<p><enttype='PERSON'>Cradling</ent> her 10-month-old daughter in her arms, <enttype='PERSON'><enttype='PERSON'>Vicki</ent><enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent></ent> stood
in the doorway of her home, mourning her slain son, unaware that she
herself had only seconds to live. In an instant a bullet tore into <enttype='PERSON'>Vicki</ent>
The bullet was fired from 200 yds. away by an agent of the federal
government.</p>
<p> What had the <enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent> family done to bring <enttype='ORG'>FBI</ent> snipers and submachine-gun-toting U.S. marshals to the woods around their cabin on <enttype='ORG'>Ruby Ridge</ent>
in northern <enttype='GPE'>Idaho</ent>? Why did the government act as though the <enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent>s
Aug. 21, 1992, was another day on a job that had been going on more
than 16 months. Their employer, the U.S. government, was spending
$13000 a week, and there had been no end in sight to the work.</p>
<p> The cabin--really a shack--was home to 44-year old former Green
Beret <enttype='PERSON'><enttype='PERSON'>Randy</ent><enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent></ent> and his family--wife, <enttype='PERSON'>Vicki</ent>; son, <enttype='PERSON'>Sammy</ent>; and
daughters, <enttype='PERSON'>Sara</ent>, <enttype='PERSON'>Rachel</ent> and <enttype='ORG'>Elisheba</ent>. It was also home to their young
friend, <enttype='PERSON'>Kevin Harris</ent>. They were subsistence hunters, and tended a
garden, putting up vegetables. A generator produced occasional
electricity. They had no TV, no radio.</p>
<p> This day there were some new men on the job site not far from the
cabin--one, 42-year-old <enttype='PERSON'>William Degan</ent>, had been brought to northern
<enttype='GPE'>Idaho</ent> on special orders. He was to help plan a successful conclusion
to the job.</p>
<p> The men in the woods were dressed in their work clothes--camouflage
commando outfits complete with masks. They carried the tools of
their trade--two-way radios rigged for quiet operation, night vision
equipment, semi-automatic handguns, fully automatic military rifles
and at least one silenced HK submachine gun. One of the men was a
medic, prepared to care for any casualties.</p>
<p> The weaver family had dogs. Somebody threw a rock to test their
reaction. A golden retriever barked near the cabin and came running
their way. A mission somebody in <enttype='ORG'>the Marshal Service</ent> had dubbed
<p> But why had the <enttype='ORG'>BATF</ent> picked <enttype='PERSON'><enttype='PERSON'>Randy</ent><enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent></ent> to set up as an
built himself--became a "mountain fortress," and then "a bunker,"
and a stronghold protected by a cache of 15 weapons and ammunition
capable of piercing armored personnel carriers."</p>
<p> The common shotguns <enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent> sold became the chosen "weapons of
drug dealers and terrorists" or "gangster weapons" that "have no
sporting use." The media always added the universal out... "agents
said." But there were no gangsters. There were no terrorists or
drug dealers, just <enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent>, the gun buyer and the government.</p>
<p> It was all a lie. Hate-hype. People believed it, maybe even the
agents who planted the hate-hype began to believe it. It all ceased
to matter on August 21, when Striker barked and sniffed out the
agents spying on the cabin--lives changed, lives ended.</p>
<p> Nobody, except the people who were there, knows exactly what
happened next. There were several versions of the story. But some
facts <enttype='NORP'>jibe</ent>. <enttype='PERSON'><enttype='PERSON'>Randy</ent><enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent></ent>'s little boy, <enttype='PERSON'>Sammy</ent>--a kid whose voice
hadn't yet changed--and <enttype='PERSON'>Kevin Harris</ent> followed Striker. <enttype='PERSON'>Harris</ent> and
<enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent> later said they thought the dog was chasing a deer. <enttype='PERSON'>Harris</ent>
carried a bolt-action hunting rifle. The boy also had a gun.</p>
<p> Without warning a federal agent fired a burst into Striker, killing
him. (It came out in court later that there had been a plan to take
the dog "out of the equation.") The boy, frightened, shot back, and
when one of the agents fired another burst, <enttype='PERSON'>Sammy</ent> lay dead.</p>
<p><enttype='PERSON'>Kevin Harris</ent> shot deputy <enttype='PERSON'>William Degan</ent> in the chest. He died a
few moments later. The shooting ended relatively quickly. The
agents would claim <enttype='PERSON'>Harris</ent> fired first. <enttype='PERSON'>Harris</ent> claimed he fired after
the boy was shot. Agents told the media their men had been pinned
down for eight hours. It was a lie.</p>
<p> The dog was dead. The boy was dead. Deputy <enttype='PERSON'>Degan</ent> was dead. Two
<enttype='GPE'>America</ent>n families had tragically lost loved-ones. During the night
hours, <enttype='PERSON'><enttype='PERSON'>Randy</ent><enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent></ent> and <enttype='PERSON'>Kevin Harris</ent> brought the little boy's body
<p> The negotiators were not in place, and no effort had been made to
contact the <enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent>s, when <enttype='PERSON'><enttype='PERSON'>Randy</ent><enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent></ent>, <enttype='PERSON'>Kevin Harris</ent>--armed--
and 16-year-old <enttype='PERSON'>Sara</ent><enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent> left the cabin and moved to the shed
they were "using a listening device that allow(ed) them to hear
conversations, and even the baby's cries in the cabin." Another lie?</p>
<p> On Thursday, August 27, radio newsman <enttype='PERSON'>Paul Harvey</ent> used his noon
broadcast to reach the <enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent>s, who he'd learned were regular
listeners. Urging <enttype='PERSON'><enttype='PERSON'>Randy</ent><enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent></ent> to surrender, <enttype='PERSON'>Harvey</ent> said,
prophetically, "<enttype='PERSON'>Randy</ent>, you'll have a much better chance with a jury
of understanding homefolks than you could ever have with any kind
of shoot-out with 200 frustrated lawmen."</p>
<p> As part of their efforts to make contact with the <enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent>s, the <enttype='ORG'>FBI</ent>
sent a robot with a telephone to the cabin. But the robot also had
a shotgun pointed at the door, so the <enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent>s feared that reaching
for the phone could result in death or injury.</p>
<p> Somewhere in all of this, the <enttype='ORG'>FBI</ent> discovered the body of <enttype='PERSON'>Sammy</ent>.
They told the news media they didn't know he'd been killed.</p>
<p> The siege began to unravel six days after <enttype='PERSON'><enttype='PERSON'>Vicki</ent><enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent></ent> had been
killed. Her body remained in the kitchen of the cabin all that time.
<enttype='PERSON'>Sara</ent> crawled around her to get food and water for her family. It
was during this time that <enttype='PERSON'><enttype='PERSON'>Randy</ent><enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent></ent> and <enttype='PERSON'>Kevin Harris</ent> dictated
their version of their story to <enttype='PERSON'>Sara</ent>. In this letter, <enttype='PERSON'>Weaver</ent> accused
his government of murdering his wife.</p>
<p> The news media, based on information from the feds, repeatedly
reported that <enttype='PERSON'>Vicki</ent> had been killed in "an exchange of fire" or in
a "gun battle." More spin control.</p>
<p> The only shots were two--from the government's sniper.</p>