Home Front: WoT |
The Slow Rot at Supermax |
2006-05-08 |
![]() ALEXANDRIA, Va. Halfway through the trial, prison expert James E. Aiken looked straight at jurors and told them what Zacarias Moussaoui could expect if they sent him away for the rest of his life. "I have seen them rot," he said. "They rot." Aiken was describing what happens to the nation's highest-risk prisoners after they settle in at the federal government's maximum-security prison in Florence, Colo., known as Supermax. Moussaoui was formally sentenced Thursday to life in prison after a federal jury rejected a death sentence for the admitted Sept. 11 conspirator. Officials at the Federal Bureau of Prisons said that Moussaoui was destined for the facility high in the Colorado Rockies. Already there is a veritable "bombers' row" Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, mastermind of the 1993 World Trade Center blast; Unabomber Theodore Kaczynski; Terry L. Nichols, an accomplice in the Oklahoma City bombing; Richard Reid, the so-called shoe bomber who Moussaoui testified was to join him in another Al Qaeda hijacking; and Eric Rudolph, who bombed abortion clinics and the Atlanta Olympics. All, like Moussaoui, are serving life without parole spending their days in prison wings that are partly underground. They exist alone in soundproof cells as small as 7 feet by 12 feet, with a concrete-poured desk, bed and stool, a small shower and sink, and a TV that offers religious and anger-management programs. They are locked down 23 hours a day. Larry Homenick, a former U.S. marshal who has taken prisoners to Supermax, said that there was a small triangular recreation area, known as "the dog run," where solitary Supermax prisoners could occasionally get a glimpse of sky. He said it was chilling to walk down the cellblocks and glance through the plexiglass "sally port" chambers into the cells and see the faces inside. Life there is harsh. Food is delivered through a slit in the cell door. Prisoners don't leave their cells to see a lawyer, a doctor or a prison official; those visitors must go to the cell. But prisoners can earn extra privileges, like a wider variety of television offerings, more exercise time and visitation rights, based on their behavior. There are 1,400 remote-controlled steel doors. Motion detectors and hidden cameras monitor every move. The prison walls and razor-wired grounds are patrolled by laser beams and dogs. The facility is filling up. Four hundred inmates are there now. There is room for 90 more. Looking to restore order after a rash of prison violence at the federal maximum-security lockup in Marion, Ill. the facility that replaced the notorious Alcatraz prison in San Francisco Bay officials in 1983 put the prisoners on indefinite lockdown. The federal Supermax prison in Colorado was opened in November 1994. Nobody has escaped. "We just needed a more secure facility," said Tracy Billingsley, a spokeswoman for the Federal Bureau of Prisons. "We needed to bring together the most dangerous, that required the most intense supervision, to one location." In his trial testimony, Aiken said the whole point of Supermax was not just punishment, but "incapacitation." There is no pretense that the prison is preparing the inmate for a return to society. Like the cellmate of the count of Monte Cristo who died an old, tired convict, Aiken said, "Moussaoui will deteriorate." The inmate "is constantly monitored 24 hours a day, seven days a week," he said. "He will never get lost in a crowd because he would never be in a crowd." Christopher Boyce, a convicted spy who was incarcerated at Supermax, left the prison about 100 miles south of Denver with no regret. "You're slowly hung," he once told The Times. "You're ground down. You can barely keep your sanity." Bernard Kleinman, a New York lawyer who represented Yousef, called it "extraordinarily draconian punishment." Moussaoui might be a household name today, "but 20 years from now, people will forget him," Kleinman said. "He will sit there all alone, and all forgotten." Ron Kuby, another New York defense lawyer, has handled several East Coast "revolutionaries" who went on a killing spree, and a radical fundamentalist who killed a rabbi in 1990. All were brought to Supermax. He thought Aiken's description that prisoners rot inside its walls was too kind."It's beyond rotting," he said. "Rotting at least implies a slow, gradual disintegration." He said there were a lot of prisons where inmates rot, where the staff "plants you in front of your TV in your cell and you just grow there like a mushroom.But Supermax is worse," he said. "It's not just the hothouse for the mushrooms. It's designed in the end to break you down." |
Link |
Home Front: WoT |
Nichols sez 3rd man was in on OKC, possibly other conspirators |
2005-05-04 |
