48Highlander said:
My problem with your statements isn't your suggestion that they send a SWAT team. That would have been justifiable, certainly, as was employing snipers around his property. The problem with your statements is your suggestion that "any deaths are the responsibility of Weaver for not submitting to the lawful authority of the government". That's the same type of thinking that resulted in this encounter turning into a slaughter. The snipers were issued orders to shoot to kill, regaurdless of wether or not their "target" posed a threat. There is NO justification for that. Even in Afghanistan our ROE's are more stringent.
The "shoot to kill" directive was not an unqualified, blanket "license to kill" as its been made out to be. The directive stated that snipers (and presumably other agents) should "shoot to kill" armed males. At one point, an unarmed male exited the cabin but wasn't fired on, as he was not holding a weapon. At the point which the directive was issued, it had been established by the prior firefight that each of the armed males constituted a very real and viable threat. I look at it as being (at that point) more of a war-like environment - you don't wait for an armed enemy to shoot at you before you kill him. The Weavers and Co. had already established their willingness and intent to kill federal agents.
Well, first off, it's been established that Weaver was absent from court because they made a clerical error. "Playing patty cake" would have been unneccesary if they had simply contacted him before declaring him a fugitive. And as for him "and his idiot family shooting at federal marshals", I somehow doubt his wife would have been able to do much shooting while standing in a dorway and holding their baby.
And his wife was killed accidentally, not intentionally. As for the clerical error, the agents didn't go storming in on Feb. 20 - he wasn't even indicted for failure to appear until March 14th, before which time a bench warrant had been issued for his arrest. He had already retained council (Hofmeister), hence knew of the warrants and issues pertinent to him. He was also contacted through intermediaries on numerous occasions before the incident:
In July 1991, he (Hofmeister)
met with them and Rodney Willey, an associate of Weaver, in an effort
to spur negotiations. On July 10, 1991, Hofmeister wrote Weaver and
explained that the firearms charge was relatively minor and that he
thought Weaver had a good defense to the charge. Hofmeister added,
"the 'cause' in which you believe does not justify the damage you do
to yourselves, because the offense Randy is charged with is not much
greater than many traffic offenses.[FN287]
Hofmeister reported to the marshals that soon after sending this
letter he received two letters from Vicki Weaver, in which she state
that they were resolute as it was "Yashua's plan" that they live or
die on the mountain.[FN288] Hofmeister also contacted Richard Butler,
leader of a local Aryan Nations Church, and requested that Butler
write a note to Randy Weaver asking Weaver to come down from the
mountain and face the weapons charge.
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/wbardwel/public/nfalist/ruby_ridge1.txt
No I have no problem with police shooting "crackheads, armed robbers, etc.", assuming that they're a threat to those officers. I WOULD however have a BIG problem with those same officers being given shoot-to-kill orders which include not only the armed perpetrators, but their wives and children as well.
The wives and children were not included in the shoot-to-kill directive - it stated that:
[/quote]...they (the snipers/agents) could and should shoot all armed adult
malesappearing outside the cabin. Operating under these Rules onAugust
22, an FBI sniper/observer fired two shots in quicksuccession. The
first shot was at an armed adult male whom hebelieved was bout to fire
at a HRT helicopter on an observationmission. The first shot wounded
Randy Weaver while in front ofa building at the Weaver compound known
as the birthing shed. The second shot was fired at Harris while Harris
was retreatinginto the Weaver cabin. The second shot seriously wounded
Harrisand killed Vicki Weaver who was behind the cabin door.[/quote]
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/wbardwel/public/nfalist/ruby_ridge1.txt
Indeed, I think the "adult" qualification in the directive was also unnecessary, as an armed adolescent can be just as dangerous. The directive should have stated "any armed individual" after the firefight, as it was an armed adolescent that killed the federal agent.