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Government prosecutors used this April 28, 1998 filing as a chance to summarize convicted Unabomber Ted Kaczynski's actions once more and to argue that Kaczynski was a cold-blooded, amoral killer who consciously and logically dispatched his victims without remorse.
Included in the memorandum are new excerpts from Kaczynski's writings, including journal entries and his rudimentary autobiography, dating back to 1966. At one point, he recalls early thoughts of murder during his days as a graduate math student at the University of Michigan, writing, "My first thought was to kill somebody I hated and then kill myself before the cops could get me."
Other excerpts, selectively culled from thousands of pages of evidence collected in the case against Kaczynski, detail the Unabomber's conscious struggle to overcome what he believed was the "indoctrination" of morality by his parents and peers. Moreover, he writes that his killings were done out of revenge and had no "philosophical or moralistic justification."
He also laments what he considered the inefficacy of some of his devices. About one 1982 bomb that injured the secretary of a professor at Vanderbilt University, he says: "no indication that she was permanently disabled. Frustrating that I cant seem to mak[e] lethal bomb."
Notably absent from the government's report was mention of Kaczynski's apparent schizophrenia, which prosecutors had argued the Kaczynski was not actually suffering from.
PAUL L. SEAVE
United States Attorney
ROBERT J. CLEARY
STEPHEN P. FRECCERO
BERNARD F. HUBLEY
R. STEVEN LAPHAM
J. DOUGLAS WILSON
Special Attorneys to the
United States Attorney General
555 Capitol Mall
Sacramento, California 95814
Telephone: (916) 554-2700
Attorneys for Plaintiff
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff,
V.
THEODORE JOHN KACZYNSKI,
Defendant.
CR. NO. S-96-0259 GEB
GOVERNMENT'S SENTENCING MEMORANDUM
DATE: May 4, 1998
TIME: 9:00 a.m.
COURT: Hon. Garland E. Burrell
INTRODUCTION
On January 22, 1998, Kaczynski pled guilty to 13 federal bombing offenses resulting in the death of three men and serious injuries to two others. During his plea colloquy Kaczynski acknowledged responsibility for a series of 16 bombings that occurred between May 25, 1978, and April 24, 1995, throughout the United States. Ex.l.
The plea agreement entered into by the parties calls for a sentence of life imprisonment without possibility of release and an
order of restitution for the full loss caused by defendant's
wrongful conduct. The offenses of conviction, as well as the
applicable Sentencing Guideline provisions, require the imposition of mandatory sentences of life imprisonment.
Because this case was resolved by a plea bargain, the public and the defendant's victims continue to have a strong interest in
having a full and accurate factual record in an open proceeding, so
that the public may take full measure of the seriousness of the
defendant's crimes and the harm they caused to the community.
Therefore, notwithstanding the mandatory sentence, the United States
files this memorandum to make clear that the defendant deserves the
sentence that the Court is required to impose, to emphasize the harm
that the defendant caused to victims and their families, and to
dispel any notion that the defendant acted for any purpose other
than satisfying his personal animosity. In addition, this
memorandum provides a basis for the government's request that this
Court make recommendations to the Bureau of Prisons regarding the
terms and conditions of Kaczynski's confinement.
The seriousness of Kaczynski's crimes, his lack of remorse for
his actions, and continuing threat he poses to the public, require
that he be removed from society for the rest of his life. In
addition, Kaczynski should be ordered to pay restitution to the
survivors of his crimes in an amount commensurate with the harm he
has inflicted on them, and should be ordered to disgorge any monies
paid to him, or on his behalf, for writings, interviews or other
information, as set forth in the plea agreement. See 18 U.S.C.
3681(a). Finally, this Court should recommend that the Bureau of
Prisons incarcerate Kaczynski in a maximum security facility so that
his activities can be monitored to prevent any future acts of
violence or intimidation. See18 U.S.C. Section 3621(b)(4)(B).
A. THE HARM WROUGHT BY KACZYNSKI
Kaczynski stands convicted of intentionally taking the lives of
three men and grievously wounding two others. In imposing judgment,
this Court should consider that "just as the murderer should be
considered an individual, so too the victim is an individual whose
death represents a unique loss to society and in particular to his
family." Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 825 (1991). Moreover,
'[t]he affront to humanity of [the] brutal Murders such as (the
defendant] committed is not limited to its impact on the victim or
victims; a victim's community is also injured, and in particular the
victim's family suffers shock and grief of a kind difficult to
imagine for those who have not shared a similar loss." Booth v.
Maryland, 482 U.S. 496, 515 (1987)(dissenting opinion).
Those who have been left to bear witness to Kaczynski's actions
may choose to address the Court, as is their right under Fed. R.
Crim. P. 32(c)(3)(E). We are simply presenting the Court with a
"quick glimpse of the li[ves] that [Kaczynski] chose to extinguish." Payne, 501 U.S. at 830 (concurring opinion), quoting Mills v.
Maryland, 486 U.S. 367, 397 (1988)(dissenting opinion).
Gilbert Murray
Gilbert Murray was a Marine Corps veteran of the Vietnam War
and a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley. A life-long forester, he was the president of the California Forestry
Association when, on April 24, 1995, he was killed at age 46 by a
package bomb sent to his office by Kaczynski. The bomb so badly
destroyed Gil Murray's body, that his family was allowed only to see and touch his feet and legs, below the knees, as a final farewell.
