U.S. Warned To Release Waco Siege Documents
Judge Again Threatens Government With Contempt
By Lee Hancock / The Dallas Morning News
11/03/99
A Waco federal judge angrily warned Tuesday that the government faces
contempt proceedings within two weeks if its lawyers do not surrender
every federal document relating to the Branch Davidian standoff.
"The court is not unmindful that the government waits not only until the
last day, but until the last minute, to respond to every order this
court has issued. That practice causes the court to be suspect of the
government's desire to comply with its orders," Judge Walter S. Smith
Jr. wrote in a four-page order rejecting a government plea for another
month to complete the turnover.
It marks the second time in two months that the judge has threatened to
hold the government in contempt for its efforts to fight the wholesale
turnover of all federal documents relating to the 1993 incident.
Judge Smith issued a sweeping order in August ordering that all
government information relating to the Branch Davidian siege be sent to
his federal clerk for safekeeping. Government lawyers tried to fight the
order but agreed to comply in September after the judge threatened to
hold them in contempt.
On Tuesday, U.S. Attorney Mike Bradford of Beaumont said federal
officials will "comply timely" with the judge's latest deadline of Nov.
15.
One day earlier, he and other Justice Department lawyers filed a motion
seeking to delay full compliance until Dec. 1. Mr. Bradford said more
time was needed because of problems with duplicating videotapes and
photographs from the Waco case for ongoing investigations by Congress
and special counsel John Danforth.
"We're going to try to get that finished by Nov. 15, and if we can't
make that deadline, we'll turn over what we have," said Mr. Bradford.
The East Texas federal prosecutor was assigned to oversee the case after
the chief federal prosecutor in Central Texas, William Blagg, asked that
his office be recused.
Despite that recusal, Judge Smith wrote that he will hold both Mr.
Bradford and Mr. Blagg responsible if the government misses his latest
deadline.
Judge Smith's Tuesday order complained that the Justice Department has
unnecessarily delayed and possibly even deliberately stalled making
arrangements for housing federal classified documents connected with the
case in Waco.
The order noted that government lawyers have tried to use the lack of
proper facilities in Waco to delay sending secret military records and
other classified materials related to the case.
As a result, Judge Smith wrote, more than 7,000 secret Defense
Department documents have not been produced, and the Justice Department
"has done nothing to assure the transfer of those materials."
He set a Nov. 9 deadline for security arrangements for storage of
classified records in Waco. After that, Judge Smith wrote, "the court
will presume that the Department of Justice has waived the right to
complain about how such materials are stored in the Waco courthouse."
At least some of the military's classified documents detail the
deployment of soldiers from classified special operations units during
the 51-day standoff, according to government documents already made
public in the case.
Government lawyers recently acknowledged that 10 special forces
personnel were sent to Waco during the 1993 incident to act as observers
or technical advisers. Lawyers for the Branch Davidians have alleged in
a wrongful-death lawsuit that some of the soldiers may have been
actively involved when the FBI mounted a tank and tear-gas assault on
the Branch Davidian compound.
Six hours after the assault began on April 19, 1993, a fire consumed the
compound with Branch Davidian leader David Koresh and more than 80
followers inside.
Lawyers for the sect have alleged that government agents, possibly
including special forces soldiers, fired shots into the compound that
day - a charge that the government has long denied.
The sect alleges that the government's actions also may have caused the
fire, but government investigators have said that the blaze was
deliberately set by Mr. Koresh and his followers.
Judge Smith is presiding over that case, now set for trial in mid-May.
Government lawyers have told lawyers for the Branch Davidians that
national security restrictions will permit only written questioning of
special forces personnel involved in the incident.
Monday's filing by the Justice Department suggested that the White House
is also considering asserting executive privilege to withhold some of
its Waco documents.
Waco federal court. But lawyers for President Clinton indicated in a
Friday memo to the Justice Department that they are withholding one
classified document until further notice.
That memo, filed with the Monday government pleading, indicated that
White House lawyers will not decide until Nov. 12 whether to withhold
other "materials that we believe are subject to executive privilege,"
the memo stated.
More than 300 boxes of government documents and other materials have
since been shipped to Waco, including 171,000 pages of Waco-related
documents from the FBI and 30,000 pages from the Department of Defense,
according to Monday's government pleading.
This Information Is From The Dallas Morning News
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