After a decade of silence, Terry L. Nichols, who was convicted in the Oklahoma City bombings, has accused a third man of being an accomplice who provided some of the explosives used to kill 168 people at the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building 10 years ago. Nichols, in a letter written from his cell at the U.S. government's Supermax prison in Colorado, said Arkansas gun collector Roger Moore donated so-called binary explosives, made up of two components, to bomber Timothy J. McVeigh that were used in Oklahoma City, as well as additional bomb components that recently were found in Nichols' former home in Kansas. The claim that a third man in addition to McVeigh and Nichols was involved in the plot comes as a California congressman has begun pressing for answers to lingering questions about what, until Sept. 11, 2001, had been the worst terrorist attack in the United States. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach), chairman of the investigative arm of the House Committee on International Relations, has been collecting new evidence in the bombing and said he would announce soon whether formal hearings would be opened into the April 19, 1995, tragedy. He believes Nichols' knowledge about other potential conspirators is central to his investigation, especially since the components found in March in a crawl space below Nichols' former home remained undetected for nearly a decade. The congressman said it was important to determine whether others were involved beyond Nichols and McVeigh, two Army pals who became antigovernment zealots. "That this mass murder of Americans was accomplished by two disgruntled veterans acting alone seems to be the conclusion reached by those in authority," Rohrabacher said recently on the House floor, referring to the FBI's investigation of the bombing. "However," Rohrabacher said, "there are some unsettling loose ends and unanswered questions." Nichols has been convicted twice in federal and Oklahoma state courts and is serving multiple life sentences without the possibility of parole. For 10 years, he has kept his silence. His recent revelations are considered particularly significant because they came in letters he sent to a woman named Kathy Sanders, who lost two grandchildren in the bombing. Having turned 50, Nichols said he wanted to begin speaking out about the bombing because the 10-year anniversary last month honoring the victims had passed and he "felt the record should be set straight." Repeated attempts to find Moore, an itinerant gun dealer who has lived in Arkansas and Florida, for comment on Nichols' allegations were unsuccessful Tuesday. The FBI, in the early stages of its investigation, took a hard look at Moore because of his antigovernment views and his close relationship with McVeigh. McVeigh often stayed at Moore's home in Royal, Ark., and the two had exchanged letters sharing their views about the government. In past interviews, Moore has steadfastly denied any involvement in the bombing. He maintained that in the period before the explosion, he was robbed at gunpoint by a masked man who stole dozens of firearms and other weapons worth about $60,000 from his home in Royal. The FBI and government prosecutors later proved that McVeigh sold the firearms to raise money to purchase bomb ingredients, and prosecutors long asserted that it was Nichols who had robbed Moore. In past interviews with The Times, Moore said he took a lie-detector test that convinced the FBI he was not involved in the bombing. "Everything they asked was 100% right," said Moore, who was 60 at the time of the bombing. "They told me that." Nichols' letter to Sanders was dated April 18, the day before the 10-year anniversary. In it he said the government knew that others were involved but would not prosecute them, and he wanted to work with Rohrabacher and Congress "to help expose the gov't coverup in my case and thus reveal the truth in the OKC bombing." He said ongoing FBI tests of the components found at his house in Herington, Kan., would support his allegation that the material came from Moore and his friend, Karen Anderson. "That case of nitromethane came directly from Roger Moore's Royal, Arkansas, home, and his prints should be found on that box and/or tubes, and Karen Anderson's prints may be there as well," Nichols wrote. Anderson also could not be found Tuesday. "Moore provided McVeigh with the binary explosives known as KINE-STIK (aka-KINE-PAK) which consist of 2 components ground ammonium nitrate and nitromethane and is approx. the size of a stick of dynamite." Nichols added in the letter: "Moore testified in open court that he did not know what KINE-STIK nor KINE-PAK was. He was clearly lying! "Kinestik that McVeigh got from Moore was used in the OKC bombing! ⊠The Fed Gov't knows of Roger Moore's corrupt activities and they are protecting him and covering up his involvement with McVeigh at the OKC bombing!" The two components of the binary explosives ground ammonium nitrate and nitromethane are chemicals that explode when combined and ignited. An FBI spokesman in Kansas City, Mo., Jeff Lanza, said Tuesday that 300 blasting caps found in the Nichols home had been positively traced to a nearby Kansas quarry from where agents believed Nichols and McVeigh stole some of the bomb components. Lanza said other material, which he declined to identify, found at the home was being examined for fingerprints and other evidence at the FBI crime laboratory in