Gilbert Murray left behind a wife, two sons, a family who loved him, and many friends, colleagues, and co-workers. His wife, Connie, was introduced to Gil by her best friend, Jan Tuck, Gil's sister, when she was 16 years old. Connie and Gil began dating a few months after they met. The following year, Gil enlisted in the Marine Corps, and the two were married when Gil returned from his tour of duty in Vietnam. According to his wife, Connie, Gil "was in love with this Earth" and felt that he had been entrusted with a small patch of it to safeguard and protect. He was known as a voice of calm and reason in a highly contentious field and a man who worked hard to build bridges between differing camps. Above all, he was a dedicated father and husband, a man who "treasured" his family.
Together Connie and Gil raised two sons, Wil and Gib. Wil was 18 at the time of Gil's murder; Gib was just two weeks past his 16th birthday. Gil was always active in his sons' lives. He taught them to ski at an earlier age, watched and coached them in athletic leagues, and when they were in High School, went to their basketball, baseball and football games, even re-scheduling meetings to attend. At Gil's funeral, Wil told the congregation that his father was "the greatest man I ever met. He loved my mom, my brother and me more than life itself. He was always there for us. We always came first." For Connie Murray, her deepest regret comes from the realization that each of her sons will never know their father on an equal footing, as one adult to another.
Shortly before Gil Murray's death, his son Wil had been accepted to Cornell University where he had been recruited for the football team. There was much discussion in the family over whether they could afford to send their son to an Ivy League school which did not offer athletic scholarships. On the Sunday before Gil died,
the Murray family met and decided that they would find a way to finance the education. one of the last images that Connie had of
her husband was his throwing out all the catalogues for other
schools that had accepted Wil. Gil was murdered the next day. Left
without the family's provider, and emotionally unable to be far away
from home at such a difficult time, Wil did not attend Cornell.
Thomas Mosser
Thomas Mosser was a Navy Veteran of the Vietnam war and worked
for the public relations firm of Burson-Marsteller, for 25 years.
He had recently been promoted to general manager of the parent
company, Young and Rubicam, Inc., and had been away on a business
trip. On December 9, 1994, he returned home to his family in New
Jersey. Earlier that day, the postman delivered the package that
had been mailed to him by Kaczynski. Thomas Mosser's wife, Susan,
brought the package inside the house and placed it on a table by the
front door. The package lay unopened overnight in the Mosser home
only a few feet from where Thomas, daughters played with their
friends.
The following day, December 10, was meant to be a special day
for the Mosser household. It was the unofficial commencement of the
holiday season, a time when Thomas devoted all of his time to his
family, and the day when the family had planned to go out together
to buy a Christmas tree. That morning, Thomas took the mail that
had accumulated during his trip, including the package sent to him
by Kaczynski, into the kitchen to open. His wife and 15-month-old
daughter, Kelly, joined him, while another daughter, Kim, slept in her room nearby. Seconds before Thomas opened the package, Kelly scurried out of the kitchen and Susan followed her. Thomas opened
the package; the ensuing blast drove shrapnel into his body, leaving
a gaping home in his head, opening up his body, and piercing his
organs with nails. He died at age 50, on the floor of his own home,
his wife at his side trying in vain to aid and comfort him.
Thomas Mosser left behind a wife, a son, three daughters, a
family that loved him, and many friends, colleagues, and co-workers.
The Christmas season is always a painful reminder of their loss.
Last year, Kelly, who had only been 15 months old when her father
was murdered, returned from Sunday school with a question for her
mother. "Is God coming back from heaven?" she asked. When told God
would indeed return, Kelly asked "Could he bring Daddy back with
him?"
Hugh Scrutton
Hugh Scrutton was a native of Sacramento and a graduate of the University of California, Davis. He had traveled the world, devoted
time to art, literature, and gardening and at age 38 was running
his own computer rental business in Sacramento. Around noontime on
December 11, 1985, he stepped out of his business and walked into
the parking lot behind his store. There he stopped to try and pick
up what looked like a wooden plank with nails protruding from it
laying on the ground. In reality, the object was a bomb that
Kaczynski had disguised and planted outside his store. Hugh
Scrutton's simple act of courtesy trying to remove what looked like
a potential hazard to others, cost him his life, Kaczynski had rigged the concealed bomb to detonate when it was moved, and when Hugh started to lift the wood, the bomb exploded severing his right
hand and driving shrapnel deep into his heart. He died at age 38, in the parking lot of the business he had only recently started,
with a co-worker and a caring passerby trying desperately to save
him.
Friends recall Hugh as a man who embraced life, a gentle man
with a sense humor who had traveled around the world, climbed
mountains, and studied languages. He cared about politics, was
"fair and kind" in business, and was remembered as "straightforward,
honest, and sincere." He left behind his mother, sister, family
members, a girlfriend who loved him dearly, and a circle of friends
and colleagues who respected and cared for him.
The survivors
Other individuals narrowly survived Kaczynski's attacks. Charles Epstein, a professor of pediatrics and a renowned researcher
in prenatal disorders, was maimed and injured when, in the quiet of
his family home, he opened the carefully disguised package bomb that
Kaczynski had mailed to him. A husband and father, accomplished
musician, as well as a physician who has dedicated his life to
healing others, Dr. Epstein suffered permanent injuries to his hand,
arm, face, and hearing. Dr. Epstein underwent weeks of emergency
and reconstructive surgery, as well as medical treatment that
continues to this day.
David Gelernter, a professor of computer science, was maimed
and injured in his office at Yale University, when he too opened a
package bomb sent to him by Kaczynski. Dr. Gelernter narrowly
escaped death from the explosion, surviving only because he managed
to stagger down five flights of steps and across a street to a
nearby medical clinic where he was rushed to the trauma unit of a
local hospital. A husband and father, as well as a noted teacher and writer, Dr. Gelernter suffered permanent injuries to his hand, arm, body, and sight. Dr. Gelernter underwent weeks of emergency and reconstructive surgery, as well as medical treatment that continues to this day.
