|
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) Timothy McVeigh counted down his final
hours Sunday in a stark isolation cell, described as confronting
death in good spirits and confident he is the "victor" in his
twisted one-man war against the government.
McVeigh spent the day in the 9-by-14 foot cell, a short walk
from the execution chamber, phoning family and writing letters as
he awaited death by chemical injection at 8 a.m. EDT Monday.
McVeigh was sentenced to die for the April 19, 1995, bombing of
the Alfred P. Murrah federal building that killed 168 people,
including 19 children the worst act of terrorism on U.S. soil.
"He once told me that in the crudest of terms, it's 168 to
one," Lou Michel, co-author of "American Terrorist: Timothy
McVeigh & The Oklahoma City Bombing," said Sunday on ABC's This
Week.
"He feels he is the victor," said Michel, who will be one of
McVeigh's witnesses. "He has made his point, and he's now going on
to whatever is the next step."
Attorney Nathan Chambers, who talked with McVeigh on Saturday
and planned to meet with him Sunday, also appeared on the ABC show
and described his client as in "very good spirits."
"He was upbeat. ... He is at peace with the decision he's
made," Chambers said, referring to McVeigh's halting his appeals
last week.
McVeigh was transferred from his 8- by 10-foot cell at the U.S.
Penitentiary to the holding cell at 5:10 a.m. EDT Sunday and
secured 20 minutes later. He was cooperative and the move occurred
without incident, U.S. Bureau of Prisons officials said.
The isolation chamber has bare tan walls, a narrow bed, a sink
and toilet, a television and a window that allows a guard in an
adjacent room to check on him.
"Watching the video of him being moved was surreal," Chambers
said in an interview outside the prison. "Look around us, all
those people gathered to watch someone die."
In Oklahoma City, survivors and victims' relatives mingled with
tourists Sunday in front of a memorial to those killed. Survivor
Richard Williams, who volunteers at the site, said he felt a
heightened sense of anticipation as he approached the area.
"I think I'm ready," said Williams, who was an assistant
manager at the building and had to be dug out of debris after the
bombing. "I'm ready for this part of the journey to be over."
In a Sunday service at St. Margaret Mary Church, the Rev. Ron
Ashmore told about 80 parishioners to pray for the families who
lost loved ones in the bombing. He also asked them not to condemn
McVeigh.
"If we approach people with harshness, if we approach people
with violence whether it's the violence of Oklahoma, or whether
it's the violence of what we reinstated in our country, capital
punishment ... we create violence in our world," he said.
In Washington, an appeal was pending Sunday with the U.S.
Supreme Court seeking to allow McVeigh's execution to be
videotaped, part of an unrelated case alleging the death penalty is
cruel and unusual punishment. The Justice Department opposes the
move.
McVeigh, 33, a decorated Gulf War veteran, will be the first
federal inmate executed in 38 years.
Dan Herbeck, co-author of the McVeigh book, said Sunday that the
FBI's recent disclosure that it didn't hand over nearly 4,500 pages
of documents to the defense confirmed McVeigh's suspicions about
the government.
"If a man can smile on death row, Tim McVeigh was smiling these
last few weeks," he said in an interview outside the prison. "He
always believed they were withholding documents, and it turns out
he was at least partially right."
Chambers said McVeigh is "sorry that 168 people died. He takes
no joy in that. But in his view, in his opinion, in pursuing his
goal, it was necessary."
McVeigh has maintained he planted the 7,000-pound bomb to teach
the government a lesson for its out-of control behavior,
particularly the disastrous federal raids at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and
near Waco, Texas.
In one excerpt from letters to The Buffalo News released
Saturday, McVeigh called the bombing "a legit tactic."
Herbeck said McVeigh wrote his co-author about a month ago,
saying he was halting communications with the media and would limit
his conversations to a small group of people, including his
lawyers.
"I'm shutting down operations," he wrote, according to
Herbeck.
After more than 75 hours of interviews with McVeigh, Herbeck
said he remains struck by two strikingly different sides to
McVeigh's personality.
"He can be such a pleasant and nice person, and I know that's
hard to believe," he said. "But then when you hit one of his
nerves, like when you mention the U.S. government, he becomes a
completely different person."
"His rage at the government was so strong that he would
actually boast about the bombing at times," Herbeck added.
Herbeck also said that for the past two years, McVeigh received
from 50 to 100 letters a week, most of them favorable. "Very
seldom did a letter come that actually agreed with the bombing, but
many of these letters agreed with his political views," he said.
In one of the letters to the Buffalo newspaper, McVeigh talked
about his afterlife.
For McVeigh, "death is part of his adventure," Herbeck said on
ABC. "And he told us that when he finds out if there's an
afterlife, he will improvise, adapt, and overcome, just like they
taught him in the Army."
|