http://www.lewrockwell.com/dieteman/dieteman57.html

June 16, 2001

Killing without Consequences
by David Dieteman
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Recently, the federal Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled, 6-5, that the
state of Idaho could prosecute federal sharpshooter Lon Horiuchi for
manslaughter in the killing of Vicki Weaver at Ruby Ridge.

Horiuchi shot Mrs. Weaver through the head at 200 yards with a 30-06 sniper
rifle. She had a baby in her arms.

After Mrs. Weaver was killed, federal agents taunted the surviving family
members.

Federal agents, one must recall, were there to arrest Randy Weaver for what
the Washington Post refers to as “relatively minor weapons charges.”

Indeed. Weaver was charged with sawing one-half of an inch off the length of
a shotgun. At this point, one must question the Post’s choice of words:
“relative” as compared to what? The “weapons charge” which ultimately led to
the death of Vicki Weaver is objectively minor, unless the word “minor” is
to lose part of its meaning. (And so we see how the mainstream media
insidiously sanitizes the news, giving perhaps half of the truth).

Did I mention that Weaver sawed the hideously evil half-inch off the length
of the shotgun at the request of a federal informant in the hire of the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms?

Weaver, by the way, had failed to appear in court because he had been given
the wrong date for his hearing.

That justifies killing? Apparently it does in the eyes of some people, who
perhaps cannot imagine any human conduct which should not be subjected to
state control. In other words, there are some people whose notion of liberty
is being allowed to do what the government tells you to do – and if you
disobey, you die.

And now the state of Idaho has decided that it will not exercise its right
to prosecute Lon Horiuchi.

Killing without consequences.

Did some federal lackey threaten to take away Idaho’s highway funds? Is
there a cushy federal agency job in somebody’s future? So far, no one is
talking.

The Washington Times adds that Boundary County Prosecutor Brett
Benson, in a brief statement issued yesterday by his office, said
Agent Lon T. Horiuchi, a member of the FBI's hostage rescue team,
would not be tried in an Idaho court for the Aug. 22, 1992, death of
Mrs. Weaver. The statement gave no reason for the decision.

This is more than a bit odd. After the state expends no small sum of money
to take the case to a federal Court of Appeals, they decide to drop the
case.

Disturbingly, one of the five judges who would deny Idaho the right to
prosecute the sniper for the killing, Judge Michael Daly Hawkins, called the
ruling a “grave disservice” to federal law enforcement authorities “who knew
until now that if they performed their duties within the bounds of reason
and without malice they would be protected...and not subject to endless
judicial second-guessing.”

What exactly is “within the bounds of reason” about shooting a woman with a
baby in the head from 200 yards? Are we to believe that the government
trained this sniper to kill from such a distance, and yet he could not tell,
or did not have sufficient optical devices to discern, that his target was a
woman with a baby?

The majority opinion from the Ninth Circuit found that the sniper’s shooting
was “more akin to recklessness than reasonable doubt.” Do we want to
encourage reckless behavior by men with sniper rifles? If they work for the
government, apparently so.

As the Washington Times reports of the Ruby Ridge killing,

Acting under modified rules of engagement by FBI supervisors saying the
sharpshooters “could and should” shoot any armed male, Mr. Horiuchi was
attempting to hit Weaver friend Kevin Harris when he shot Mrs. Weaver, 42,
as she stood behind a cabin door. The same bullet also struck Mr. Harris as
he ran behind the door.

Ah, he couldn’t see what was behind the door – that is the excuse.

But of course, if any private citizen were to shoot at someone in
self-defense, but hit someone else, you can be certain that private citizen
would face prosecution. That is because his private killing is not
“official.” In short, those who work for the government can kill – they can
violate the government’s constitutional duty to safeguard the lives of the
citizens – and face no consequences. Well, they might not get a promotion.

The point the minority judges miss is that the decision to kill – most
certainly the decision to kill a woman holding a baby, even if she was
killed because she was behind a door and not the intended target – must
always and everywhere be subject to second guessing.

The alternative is to allow the government to create more men like Tim
McVeigh – who was, of course, trained to kill by the government – who kill
without remorse.

The state of Idaho owes the world an explanation. Since the Justice
Department spent $3.1 million in tax dollars to settle one lawsuit stemming
from Ruby Ridge in 1995, perhaps someone believed that justice had already
been served.

But if that is the case, was the state of Idaho merely making a point by
pursuing its appeal to the Ninth Circuit?

I doubt that very much.

To be blunt, something doesn’t smell right about this decision to let a
killing go unpunished.

In that regard, the Washington Post reports that the newly elected
prosecutor who decided to drop the case, Brett Benson, “is being
investigated by the Idaho Attorney General’s office at the request of the
Boundary County Board of Commissioners because of allegations that he
falsified two notarized documents.”

Benson won his job by defeating the old prosecutor, Denise Woodbury, last
November. And surprise, surprise, it is the defeated Woodbury who appointed
the special prosecutor, Stephen Yagman, to handle the case against the
sniper.

Yagman, the special prosecutor, called the decision to drop the case
“unjustified and done in a sneaky way.”

Who backed the Benson campaign? Was the decision to drop the case his alone
to make?

The plot thickens.

Mr. Dieteman is an attorney in Erie, Pennsylvania, and a PhD candidate in
philosophy at The Catholic University of America.

© 2001 David Dieteman

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