Numerous other individuals were injured by Kaczynski's bombs. Gary Wright was injured by the bomb Kaczynski planted in the parking lot of a Salt Lake City computer store. He suffered lacerations and puncture wounds to his face, hands, arms, shoulder, and legs, and
underwent surgery to remove shrapnel. Nicklaus Suino, an assistant to Professor James McConnell at the University of Michigan, was hospitalized when he opened the package bomb Kaczynski mailed to McConnell. John Hauser, then an Air Force Captain and graduate student at U.C. Berkeley, was seriously wounded by a bomb Kaczynski planted in a university computer room. Dr. Hauser suffered
permanent injuries, ending his career as an Air Force pilot and his dream of becoming an astronaut, and underwent weeks of surgery to
repair the damage from the blast. Diogenes Angelakos, who died last
year from cancer, was a distinguished Professor at U.C. Berkeley when he was injured by a bomb Kaczynski planted in a break room on the U.C. Berkeley campus. He was hospitalized and underwent surgery, suffering permanent injuries to his hand. Janet Smith was injured when she opened a package bomb Kaczynski mailed to the
professor she worked for. She was hospitalized and underwent
surgery for her injuries. Percy Wood was the President of United Airlines when he was injured in his family home by a book bomb Kaczynski mailed to him. He was hospitalized and underwent surgery for injuries to his hand, legs, and face. Eighteen passengers and crew members were treated for smoke inhalation when the flight of their passenger airliner was aborted by a fire started by one of
Kaczynski's bombs in the cargo compartment. John G. Harris was a student at Northwestern University when he was injured by a
disguised bomb placed in a university work room by Kaczynski.
Officer Terry Marker was injured while examining the contents of a
concealed bomb Kaczynski had left in a University campus parking
lot.
Many people were placed directly in harm's way by Kaczynski's bombs. Only chance prevented the death and injury of many of the victims, family members and co-workers, such as the wife and
daughters of Thomas Mosser and Gilbert Murray's colleagues at the
California Forestry Association. Many of Kaczynski's bombs were
left in heavily trafficked areas -- the parking lot behind Hugh Scrutton's store, the student workrooms at Berkeley and Northwestern -- and easily could have killed or injured many others.
The harm Kaczynski brought about is not limited to the physical injuries he inflicted. By his actions, Kaczynski forced family
members and co-workers to witness the slaying or wounding of loved
ones, friends, and colleagues. In addition, while hiding behind an
alias, Kaczynski intimidated individuals and the public with
letters, threatening two noted scholars for pursuing academic
research, taunting one of the men he had maimed, bringing the nation's air traffic to standstill on a holiday weekend by a threat to bring down a jetliner, and coercing newspapers into publishing his turgid theories on society's shortcomings, His acts of terrorism deprived countless individuals of their sense of security
in their homes, workplaces, and communities.
KACZYNSKI'S CULPABILITY
"Deeply ingrained in our legal tradition is the idea that the more purposeful is the criminal conduct, the more serious is the offense, and, therefore, the more severely it ought to be punished." Tison v. Arizona, 481 U.S. 137, 156 (1986). The purposefulness of Kaczynski's conduct is evident from the circumstances of the crimes
themselves. Each offense entailed considerable preparation and planning, from the design and construction of the homemade bombs to their clandestine implementation. And every step in the commission
of these offenses allowed substantial opportunity for reflection on
the consequences. That the crimes continued unabated over the
course of nearly two decades should dispel any uncertainty as to
their deliberate nature.
In addition to what we may rightfully infer from the cruel
details of these crimes, Kaczynski's own writings provide a stark
account, in his own words, of his purposes and intentions.
Thousands of pages of Kaczynski's handwritten and typed documents were found during the April 1996 search of his cabin; the documents
include Kaczynski's self-styled "autobiography" chronicling his life
to the age of 27, a daily journal for the days thereafter, and
numerous handwritten entries and notes detailing plans for the
bombings, the construction and placement of bombs, and Kaczynski's
own reactions to the aftermath of his crimes. The earliest entry in
these writings is 1969 and the latest is dated February 1996.
Combined, these writings provide a detailed picture of Kaczynski's
life and his motivation for becoming a serial killer.
Kaczynski killed out of hatred
In June of 1995, late in his bombing career, Kaczynski sent a manuscript (which came to be known as the 'Unabom Manifesto') to
newspapers under the alias 'FC' espousing an ideological basis for
his crimes. He claimed that he "had to kill people" to get a "message before the public" that technology was destroying mankind. Ex. 2. while Kaczynski adopted the pretense that he was killing for
the greater good of society, two points are clear from the writings
seized from his home. First, his desire to kill preceded by several
years any serious concerns about technology. Second, he wanted to
kill not out of some altruistic sense that he would thereby benefit
society, but, in his own words, out of "personal revenge" and
without "any kind of philosophical or moralistic justification."
Ex. 3.
Kaczynski's writings contain extensive meditations on his hatred of people, his ideology and motivations, and his intent to
kill his victims. In his autobiography Kaczynski recounts that he
first formed a desire to kill while still a graduate student at the
University of Michigan in 1966, years before he made his way to
Montana and adopted his isolated lifestyle. He immediately began to
plan how he would murder: "My first thought was to kill somebody I
hated and then kill myself before the cops could get me." Ex. 4.
