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Ashcroft announces closed-circuit telecast of McVeigh execution
WASHINGTON (AP) Attorney General John Ashcroft said Thursday
survivors and relatives of the Oklahoma City bombing victims will
be allowed to watch Timothy McVeigh's execution on closed-circuit
television. He said he wanted to help them "close this chapter of
their lives."
"The Oklahoma City survivors may be the largest group of crime
victims in our history," Ashcroft said. "The Department of
Justice must make special provisions to assist the needs of the
survivors and the victims' families."
Ashcroft also said he would allow two additional public
witnesses beyond the eight already cleared for watching the
execution firsthand on May 16 at a federal penitentiary in Terre
Haute, Ind.
The attorney general also said the Justice Department and the
Bureau of Prisons would work closely with the FBI to thwart any
attempts to record or pirate the closed-circuit broadcast. He
described the broadcast as a "state-of-the-art video
conferencing."
Ashcroft said he determined that the broadcast should be
permitted after meeting this week in Oklahoma City with some 100
victims or relatives of victims of the April 19, 1995, bombing of
the Alfred P. Murrah Building there.
McVeigh was convicted of the bombing, which killed 168 people,
including 19 children, on June 2, 1997. He was sentenced to death,
and Ashcroft noted Thursday that McVeigh had exhausted all appeals.
Describing his meeting with the families, Ashcroft said: "My
time with these brave survivors changed me. What was taken from
them can never be replaced nor fully restored. I hope we can help
them meet their needs to close this chapter in their lives."
The decision fulfills the requests of some 250 victims and
family members who want to see McVeigh die.
McVeigh's execution will be the first under federal law since
1963.
Ashcroft said McVeigh would be able to talk to the media up to
15 minutes a day by telephone, but no longer.
"As an American who cares about our culture, I want to restrict
a mass murderer's access to a public podium," Ashcroft said. "As
attorney general, I don't want anyone to be able to purchase access
to the podium of America with the blood of 168 innocent victims.
Please do not help him inject more poison into our culture. He's
caused enough senseless damage."
McVeigh has said he is not opposed to a closed-circuit telecast
and has suggested that his execution should be televised
nationally. In a letter to the Daily Oklahoman newspaper, McVeigh
said that, to provide equal access, the government should "hold a
true public execution allow a public broadcast."
Media outlets have been clamoring to get interviews with
McVeigh.
McVeigh did 75 hours of interviews with two newspaper reporters
who have written a book, "American Terrorist." The book created a
stir because in it McVeigh appeared to show no remorse.
"I understand what they felt in Oklahoma City. I have no
sympathy for them," he told the authors.
McVeigh's attorney, Nathan Chambers, said Wednesday that McVeigh
shows no sign of interest in a last-minute appeal to stop or delay
his execution.
Justice Department officials said this week that McVeigh's last
chance to ask for a stay of execution would be two hours before he
is scheduled to die, when he will be allowed a final meeting with
his lawyers.
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