|
Blunders in big cases plague FBI
WASHINGTON (AP) It's happened before, the FBI fumbling
high-profile cases.
Now, it turns out that the FBI also dropped the ball on the
Oklahoma City bombing, the largest terrorist attack in U.S.
history, by failing to turn over files and physical evidence to
Timothy McVeigh's attorneys.
That disclosure prompted Attorney General John Ashcroft on
Friday to delay the convicted bomber's execution, scheduled for
Wednesday, until June 11.
In recent years, the bureau failed to notice a Russian spy
within its ranks, accused the wrong man in the bombing at the
Atlanta Olympics and botched its investigation of a government
scientist who handled nuclear weapons secrets.
With word of the new misstep, President Bush and Ashcroft were
evasive when asked whether they still had confidence in the FBI.
"I'm obviously concerned about an incident where documents have
been misplaced. But I withhold judgment until I find out the full
facts," Bush said at a news conference Friday.
Less circumspect was Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa: "We must
change the FBI culture that has caused these colossal mistakes,"
Grassley, a senior member of the Judiciary Committee, said in a
statement.
The committee will review nominees to replace FBI Director Louis
Freeh, who is retiring in June.
"I want to know that the next FBI director is committed to
sweeping changes," Grassley said.
Danny Coulson, a lead investigator with the FBI's hostage rescue
team who took McVeigh into federal custody, said the incident
creates a perception problem for the bureau. But, he added, "I'm
sure there's nothing (in the documents) that changes the outcome of
the case."
The FBI blames the problem on a computer glitch. Grassley is not
so sure.
"We saw documents suddenly disappear in the Waco, TWA Flight
800 and Wen Ho Lee cases," Grassley said. "FBI careers are made
in high-profile cases, and this is the fourth time in recent years
where evidence has belatedly appeared. We have to be careful that
withholding evidence is not done simply to win a case."
Kris Kolesnik, director of the National Whistleblower Center, a
Washington-based nonprofit public interest organization, said the
recent blunders reflect what he contended was the FBI's tendency to
emphasize public relations over pure science or good investigative
technique.
"The culture is driven by image don't embarrass the bureau,
make the bureau look good," he said.
On the positive side, State Department officials are praising
the way the FBI was able to penetrate a spy ring that Cuba had
operated in Florida. Five alleged spies are on trial in Miami on
charges of espionage and of involvement in the 1996 MiG attack on a
Miami-based unarmed plane north of Cuba. Four Cuban-Americans were
killed in the incident.
But success stories like this have been overshadowed by a series
of missteps:
In February, Robert Philip Hanssen, a 20-year agent at the FBI,
was accused of selling national secrets to Moscow. Hanssen carried
on his alleged spying activities for 15 years without being
detected by his bosses.
Joseph Salvati of Boston spent 30 years in prison for a murder
he did not commit even though the FBI had evidence of his
innocence. Salvati was freed in January after a judge concluded
that FBI agents hid testimony that would have cleared Salvati
because they wanted to protect an informant.
Last year, the FBI botched an investigation of Wen Ho Lee, the
Los Alamos National Laboratory scientist who was indicted on 59
criminal counts of mishandling nuclear weapons secrets. Lee spent
nine months in solitary confinement. All but one count was
eventually dropped.
In 1999, the General Accounting Office said a report by the
Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms, which pointed early on to
the explosion of a center fuel tank as the cause of the 1996 crash
of TWA Flight 800, was never forwarded to the National
Transportation Safety Board. The ATF provided the report to the
FBI, but the FBI never sent it the safety board, the GAO said.
The FBI targeted Richard Jewell in the bombing at the 1996
Summer Games that killed one person and injured more than 100
others. Jewell was cleared three months later.
In the mid-1990s, the FBI suffered an embarrassing
investigation of its world-renowned crime lab. Justice Inspector
General Michael Bromwich criticized the lab for flawed scientific
work and inaccurate, pro-prosecution testimony in major cases,
including the Oklahoma City bombing.
In July, former Missouri Sen. John Danforth said an FBI lawyer
"goofed" in not telling superiors in 1996 that federal agents
fired pyrotechnic tear gas canisters into David Koresh's Branch
Davidian compound in Waco, Texas. Four agents and more than 80
Davidians died during a 51-day standoff with federal officials.
During a 1992 standoff in Ruby Ridge, Idaho, an FBI agent
fatally shot white separatist Randy Weaver's wife, Vicki, while she
held her 10-month-old baby.
|