He quickly rejected this plan, however, in favor of one that would
allow him to commit multiple murders and spare his own life:
But, since I now had new hope, I was not ready to relinquish life so easily. So I thought, "I will kill, but I will make at least some effort to avoid detection, so that I can kill again."
Id. According to his own writings, Kaczynski's decision to live a wilderness lifestyle was made in part to further his murderous plans:
Then I thought, "Well, as long as I am going to throw everything up anyway, instead of having to shoot it out with the cops or something, . . . I will go up to Canada, take off into the woods with a rifle, and try to live off the country. If that doesn't work out, and if I can get back to civilization before I starve, then I will come back here and kill someone I
hate."
Id.
over the ensuing years, Kaczynski came to despise many people,
including those who interfered with the solitude he craved or came
to represent for him certain aspects of modern technological and
industrial society. Thus, his journals are filled with expressions
of hatred often expressed in terms of some ill-defined need for
"revenge" and plans to injure a varied group of individuals, from
campers and snowmobilers who found their way into the national
forest near his home, to a woman who had spurned his advances. In
describing this abundant hatred, Kaczynski wrote: "I often had
fantasies of killing the kind of people whom I hated (e.g.
government officials, police, computer scientists, behavioral
scientists, the rowdy type of college students who left their piles
of beer-cans in the Arboretum, etc., etc., etc.) and I had high
hopes of eventually committing such crimes." Ex. 5.
Kaczynski's culpability lies in his decision to act on his
"fantasies of killing." For Kaczynski, violence was never the result of momentary rage or a response to provocation; rather it was the culmination of a plan worked out over a number of-years. He
described his motivation as "not hot rage, but a cold determination
to get my revenge" (Ex. 6) and often wrote of his resolve to act on
his hatred:
Thus, when I had a fantasy of revenger had very little comfort from it, because I was all too clearly aware that I had
had many previous fantasies of revenge, and nothing had ever come of any of them. This was very frustrating and
humiliating. Therefore I became more and more determined that some day I would actually take revenge on some of the people that I hated.
Ex. 7. And while Kaczynski wrote extensively on a need for revenge,
he was less articulate in explaining what he was seeking revenge
for. Instead, his writings simply reveal that his hatred extended
to virtually anyone who irritated him or represented some aspect of
society he disagreed with. Kaczynski did, however, give
considerable thought to how he would exact a plan of revenge, and
was clear-eyed enough to admit (at least to himself) that he was not
acting for anyone's gratification but his own. In April, 1971, before he embarked on his serial bombing campaign, Kaczynski recorded the following in his journal:
My motive for doing what I am going to do is simply personal
revenge. I do not expect to accomplish anything by it. Of
course, if my crime (and my reasons for committing it) gets any
public attention, it may help to stimulate public interest in
the technology question and thereby improve the chances of
stopping technology before it is too late; but on the other
hand most people will probably be repelled by my crime, and the
opponents of freedom may use it as a weapon to support their
arguments for control over human behavior. I have no way of
knowing whether my action will do more good than harm. I
certainly don't claim to be an altruist or to be acting for the
"good" (whatever that is) of the human race. I act merely from
a desire for revenge.
Ex. 8. Throughout his furtive journal entries Kaczynski conceded
that his motivation to kill grew out of a "personal grievance"
against society, bereft of any genuine belief that his actions would
lessen what he viewed to be the negative impact of technology on
others. Indeed, he noted that he would not plan his crimes and "take such risks from a pure desire to benefit my fellow man." Ex. 9. Even the causes Kaczynski later extolled in his manuscript, such as the preservation of the wilderness, he at times ridiculed in
his private entries:
I believe in nothing... I don't even believe in the cult of nature-worshipers or wilderness-worshipers. (I am perfectly ready to litter in parts of the woods that are of no use to me -- I often throw cans in logged-over areas or in places much frequented by people; I don't find wilderness particularly
healthy physically; I don't hesitate to poach.)
Ex. 10.
Kaczynski seems to have prided himself in acting outside moral boundaries. He boasted that from an early age he had "never had any
interest in or respect for morality, ethics, or anything of the
sort." Ex. 11. Indeed, Kaczynski bragged in his autobiography:
The fact that I was able to admit to myself that there was no
logical justification for morality illustrates a very important
trait of mine ... I have much less tendency to self-deception than most people. ... Thus, I tended to feel that I was a particularly important person and superior to most of the rest of the human race. . . . It just came to me as naturally as breathing to feel that I was someone special.
Ex. 12.
Kaczynski's journals also reflect that he worked at overcoming
inhibitions against committing crimes, striving to develop what he
called "the courage to behave irresponsibly." Ex. 4. Thus, in a journal entry dated December 1972 he wrote:
About a year and a half ago, I planned to murder a scientist -- as a means of revenge against organized society in general and
the technological establishment in particular. . .
Unfortunately, I chickened out. I couldn't work up the nerve
to do it. The experience showed me that propaganda and
indoctrination have a much stronger hold on me than I realized.
My plan was such that there was very little chance of my
getting caught. I had no qualms before I tried to do it, and I
thought I would have no difficulty. I had everything well
prepared. But when I tried to take the final, irrevocable
step, I found myself overwhelmed by an irrational,
superstitious fear -- not a fear of anything specific, merely a vague but powerful fear of committing the act. I cannot
attribute this to a rational fear of being caught. I made my
preparations with extreme care, and I figured my chances of
being caught were less than, say, my chances of being killed in an automobile accident within the next year. I am not in the
least nervous when I get into my car. I can only attribute my
fear to the constant flood of anticrime propaganda to which one
is subjected. . . .
Ex. 13, 14.
