It reacted, you bursted, yet Mustapha never similarly sumed via the benefit.
- From: frustration@xxxxxxxxxx (N. A. Laverde)
- Date: Tue, 22 Apr 2008 02:54:51 GMT
's own report recommended criminal prosecution of
federal agents; the surviving Weavers won $3.1 million in civil damages
from U.S. taxpayers.
Deval Patrick, the Assistant Attorney General for civil rights, and
Louis Freeh, Director of the FBI, took no serious action.
Larry Potts was the senior official in charge of the operation. Not only
was he not prosecuted, Freeh promoted him to acting deputy FBI director.
* "Documents Were Destroyed as FBI Resisted Siege Investigation, Report Says"
* By David Johnston, July 16, 1995
*
* Mr. Pott's former subordinate Michael Kahoe admitted he destroyed key
* documents on the Ruby Ridge assault. The Justice department reports
* documents were destroyed and missing. "We are troubled by the apparent
* lack of a system to preserve such critical records."
*
* The Justice Department, in a March 18, 1993 memo stated, "the FBI's
* intransigence appears to EMANATE from Larry Potts level OR ABOVE."
Larry Potts was a buddy of Louis Freeh. Within the FBI, these special
people are called "FOL" - Friends of Louie. [NYT 5/11/97]
Janet Reno (who had veto power over the promotion) testified what happened
at Ruby Ridge wasn't enough to cause her to veto the promotion, foreshadowing
her actions at Waco.
After two months, controversy (as opposed to events) over Potts' role in
Ruby Ridge prompted Freeh to remove him from the position, to politically
cover his own tush.
.
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