Quantico, Va. "I'm not going to deny that they were there," Lanza said of the Kinestik and Kinepak described by Nichols. "But we just haven't made any conclusive determination" about where those explosives came from. Despite her personal loss in the Oklahoma City bombing, Sanders has befriended Nichols over the years, while conducting her own investigation into the bombing. She said the letter he wrote her showed that he was eager to talk now that his trials were over, the anniversary had passed and Congress was considering hearings on Capitol Hill. "He was a quiet, introverted little fellow before the Oklahoma City bombing," she said. "He's been sitting in his cell now for 10 years alone. He's very timid; he's not good in social circles. "But he is starting to want to tell everything." McVeigh was considered the bombing mastermind. Nichols helped him assemble the bomb in Kansas but stayed home while McVeigh drove the rental truck to Oklahoma City. McVeigh was executed in June 2001, and any secrets he might have had died with him. That makes Nichols all the more interesting to Rohrabacher and Sanders. She recently wrote a book, "After Oklahoma City," and met with the congressman to share some of what she had turned up in her quest to find others besides Nichols and McVeigh who might be responsible. In other letters from Nichols, which she shared with The Times, he described his solitary life amid unending conspiracy theories such as whether a gang of Midwestern bank robbers were involved, whether there was a German or Middle Eastern connection to the bombing, and whether a figure known as John Doe No. 2 accompanied McVeigh to the truck rental store. In March 2000, Nichols wrote Sanders that God had changed his outlook on life. "I wish I would have known these truths myself years ago, for it would have prevented me from making numerous mistakes in my life," he wrote. "But that's the past and no one can change it." In a letter dated April 6 this year, he denied that he had hidden the explosives at his home so they could be used for another bombing at the Murrah site on the 10-year anniversary. He said another inmate at his prison told authorities that story to try to win a reduced sentence. "The devil is twisting the truth," Nichols wrote. He added: "Pray that the truth be revealed." In his April 18 letter alleging the connection between Moore and the explosives, Nichols included this line: "There's much more I would like to sayâŠ. Please pray that the truth finally comes out." And in a final letter dated April 24, which Sanders received Monday night, he urged her to seek clearance from prison officials to meet with him. "I would be more than willing to discuss with you my knowledge of the OKC bombing," he said. Sanders said Rohrabacher had made inquiries about meeting with Nichols. If he convenes formal hearings, the congressman could subpoena Nichols to appear in Washington as a star witness. In his House floor speech April 19, the congressman suggested that Nichols held many of the answers for those who doubted he and McVeigh had acted alone. The congressman also wants to review government documents and 23 surveillance tapes of activity around the Murrah site on the morning of the bombing. The tapes have not been released to the public, even though the trials are over and the FBI says its investigation is closed. "This is a free society," Rohrabacher said. "And if the public is to have faith in their government, we cannot keep secrets like this." |
Link |
McVeigh Denied Broad Conspiracy in Oklahoma City Bombing |
2004-02-27 |
Timothy J. McVeigh went to his grave in June 2001 insisting that no widespread conspiracy was behind the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, but also predicting that some people would continue to believe that a larger conspiracy existed. "For those die-hard conspiracy theorists who will refuse to believe this, I turn the tables and say: Show me where I needed anyone else," McVeigh wrote in a letter to The Buffalo News a few weeks before his execution. "Financing? Logistics? Specialized tech skills? . . . Show me where I needed a dark, mysterious "Mr. X.â " .... During more than 70 hours of interviews for the book "American Terrorist: Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City Bombing," McVeigh anticipated and discussed several of the issues that arose in this weekâs AP story: * He said he was aware of allegations about his involvement with a bank robbery gang but denied them.The latest conspiracy allegations caused concern in Oklahoma City, where 168 people were killed and more than 500 injured in the bombing, and in Pendleton, where the convicted bomberâs father, retired factory worker William McVeigh, still lives. McVeigh said he believes his son told the truth in interviews for American Terrorist. The book, detailing Timothy McVeighâs claim that he planned and carried out the bombing with help from former Army buddy Terry L. Nichols, was published two months before the bomber was executed. Asked about the newest conspiracy theory, the elder McVeigh said: "I donât believe any of that. I think itâs false." .... |
Link |