As early as 1975, Kaczynski took the first tentative steps on
his destructive path. In the summer of that year he engaged in
various acts of vandalism, including putting sugar in the gas tanks
of various vehicles and vandalizing trailers and camps in Montana.
In an act of a more deadly nature, he strung wire at neck height
across roads frequented by motorcyclists. These acts continued over
several summers and were a prelude to Kaczynski's coming bombing
attacks.
Kaczynski's terrorism began in 1978. The history of his bombings reveal a patient and methodical killer. In May of that year he left Montana and returned to Chicago where he lived and
worked for approximately a year. He noted in his journal that his
biggest reason for returning to Chicago in 1978 was to "more safely
attempt to murder a scientist, businessman, or the like" (Ex. 15)
and explained:
In Montana, if I went to the city to mail a bomb to
some big shot, (a Montana neighbor] would doubtless remember
that I rode [the] bus that day. In the anonymity of the big
city I figured it would be much safer to buy materials for a
bomb, and mail it.
Ex. 16. Around the same time, he wrote of his continuing
determination to overcome any compunction against committing crimes and realize his "ambition":
As a result of indoctrination since childhood, I had strong
inhibitions against doing these things, and it was only at the
cost of great effort that I overcame the inhibitions. I think
that perhaps I could now kill someone (and I don't mean just
set a booby trap having only a fractional chance of success), under circumstances where there was very little chance of
getting caught... My ambition is to kill a scientist, big
businessman, government official, or the like. I would also like to kill a Communist.
Ex. 3, 17.
Kaczynski's writings track his progress in realizing his "ambition." They also reflect his appreciation for the gravity and unlawfulness of his conduct. For example, Kaczynski classified many of his writings by their incriminating nature, and left catalogues designating which writings were the most damning, designating some
to be burned and others to be buried. Ex. 18. These entries illustrate how well he grasped the legal significance of his actions, as when he noted that that certain journal passages detailed events "past [the] statute of limitations." Ex. 19. They also reveal his concern for his public image, with Kaczynski
describing other passages as "embarrassing, not dangerous," or simply "very bad public relations." Id.
Kaczynski wrote some documents in code, others in Spanish, and concealed carbon copies of his later public "FC" missives deep within a storage container in the loft of his home. many journal entries recount daily activities in plain English text and then revert to coded text, often in Spanish, as the subject matter moves to criminal acts. Some entries explicitly recognize the
incriminating nature of the contents, as in this notebook entry where he wrote:
[M]y motive for keeping these notes separate from the others is the obvious one. Some of my other notes contain hints of crime, but no actual accounts of felonies. But these notes must be very carefully kept from everyone's eyes. Kept
separate from the other notes they make a small compact packet,
easily concealed.
Ex. 20.
It is apparent that Kaczynski understood, indeed relished, the
damage and suffering he was inflicting. In his journals he
carefully monitored news accounts of his attacks and graphically
rated their success, often by describing in detail the extent of the
injuries his victims suffered. He also collected newspaper or
magazine articles concerning his bombings, particularly those with
photographs of bleeding victims or grieving-family members, as
souvenirs or trophies of his accomplishments. Eg. Ex. 21, 22.
Kaczynski has no remorse for his crimes
Kaczynski's own words demonstrate that he had neither remorse
for his conduct nor empathy for his victims. When he planted his
first bomb in May of 1978 at the University of Illinois, Chicago
Circle Campus, he documented how he selected the name of the victim
at random from the ranks of professors engaged in technical fields,
and, when the bomb would not fit in a campus mailbox, left the bomb
in a parking lot near a science building in the hope that a student
in a scientific field would find the package and "blow his hands off
or get killed." Ex. 15. In his journal he boasted: "I have not
the least feeling of guilt about this - on the contrary, I am proud
of what I did." Id.
In May 1979, just prior to returning to Montana, Kaczynski
placed his second bomb on a table located in the Technological
Institute at Northwestern University. A researcher was badly
injured when he attempted to pick up the device, but not badly
enough to suit Kaczynski. In a journal entry, Kaczynski stated:
I figured the bomb was probably not powerful enough to kill
(unless one of the lead pellets I put in it happened to
penetrate a vital organ). But I had hoped that the victim
would be blinded or have his hands blown off or be otherwise maimed ... maybe he would have had burns in the eyes if his
glasses hadn't momentarily retarded the flow of hot gasses.
Well, at least I put him in the hospital, which is better than
nothing. But not enough to satisfy me .... I wish I knew how
to get hold of some dynamite.
Ex. 23.
Kaczynski's writings chronicle his emotions during his subsequent crimes. In November of 1979 Kaczynski tried to "blow up
an airliner" and "kill a lot of business people," (Ex. 24) but failed. He noted in his journal that "unfortunately plane not destroyed, bomb too weak" and sought consolation in the thought that "at least it gave them a good scare." Ex. 25. Next, in June of 1980, after he mailed the bomb that injured Percy Wood in his own
home, he recorded that "after complicated preparations I succeeded
in injuring the pres of United A.L." Ex. 26. Around this time he
noted in his journal:
Guilty feelings? Yes, a little. Occasionally I have bad
dreams in which the police are after me. Or in which I am
threatened with punishment from some super natural source.
Such as the devil. But these dont occur often you enuf (sic) to be a problem. I am definitely glad to have done what I have.
Ex. 27.
Kaczynski then returned his attention to universities, and in
October of 1981 planted a firebomb at the University of Utah, but
was disappointed with the result:
last fall I attempted a bombing and spent nearly three hundred
bucks just for travel expenses, motel, clothing for disguise,
etc. aside from cost of materials for bomb. And then the thing
failed to explode. Damn. This was the firebomb found in U. of
Utah Business School outside door of room containing some
computer stuff.
