From daemon@mars.galstar.com Mon Mar 03 03:17:53 1997 Received: from mars.galstar.com ([204.251.80.4]) by THE-SPA.COM with ESMTP (IPAD 1.51) id 5609000 ; Mon, 03 Mar 1997 03:17:53 EST Received: (from daemon@localhost) by mars.galstar.com (8.8.5/8.8.5) id CAA29564 for piml-mail; Mon, 3 Mar 1997 02:16:50 -0600 (CST) Received: from emout10.mail.aol.com (emout10.mx.aol.com [198.81.11.25]) by mars.galstar.com (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id CAA29557 for ; Mon, 3 Mar 1997 02:16:43 -0600 (CST) From: Mo10Cav@aol.com Received: (from root@localhost) by emout10.mail.aol.com (8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0) id DAA29396; Mon, 3 Mar 1997 03:03:58 -0500 (EST) Date: Mon, 3 Mar 1997 03:03:58 -0500 (EST) Message-ID: <970303030357_1182268596@emout10.mail.aol.com> To: Mo10Cav@aol.com Subject: piml] JohnDoeTimes,Vol.IV,No.9:FBI:Clueless In Spokane &Dallas Morning Snooze MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-type: multipart/mixed; boundary="PART.BOUNDARY.0.5504.emout10.mail.aol.com.857376237" Errors-To: piml-owner@mars.galstar.com X-bmw: Black Marble Wombat Version 5.1 Galstar Secure Hack --PART.BOUNDARY.0.5504.emout10.mail.aol.com.857376237 Content-ID: <0_5504_857376237@emout10.mail.aol.com.71712> Content-type: text/plain The John Doe Times Vol. IV, No. 9 1 March 1997 IN THIS ISSUE: **Wyoming Highway Patrol Finds Motorhome for Feds, FBI Still Can't Find Kehoe Brothers... Sheesh! ** TRAVELING-NAZI-FUGITIVE-CIRCUS ELUDES MASTERFUL FBI DRAGNET! ** Kehoe Boys Leave Behind a Portable Stretcher, Body Bag and Duct Tape: Were They Measuring Someone in Ohio for the Mueller Treatment? ** "Have Bodybag, Will Travel." **A JOHN DOE TIMES' HINT TO LOUIS FREEH: DRAW A LINE ON THE MAP, LOUIS. CAN YOU SAY "VANCOUVER"? THAT'S VAN-COO-VER, YOU KNOW, LIKE "HOOVER"? **Also: Dallas Morning Snooze Startles The Populace With McVeigh Tale. ******************* The John Doe Times is an on-line, electronic newsletter published by the First Alabama Cavalry Regiment (Constitutional Militia) & friends. we are a proud and active member of the "Right Wing Media Cabal", Internet Division. Letters to the editor may be directed to Mike Vanderboegh at: Mo10Cav@aol.com. Snail mail, neo-Nazi letter bombs and other bulky objects calculated to merely frighten my postmaster but not kill him may be sent to: P.O. Box 926, Pinson, AL 35126. Back issues of The John Doe Times may be found in Morris "The Molester" Dees' filing cabinets, but if you want to see them, you may access them electronically at one of the following addresses: http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/6784/index.htm http://www.techmgmt.com/restore/jdt.htm http://nighthawk.reichel.net.patriot/main.mhtml Our Motto: Sic Semper Rodentia! ******************* KEHOE BOYS: HAVE BODYBAG, WILL TRAVEL OR, DUCT TAPE-- A THOUSAND AND ONE USES. "YOU'RE GOING TO HANG ME UP HERE AGAIN." ********* Columbus Dispatch 28 February 1997 Search Warrant Unsealed Guns, ammo found in shootout vehicle. By Jim Woods, Dispatch Staff Reporter Wilmington, Ohio-- Six guns, more than 4,000 rounds of ammunition, bulletproof vests and a large quantity of military-type gear were found in a 1977 Chevrolet Suburban abandoned by two brothers after shootouts with law enforcement officers on Feb. 15, a search warrant revealed. Chevie O'Brien Kehoe, 24, and Cheyne C. Kehoe, 20, both of Colville, Wash., also had hats and jackets with FBI and police logos, and two U.S. Marshal badges, according to a search warrant inventory unsealed yesterday. Sgt. John Born of the State Highway patrol characterized the seized items as "a substantial amount of evidence." When asked what use the fugitive brothers would have for the military-style