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Suspected Olympic Park bomber arrested


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Eric Rudolph, the longtime fugitive charged in the 1996 Olympic Park bombing and in attacks at an abortion clinic and a gay nightclub, was arrested early Saturday in the mountains of North Carolina.

 

Rudolph had been on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list and had eluded a massive manhunt for five years, much of it in the western North Carolina mountains near where he was caught Saturday.

 

 

He was captured when Police Officer Jeffrey Postell spotted a man near a grocery about 4:30 a.m. in the small town of Murphy. Worried that he might try to break into a business, he arrested him.

 

"I did not have a clue" who he was, Postell said.

 

Postell took the man to the Cherokee County Sheriff's Department, where he gave a false name and birthdate, Sheriff Keith Lovin said. A deputy who thought he recognized him asked for his name, and he then admitted he was Eric Robert Rudolph, Lovin said.

 

The FBI, confirmed Rudolph's identity through a fingerprint match, authorities said.

 

The next step will be a hearing in federal court in Asheville, where authorities will decide whether Rudolph should be taken to Atlanta or Birmingham, Ala., where the bombings occurred. The FBI had offered a $1 million reward for his capture.

 

"This sends a clear message that we will never cease in our efforts to hunt down all terrorists, foreign or domestic, and stop them from harming the innocent," Attorney General John Ashcroft said in a statement.

 

The 36-year-old Army veteran and experienced outdoorsman hadn't been seen since July 1998 after he took supplies from a health store owner in North Carolina.

 

Authorities believed he had fled into the mountains, and as more time passed with no reported sightings of him, some believed he was dead.

 

"We always thought he was in the mountains of North Carolina somewhere," said Chris Swecker, the lead FBI agent in the state. "No law enforcement agent ever gave up on finding him."

 

The small police and sheriff's departments that cover the region continued to look. Early in the search, authorities ran across some camping sites believed to be Rudolph's and found cartons of oatmeal and raisins, jars of peanuts and vitamins, and cans of tuna.

 

"Quite some time ago, I made the comment if he was in our area, a local officer would be the most likely to stumble across him," Thigpen said. "It's a very appropriate way for him to be captured."

 

Lovin said Rudolph appeared to have lost quite a bit of weight but still looked very much like his picture on wanted posters. He was wearing blue work pants and shirt, jogging shoes, a camouflage jacket and backpack when he was caught.

 

He had a flashlight, but no weapon, and didn't resist when he was arrested, Lovin said.

 

"He was very cooperative, not a bit disrespectful," Postell said.

 

The 1996 bombing at the crowded Olympic park during the summer Olympics in Atlanta followed closely on the heels of the Oklahoma City federal building bombing and stunned the world.

 

The bomb was left hidden in a knapsack in the crowded Centennial Olympic Park on July 27, 1996. When it exploded, it killed one woman and injured 111 other people.

 

Two years later, Rudolph was charged with that attack and in three others -- at a gay nightclub in Atlanta and at an office building north of Atlanta in 1997, and at an abortion clinic in Birmingham in 1998. One police officer was killed.

 

In all, the bombings killed two people and wounded more than 100 people, according to the FBI.

 

Jeff Lyons, whose wife, Emily, was critically injured in the women's clinic attack in Birmingham, said they had never given up hope that Rudolph would be caught. Saturday morning, a friend called after hearing the news.

 

"I turned to Emily, and I said 'What news would be worth being woken up for?'" he said. "This is indeed one of the best days we've had in quite some time."

 

Emily Lyons said she is looking forward to seeing Rudolph face to face when he goes to trial.

 

"You don't have to go to the Middle East to find terrorists. Rudolph is one of them. He terrorized and he murdered," Lyons said.

 

Robert Stadler, whose wife worked at an attorney's office in the Atlanta building that was bombed in 1997, had been inside the building with the couple's baby twins when the bomb exploded. They had made it outside when a second bomb exploded that injured several police officers.

 

"We had moved on from what happened in 1997," Stadler said Saturday, "but always there was a feeling that Eric Rudolph was somewhere."

 

Rudolph, a Florida native who moved to western North Carolina in 1981, was believed to adhere to Christian Identity, a white supremacist religion that is anti-gay, anti-Semitic and anti-foreigner. Some of the four bombs he is charged with planting included messages from the shadowy "Army of God."

 

The search for Rudolph began a day after the Birmingham blast. He was initially sought as a witness: A gray 1989 Nissan pickup truck registered in his name was seen near the clinic following the explosion.

 

He was tied to the bombings when authorities who searched a storage locker he had rented in Murphy found nails like those used in the clinic attacks.

 

At its height, the search for Rudolph in the mountainous region in western North Carolina, just over the Tennessee border, included more than 200 federal agents. In 2000, it was scaled back to less than a handful of agents working out of a National Guard Armory just outside Murphy.