Ex. 28. In May of 1982, when a bomb he sent wounded Janet Smith, a professor's secretary, he lamented:
May about 1982 I sent a bomb to a computer expert named Patrick
Fischer. His secretary opened it. One newspaper said she was
in hospital? In good condition? With arm and chest cuts. other
newspaper said bomb drove fragments of wood into her flesh.
But no indication that she was permanently disabled.
Frustrating that I cant seem to mak[e] lethal bomb.
Ex. 29. A few months later he traveled to U.C. Berkeley and planted
another firebomb, this time injuring Professor Diogenes Angelakos.
Again Kaczynski registered disappointment:
According to newspaper, vice chairman of computer-sci. dept.
picked it up. He was considered to be 'out of danger of losing any fingers', but would need further surgery for bone and tendon damage in hand. Apparently pipebomb went off hut did
not ignite gasoline. I dont understand it. Frustrated.
Ex. 30.
Kaczynski set no bombs for three years. His journals reflect that he used this sabbatical to experiment with more deadly bombs.
His return was marked by renewed ferocity. In May of 1985 he set a
bomb in the same building where he had injured Professor Angelakos.
A graduate student, then Air Force Captain John Hauser, was
seriously injured when the bomb exploded with such force that it
left an exact imprint of his Air Force Academy ring embedded in the
workshop wall. Kaczynski followed the news accounts closely,
recording the descriptions of "blood all over the place" and
Hauser's "mangled" arm. Ex. 31. While he confided to himself some
unease over maiming a "father of 2 kids" he later reflected that he "just got over it" and even "laughed at the idea of having any compunction about crippling an airplane pilot." Id.
Around the time that he placed this bomb, Kaczynski mailed a
bomb to the Boeing Corporation in Auburn, Washington. Unbeknownst
to Kaczynski, this bomb was successfully rendered safe by police
after several employees had handled it. Kaczynski could only record his disappointment: "Outcome of Boeing bomb unknown . . . Seems inexplicable it was designed and built with such care that
malfunction seems highly improbable." Ex. 32. He sent the next
bomb to a University of Michigan Professor James McConnell. When
the bomb injured the Professor's assistant, Nicklaus Suino,
Kaczynski noted only scientific detachment: "Only minor injuries to
McConnells (sic) assistant. Deflagrated, did not detonate. Must be
either pipe was a little weak or loading density of explosive a
shade too high at failure." Ex. 33.
Later that year, Kaczynski rejoiced when he killed his first
victim. "Excellent ... humane way to eliminate somebody" and "very
good results" (Ex. 34,35) was how he described his murder of Hugh
Scrutton, who died in the parking lot of his Sacramento store when
Kaczynski's bomb tore his hand from his body and drove shrapnel into
his heart.
In February of 1987, Kaczynski placed the bomb that injured
Gary Wright in Salt Lake City. Kaczynski noted that while the bomb
detonated, the results "were not enough to satisfy" him. Ex. 36.
Kaczynski was more concerned with the sketch of a suspect circulated
after the bombing. He noted in his journals, "Description (several
versions) ... The 'composite drawing' did not show any beard, although it did show a small moustache." Id.
Apparently alarmed by the possibility of an eyewitness, Kaczynski was silent for nearly six years. In his April 1995, letter to the New York Times, Kaczynski explained these periods of
apparent inactivity:
Our early bombs were too ineffectual to attract much public attention or give encouragement to those who hate the system.
We found by experience that gunpowder bombs, if small enough to be carried inconspicuously, were too feeble to do much damage, so we took a couple of years off to do some experimenting. We learned how to make pipe bombs that were powerful enough, and we used these in a couple of successful bombings as well as in some unsuccessful ones. Unfortunately we discovered that these bombs would not detonate consistently . . . .
So we went back to work, and after a long period of
experimentation we developed a type of bomb that does not
require a pipe, but is set off by a detonating cap that
consists of a chlorate explosive packed into a piece of small diameter copper tubing . . . we used bombs of this type to blow up the genetic engineer Charles Epstein and the computer specialist David Gelernter.
Ex. 37,38.
By 1993, Kaczynski no longer accepted the risk of detection involved in placing bombs, so he concentrated on designing and sending mail bombs. In June he traveled to Sacramento and mailed bombs to Dr. Epstein in Tiburon and Dr. Gelernter in New Haven. Though he critically injured both recipients, Kaczynski was only partially satisfied:
I sent these devices during June, 1993. They detonated as the
should have. The effect of both of them was adequate, but no
more than adequate.
Ex. 39.
Kaczynski thereafter ensured that his next attacks were fatal.
He modified his designs to improve fragmentation and inserted
additional screws, paneling nails, and even bits of razor blades
into the bombs to serve as enhanced shrapnel. In December of 1994
he traveled to San Francisco and mailed a package bomb to Thomas
Mosser in New Jersey. Mosser opened the package in the kitchen of.
his home. The bomb detonated, spraying shrapnel with such force
that nails penetrated walls and metal kitchen pans. Mosser died on
the floor of his kitchen with his wife and children nearby.
Kaczynski noted his satisfaction in his journal, recording that the bomb "gave a totally satisfactory result." Ex. 40. Kaczynski later bragged about his technical innovation in one of his letters to the newspapers:
We did use a chlorate pipe bomb to blow up Thomas Mosser because we happened to have a piece of light-weight aluminum pipe that was just right for the job. The Gelernter and Epstein bombings were not fatal, but the Mosser bombing was fatal even though a smaller amount of explosive was used. We think this was because the type of fragmentation material that we used in the Mosser bombing is more effective . . . .
