|
McVeigh finds weakness in government's armor, reason to live
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) Preparing for his execution at the
hands of the government he despises, Timothy McVeigh gave fellow
death row inmates everything he owned, arranged for his body to be
turned over to family members and readied himself for what some saw
as martyrdom.
He sat in his stuffy 8-by-10-foot cell and waited.
Then he learned of an FBI error, saw a chink in the government's
armor. Now instead of waiting to die, the man convicted of killing
168 people in the Oklahoma City bombing has found a reason to live.
"I would say he has some new resolve," said attorney Robert
Nigh, who described his client's demeanor after a meeting in the
federal prison here Thursday.
McVeigh's attorneys have filed court papers in Denver and now
await a Wednesday hearing to argue for a stay of McVeigh's June 11
execution. They say they need more time to review thousands of
documents the FBI failed to turn over during McVeigh's 1997 trial,
and they hope to show that the government's mistake could mean a
new trial.
The decision stands in stark contrast to McVeigh's previous
stance.
In December, he asked that all appeals be dropped and his death
be scheduled quickly. Among the possessions he handed over to
fellow inmates was his fan, prized in death row cells without air
conditioning.
As early as Thursday morning, when he met with Nigh and attorney
Richard Burr at the U.S. Penitentiary, he had yet to decide whether
to seek a stay or move forward with the execution.
"He had prepared himself psychologically and emotionally,"
Nigh said. "He had prepared himself to die."
According to an online journal by fellow death row inmate David
Hammer, McVeigh had been in a "soldier" mode while getting ready
for his lethal injection, even keeping his bed made up military
style. Hammer, who is friends with McVeigh, wrote that the 6-foot-2
Gulf War veteran had slimmed down to 157 pounds, giving his face a
drawn look.
"All of this is by design, planned to the most minute detail,"
Hammer wrote. "All for impression and purpose."
According to the journal, McVeigh gave Hammer a photograph of
himself and inscribed it with the words: "My head has been
bloodied, but it remains unbowed."
Robert Jay Lifton, co-author of the book "Who Owns Death?," an
examination of the psychology of capital punishment, said he
believes McVeigh is torn between making a martyr of himself and
exposing the government's mistakes.
"With McVeigh, there's always been a conflict between his own
impulses, particularly toward martyrdom, and what you could call
the legal interests of his case," Lifton said. "Now the impulse
toward martyrdom has become mixed in with a desire to live and a
desire to embarrass the government."
Burr said his client simply wants to expose problems in the
criminal justice system.
"That right now is paramount to him," Burr said. "It caused
him to put principle over personal concerns."
But McVeigh's personal concerns have never been clear. Hammer
writes that McVeigh once told him that the theme song to a 1970
World War II movie, "Kelly's Heroes," accurately portrays his own
actions in life.
The song, called "Burning Bridges," contains the following
lyrics:
"Years have passed and I keep thinking what a fool I've been/I
look back into the past and think of way back then/I know that I
lost everything I thought that I could win/I guess I should have
listened to my friends."
It's now clear that McVeigh still believes he can win something.
His newfound resilience can be found in one simple act: He just
bought a fan from the prison commissary.
|