 

Pockets of western North Carolina have had a reputation as a haven for right-wing extremists. Some there mocked the government's inability to find Rudolph with bloodhounds, infrared-equipped helicopters and space-age motion detectors -- and some said they would hide him if asked.

 

The FBI had said it believed Rudolph was somewhere in the Nantahala National Forest, living on his own, breaking into vacant vacation cabins, stealing from local gardens.

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Awesome. And I have seen even more extreme examples of how police never stop trying to catch their man. In 1957, a man raped some teenagers and then later that night a cop pulled him over for a routine traffis stop and he murdered one, maybe two, cops and sped away. He was seen for 46 years. Then he was arrested for a crime that happened nearly half a century before. Thats the most extreme example Ive ever seen.

 

Personally, I never thought theyd catch Rudolph. Just hidden away in the woods, I never thought they would find him. Im glad Im wrong...

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This guy bombed an abortion clinic because he's a pro-life member.

 

Pro lifers killing people. :lol:  It's irony on a basic level, but I enjoy it.

Dude dont get on your high horse. There are f***ed up people in all aspects of life.

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This guy bombed an abortion clinic because he's a pro-life member.

 

Pro lifers killing people. :lol:  It's irony on a basic level, but I enjoy it.

Being a lover of irony, I am with you on this one. Prolife = blowing away people who are not pro life? Anyway I won't say anything more on this one...

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Beter yet. Bin Ladens murdering thousands of people to achieve peace in the Middle East. Peace thru violence? Now thats ironic. Or perhaps how astronaut Gus Grissom died in a fire because the hatch wouldnt open. Earlier he had almost drowned because a hatch opened prematurely. So he almost drowned because a hatch that was too quick to open, and then he did die because of one that wouldnt open at all...

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Peace thru violence? Now thats ironic.

I thought the was the whole premise for every war ever fought. And the existance of the Armed Forces (including your beloved United States Marine Corps).

 

The door swings both ways, buddy.

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I thought the was the whole premise for every war ever fought.  And the existance of the Armed Forces (including your beloved United States Marine Corps).

 

The door swings both ways, buddy.

Peace through violence has merit. Youre too young to see that yet. Ask yourself where the world would be today if the world just "peacefully" tried to stop Hitler.

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I thought the was the whole premise for every war ever fought.  And the existance of the Armed Forces (including your beloved United States Marine Corps).

 

The door swings both ways, buddy.

Peace through violence has merit. Youre too young to see that yet. Ask yourself where the world would be today if the world just "peacefully" tried to stop Hitler.

Yes, like taking out a tyrant who murders his own people is a good form of peace thru violence. But bin Ladens kind, murder thousands of innocents just living normal lives and not bothering anyone, is senseless and tragic...

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I thought the was the whole premise for every war ever fought.  And the existance of the Armed Forces (including your beloved United States Marine Corps).

 

The door swings both ways, buddy.

Peace through violence has merit. Youre too young to see that yet. Ask yourself where the world would be today if the world just "peacefully" tried to stop Hitler.

Yes, like taking out a tyrant who murders his own people is a good form of peace thru violence. But bin Ladens kind, murder thousands of innocents just living normal lives and not bothering anyone, is senseless and tragic...

Both cases only prove that sometimes peace through violence is helpful. I want to go on record, though, that most of the time peace is the right way.

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Yes, like taking out a tyrant who murders his own people is a good form of peace thru violence. But bin Ladens kind, murder thousands of innocents just living normal lives and not bothering anyone, is senseless and tragic...

Bin Laden's attacks are a direct result of US foreign policy throughout the world and especially in that region (i.e. Iran 1953, Middle East throughout the 1960s, Iraq in 1972-1975...there is more in William Blum's book "Killing Hope")

 

If you want to discuss the murder of thousands of innocents, let's talk US foreign policy. 1954, the democratically elected leader Jacobo Arbenz of Guatemala takes power and has marginal land reform. United Fruit owned over half of Guatemala (the entire country). Arbenz asked United Fruit if the Guatemalan government could buy back ownership of the land [continue to allow UF to use it but pay taxes on it] for *gasp* the same price at which UF was buying it at. UF refused the 6 figure sum and asked for hundreds of millions in compensation. Arbenz refused and became hostile to UF, so like the peacekeeping force the US is ;) we sent in the US Marine Corps and the CIA and overthrew Arbenz. Of special interest was the US bombing campaign of civilian villages there [even the US Embassy there put loudspeakers up playing sounds of bombs going off to scare the s*** out of the civilians] and the CIA strafed villages shooting peasants. Also, Arbenz tried to go on the radio to calm his people down. CIA jammed his signal.

 

That's just one of too many examples of the US killing innocents. Or how about installing and arming the Pinochet government that killed 20,000 Chileans? Or the current funding of Columbia that has killed thousands? Or the SOA/WHISC that has killed hundreds of thousands of Central and South American clergy, women and children?

 

If you want to be a Marine, Roman...Please check out the resignation address of Marine Commandant Smedley Butler.

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