Ex. 41.
In April of 1995, Kaczynski sent a bomb addressed to William
Dennison at the California Forestry Association (CFA) in Sacramento.
On April 24, Gilbert Murray opened the package at the CFA and was
killed by the blast and shrapnel. Several co-workers narrowly
escaped harm as the force of the blast sent shrapnel and fragments
through the walls of the building. In a later letter from "FC" to
the New York Times, Kaczynski expressed no qualms about missing his
mark at the CFA: "We have no regret about the fact that our bomb
blew up the 'wrong' man, Gilbert Murray, instead of William N.
Dennison, to whom it was addressed." Ex. 42.
Around this time Kaczynski also took to taunting victims, law
enforcement, and the public in a series of letters. These letters
were designed not only to instill fear, but also to thwart
investigators. For example, in April of 1995 he sent a letter to
one of his previous targets, David Gelernter, mocking him for having
opened the package Kaczynski had sent him two years earlier:
People with advanced degrees aren't as smart as they think they
are. If you'd had any brains you would have realized that
there are a lot of people out there who resent bitterly the way
techno-nerds like you are changing the world and you wouldn't
have been dumb enough to open an unexpected package from an
unknown source.
Ex. 43. Kaczynski explained the subterfuge in his journal:
In a letter say that, 'scientists consider themselves very
intelligent because they have advanced diplomas (advanced
degrees) but they are not as intelligent as they think because
they opened those packages.' This will make it seem as though I have no advanced degree.
Ex. 44.
Kaczynski sent letters to Nobel laureates Phillip Sharp and
Richard Roberts threatening them that "It would be beneficial to your health to stop your research in genetics." Ex. 45,46. He sent
a letter to a newspaper threatening to blow up an airliner out of
the Los Angeles International Airport. The threat paralyzed air
travel until Kaczynski wrote another letter saying:
Note. Since the public has a short memory we decided to play one last prank to remind them who we are. But no, we haven't tried to plant a bomb on an airliner (recently).
Ex. 47.
Kaczynski used fear to manipulate the public into considering his views. He threatened the public with "bombs much bigger" than any made before, offering to desist from further "terrorism" only if his manuscript was published in the newspapers. Ex. 48. At the
request of law enforcement, the manuscript was published in September of 1995.
Kaczynski poses a future threat to society
Kaczynski's crimes were conceived and carried out with
inventive cunning. Kaczynski crafted his bombs by hand, producing sophisticated lethal contraptions without the benefit of electricity
or modern facilities. He experimented with different homemade
explosive charges, often creating mixtures from household products,
designed and perfected electrical initiating systems for bombs, and
fashioned bomb components out of scrap materials. See eg. Ex. 49-55. He tested prototypes and plotted the force and distance of
fragments and shrapnel to measure their effective killing zones.
Kaczynski contrived ways to deceive his unsuspecting targets,
designing books that exploded upon opening, test equipment that
detonated when lifted by the handle, and bombs disguised in packages
fashioned to look like research papers.
Kaczynski also labored methodically on his bombs, combining
patience with stealth and eluding detection for nearly twenty years.
When assembling his bombs, he wore gloves and manually sanded all
parts to remove fingerprints. Ex. 56-83. He carefully chose stamps
for his mail bombs, checking to make sure they bore no indented
writing, and even soaked his stamps in a home-made solution in the
hopes of removing trace evidence. Ex. 84-87. He went as far as to
insert false evidence into his bombs to misdirect investigators,
lacing human hair he collected from a public restroom in a bus
station on tape used to construct the device. Ex. 88. He carefully
sealed and weighed packages to determine the appropriate postage,
hereby avoiding interaction with postal clerks. He researched
names to select victims and fictitious return addresses, charted bus
schedules to plan his attacks, and wore disguises to purchase
materials and mail bombs. Ex. 89. Kaczynski also made plans for
light in the event the authorities identified him, charting escape
routes through the Montana wilderness and designating secret hiding
laces and burying food and ammunition on map locations disguised in
manner so that only he would recognize them.
And while Kaczynski had claimed in his 1995 letters to the
press that he would forswear terrorism if his manuscript were
published, it is clear he had no intention of halting the violence.
Instead, at the time of his arrest in April of 1996, Kaczynski was
preparing for more lethal attacks. When agents searched his cabin
they found all the materials necessary for the construction of
several more bombs. Kaczynski had stockpiled in excess of 40 pipes,
many individually wrapped and bearing coded notations, and nearly
200 feet of the copper tubing of the type he had used in approximate
411 increments as detonators in many of his previous bombs. He also
had chemicals arranged on shelves, some in raw form and others in
individually marked containers mixed to the specifications of his
explosive charges.
The array of materials Kaczynski had in inventory speaks
volumes as to his future plans. He had 23 identical initiating
devices of the sort he had perfected over the years in other bombs, as well as a fully constructed pivot switch of the same configuration that he had used in three of his last four bombs. He
also had a number of timing devices, a rigged alarm clock, an anti-movement ball switch, spools of wire, reserves of solder, ammunition, and even specially designated nails and screws for use as shrapnel. His home also had his work bench with all the tools
necessary for his craft, as well as a wide variety of books that
included textbooks on chemistry and electrical circuitry, and even
an FBI manual on fingerprinting.
The most disconcerting discovery during the search was that
Kaczynski had already completed another bomb. It was, by any standard, a powerful weapon, fully-armed and virtually identical in
design to that which killed Gilbert Murray. The weapon was intended
to kill people, as the outside of the bomb cylinder was covered with
a mosaic of individual lead squares, a trademark of an anti-
personnel device, since the lead pellets create a lethal zone of
some distance when the bomb is detonated. The device was disguised
in a package with a label describing it as a "Newell Channel
Reamer," a mechanical tool commonly used in the aircraft industry.
