federal Government terrorist, otherwise known as LON HORIUCHI was hired by Gun Company (H-S Precision) as spokesperson in November, 2008. H-S Precision sells hunting and tactical rifles. Here is a scan from the back cover of their Catalog. Note who did the write-up (circled in yellow):

Source


Vicki Weaver about 60 minutes before she was assassinated by FBI murderer LON HORIUCHI

Excerpts from the Testimony of Lon Horiuchi, FBI Terrorist:

Cross-examination by Gerry Spence:

Spence: “This is the gun you shot Mrs. Weaver with and Mr. Weaver with and Mr. Harris with’ Gerry Spence asked, “isn’t it?”

Horiuchi: “Yes, sir, it is.”

Spence: ....“You intended to kill both [Kevin and Randy], didn’t you?”

Horiuchi: “Sir, if they came out all at one time, we were intending to take them all out at one time, versus waiting for one individual to come out and take him piecemeal. Our normal procedures are whenever you have more than one subject, you try to take them out one at a time.”

Spence: “You testified yesterday the reason you didn’t shoot them [at first is because you hadn’t expected them to come into sight, that they surprised you?”

Horiuchi: “Yes, sir.”

Spence: “I take it that had you known they were going to be in that position, had you been ready, you would have shot at that point.”

Horiuchi: “Probably not, sir.”

Spence: “Well, I’m confused. You tell me the reason you didn’t shoot is because they surprised you.”

Lindquist: "Objection."

Spence: “You saw somebody you identified as Kevin Harris?”

Horiuchi: “Yes, sir.”

Spence: “You see him in the courtroom?”

Horiuchi: “Yes, sir, I do.”

Spence: “That’s the man you were going to kill, isn’t it?”

Horiuchi: “Yes, sir.”

“Spence: You wanted to kill him, didn’t you?”

Horiuchi: “Yes, sir.”

[Spence asked about the second shot:] ... “Just before you shot, you knew the door was open, didn’t you?”

Horiuchi:“At that time, yes sir.”

Spence: “Didn’t you know that there was a possibility of someone being behind the door?”

Horiuchi: “There may have been, yes, sir.”

Spence: “You shot twice and both times you made mistakes; is that correct?”

Spence: ....“You heard a woman screaming after your last shot?”

Horiuchi: “Yes, sir, I did.”

Spence: “That screaming went on for thirty seconds?”

Horiuchi: “About thirty seconds, yes, sir.”

Spence: “I want us to just take thirty seconds, now pretend in our mind’s eye that we can hear the screaming—” [Spence says nothing and looks at the wall clock as it ticks off 30 seconds.]les—shooting to protect someone else.

Cross-examination by David Nevin:

Nevin: .....“But you were waiting to kill them irrespective of a threat, weren’t you?”

Horiuchi: “Based on the rules, sir, we could.”

Nevin: “Mr. Horiuchi, I’m going to put my arm right next to the door. [Nevin stands behind the cabin door with its curtains drawn.] Would you do me a favor? Would you say ‘bang’?”

Horiuchi: “Bang.”

Nevin: “Did I flinch?”

Horiuchi: “I can’t tell, sir.”

Nevin: “You can’t see me, can you?”

Horiuchi: “No, sir’

Cross-examination by Gerrry Spence [after discovery of Horiuchi's sketch]:

Spence: “Let’s assume... the curtain at the bottom of the window was open approximately seven or eight inches. You could have seen the movement of those two heads across there, couldn’t you?”

Horiuchi: “If the curtain was open, yes, sir.”

Spence: “You could have seen Vicki Weaver standing there, couldn’t you?”

Horiuchi: “Yes, sir, if the curtain was open.”

Press 1 for English, Press 2 for English, Press 3 for deportation

Uncle Bill  posted on  2018-01-20   19:38:50 ET  (3 images) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: X-15 (#0)

Press 1 for English, Press 2 for English, Press 3 for deportation

Uncle Bill  posted on  2018-01-20   19:49:31 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Uncle Bill (#1)

H-S Precision continues to take heat for their association with Lon Horiuchi to this very day. Fuck them, they've earned all the vitriol aimed at them.

“With the exception of Whites, the rule among the peoples of the world, whether residing in their homelands or settled in Western democracies, is ethnocentrism and moral particularism: they stick together and good means what is good for their ethnic group."
-Alex Kurtagic

X-15  posted on  2018-01-20   19:59:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: X-15 (#0)

Has anybody seen Lon Horiuchi??

"Vera"
Does anybody here remember Vera Lynn?
Remember how she said that we would meet again
Some sunny day?

Vera! Vera!
What has become of you?
Does anybody else in here feel the way I do?

“I am not one of those weak-spirited, sappy Americans who want to be liked by all the people around them. I don’t care if people hate my guts; I assume most of them do. The important question is whether they are in a position to do anything about it. My affections, being concentrated over a few people, are not spread all over Hell in a vile attempt to placate sulky, worthless shits.” - William S Burroughs

Dakmar  posted on  2018-01-20   20:06:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: X-15 (#0)

Fed's misconduct in Cliven Bundy case stems from Ruby Ridge
"Federal judge Gloria Navarro slammed the FBI and Justice Department on Monday, Jan. 8, for “outrageous” abuses and “flagrant misconduct” in the prosecution of Cliven Bundy and sons, the Nevada ranchers who spurred a high-profile standoff with the FBI and Bureau of Land Management in 2014. Navarro condemned the "grossly shocking” withholding of evidence from defense counsel in a case that could have landed the Bundys in prison for the rest of their lives. Navarro, who had declared a mistrial last month, dismissed all charges against the Bundys. Navarro was especially riled because the FBI spent three years covering up or lying about the role of their snipers in the 2014 standoff."


The Latest, Greatest Waco Whitewash


Press 1 for English, Press 2 for English, Press 3 for deportation

Uncle Bill  posted on  2018-01-20   20:43:56 ET  (3 images) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Dakmar (#4)

We'll Meet Again - Vera Lynn

Press 1 for English, Press 2 for English, Press 3 for deportation

Uncle Bill  posted on  2018-01-20   20:49:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Uncle Bill (#2)

Thanks for those damning pics.

“The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable.” ~ H. L. Mencken

Lod  posted on  2018-01-20   21:03:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Lod (#7)

You're welcome. 8-)

Summary of Preliminary Findings

Press 1 for English, Press 2 for English, Press 3 for deportation

Uncle Bill  posted on  2018-01-20   21:48:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: X-15 (#0)

I was at a fire arms training when a cop told us the the murder of Vickie was a clean kill. 20 minutes later I was told to leave the class, I got a refund. The frelling truth hurts.

Darkwing  posted on  2018-01-21   9:02:25 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Darkwing (#9)

I was at a fire arms training when a cop told us the the murder of Vickie was a clean kill. 20 minutes later I was told to leave the class,

What did you tell the cop after he said that about Vickie Weaver? ;)

"When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke

BTP Holdings  posted on  2018-01-21   12:03:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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