The package was ready for delivery, lacking only an address.
Finally, as a chilling reminder of the purpose of all this
material, Kaczynski kept handwritten lists of potential victims with
their home or work addresses as well as maps of various cities with
these locations circled. See eg. Ex. 90.
From what can be discerned from the search of his home, it also appears that Kaczynski's weaponry was not limited exclusively to
bombs. For example, agents discovered a completely homemade, operable handgun, as well as a corresponding written description of
its creation and purpose, all of which further demonstrates the
resourcefulness that Kaczynski was able to summon to further his
murderous intent:
a few days ago I finished making a twenty two caliber pistol. This took me a long time, for a year and a half, thereby preventing me from working on some other projects I would have liked to carry out. Gun works well and I get as much accuracy out of it as I'd expect for an inexperienced pistol shot like me. It is equipped with improvised silencer which does not
work as well as I hoped. At a guess it cuts noise down to
maybe one third. It is said that it is easy for machinist to
make a gun, but of course I did not have machine tools, but
only a few files, hacksaw blades, small vice, a rickety hand
drill, etc. I took the barrel from an old pneumatic pistol. I made the other parts out of several metal pieces. Most of them come from the old abandoned cars near here. I needed to make the parts with enough precision but I made them well and I'm
very satisfied. I want to use the gun as a homicide weapon.
Ex. 91.
Furthermore, while it is clear that Kaczynski plotted and carried out his crimes alone, he also contemplated recruiting others
to join in his plans. Among the many documents found in his cabin
were "how to" guides he had prepared -- a handwritten manual
recounting step by step how to construct improvised bombs with
detailed instructions on how to avoid detection by the FBI or police
and a handwritten document entitled "How to Hit an Exxon Exec" detailing with chilling precision the step by step process one can undertake to send a package bomb to a corporate official. Ex.92. There were also copies of correspondence sent to other organizations, such as letters to radical environmental groups "Earth First!" and "Live Wild or Die", offering secret codes for
communicating and seeking an audience for his "strategy for revolutionaries seeking to destroy the industrial system."
The history of Kaczynski's conduct demonstrates that he has
both the capacity and willingness to dedicate years of his life to
plan murders and elude detection. If released back into society, he
would kill again.
C.SENTENCING RECOMMENDATION
1. Imposition of Mandatory Life Sentence
The nature and circumstances of the offenses justify the life sentence the Court is required to impose. Kaczynski's repeated
crimes were the considered acts of a man who chose to repeatedly
inflict violence and kill to gratify his own hatred. Furthermore "any sentencing authority must predict a convicted person's probable future conduct when it engages in the process of determining what
punishment to impose." Jurek v. Texas, 428 U.S. 262, 275 (1976). Kaczynski's abiding hatred of everyone but himself, coupled with his lack of remorse for his conduct, gives no cause to believe he could ever rejoin society as anything other than a killer. Justice
therefore requires that he spend the remainder of his days
imprisoned.
2. Restitution and Forfeiture
Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 3663 and the Plea Agreement in this case, the Court should order restitution to the individuals, and in the amounts, identified in the Presentence Investigation Report. In addition, in accordance with the plea agreement (p. 4, Paragraph D.) and 18 U.S.C. Section 3681, this Court should order that Kaczynski forfeit all or
any part of proceeds received or to be received by him for writings,
interviews, memorabilia or other information for restitution or other distribution to the victims of his crimes.
3. Recommendation to the Bureau of Prisons That Defendant Be
Placed in a Maximum Security Institution
In light of Kaczynski's continuing desire to kill and his evident resourcefulness, there remains the threat that Kaczynski could continue his lethal preoccupation behind prison walls. See, eg. United States v. Hamrick, 43 F.3d 877, 878-79 (4th Cir. 1994) (en banc) (while in federal prison, defendant built "five improvised
bombs" and later built and sent from state prison a bomb capable of producing "1000 degree fireball" to U.S. Attorney). Accordingly, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 3621(b)(4)(B), the United States requests that in addition to imposing a sentence of life imprisonment without release, this Court recommend to the Bureau of Prisons that
Kaczynski be incarcerated in a maximum security facility where he can be closely monitored to prevent any future acts of violence or
intimidation.
Respectfully submitted,
PAUL L. SEAVE
United States Attorney
By:
STEPHEN P. FRECCERO
ROBERT J. CLEARY
J.DOUGLAS WILSON
R.STEVEN LAPHAM
Special Attorneys to the
United States Attorney General
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
The undersigned hereby certifies that she is an employee in the
office of the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of
California and is a person of such age and discretion to be
competent to serve papers.
That on April 24 1998, she served a copy of the GOVERNMENT'S SENTENCING MEMORANDUM by placing said copy in a postpaid envelope addressed to the person(s) hereinafter named, at the place(s) and
addresses stated below, which is/are the last known addresses,
and by depositing said envelope and contents in the United States
Mail at Sacramento, California, by depositing said envelope and
contents in the inter-office mailbox at the Clerk's Office, Federal
Building, Sacramento, California.
Addressee(s):
INTER-OFFICE MAIL AND BY FAX
Quin Denvir
Federal Defender
Judy Clarke
Executive Director of Federal Defenders
of Eastern Washington & Idaho
801 K Street, Suite 1024
Sacramento, CA 95814
10 North Post, Suite 700
Spokane, WA 99201
SANDRA CALLAHAN
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