cache, Born replied: "That's one of the questions we'd like to ask them. Our focus is on trying to locate them." A nationwide manhunt is underway for the Kehoes, who face a 16-count indictment for shooting at a patrol trooper, a Clinton County deputy sheriff and two Wilmington police officers after a traffic stop. Born said the patrol has assigned five investigators to the case which he said "is unique." Some of the evidence seized from the Suburban has been shared with law enforcementinvestigators from Arkansas and the Spokane, Wash., area, who are investigating the Kehoes' potential links to other crimes. Chevie Kehoe is sought for questioning in the slayings of Tilly, Ark., gun dealer David Mueller, 52, his wife Nancy, 28, and her daughter, Sarah Elizabeth Powell, 8. The three disappeared in January 1996. Their decomposed bodies were dredged from the Illinois Bayou near Russellville, Ark., on June 28. Chevie Kehoe, who made his living trading and selling guns at shows, was indicted on Tuesday by a federal grand jury in Spokane on three firearms violations. He is accused of possessing a pistol stolen from Mueller in October 1995 and a .223-caliber rifle taken from Mueller when the gun dealer disappeared in 1996. "At this point our concern with Chevie Kehoe is how he came into possession of those guns," said Pope County, Ark., Sheriff Jay Winters, who is leading the murder investigation. The bodies of the three victims were bound with duct tape. A roll of duct tape was found in the Suburban. When asked if he was interested in duct tape found in the Suburban, Winters replied: "You're going to hang me up here again." The FBI has "absolutely no comment" on the items seized in the search warrant, said Steve Kosky, a Cincinnati based FBI spokesman. Born said that finding three bulletproof vests and a piece of body armor in the Suburban lends credence to a theory that Cheyne Kehoe put on a vest prior to exchanging gunfire with a trooper and deputy during the first confrontation in Wilmington. Clinton County Sheriff Ralph Fizer said he believes an FBI enhanced video of the first shootout shows that Cheyne Kehoe, firing a .45-caliber handgun, appears to flinch. Fizer said no blood was found at the scene on Rt. 73. Chevie Kehoe is believed to have used a .223-caliber rifle when he fired 26 shots during the second shootout with two Wilmington police officers at the Clinton Electrical and Plumbing Supply, Inc., 1450 W. Main Street. After Chevie Kehoe fled, the officers found a loaded M-16 rifle in the Suburban. (SIDEBAR) CACHE SEIZED Here is a list of some items seized from a 1977 Chevrolet Suburban (shown below) that was involved in a shootout with a State Highway Patrol trooper, Clinton County deputy sheriff and Wilmington police enforcement officers on Feb. 15: **Ammunition: Clips and bags of more than 4,000 rounds of ammunition, various calibers. **Weapons*: .308-caliber bolt-action rifle with scope; .45 caliber semiautomatic pistol; SKS military assault rifle; 9mm semiautomatic Glock pistol; .22-caliber Ruger rifle. *Fugitive Chevie Kehoe is believed to have fired a semiautomatic .223-caliber rifle. A fully loaded M-16 was recovered from the front seat by Wilmington police after the shootings. **Miscellaneous: Three bulletproof vests and one body armor plate; two FBI logo baseball caps; two U.S. marshal badges; three raid jackets with federal and police logos; handcuffs; portable scanner radio; gas grenade; pepper spray; portable stretcher and body bag; latex gloves; duct tape $800.00; three gas masks; camouflage clothing; survival gear; face covers. Source: Clinton County Municipal Court Records. ****** FBI RUNS IN CIRCLES WHILE KEHOE BOYS MAKE BEELINE FOR NEO-NAZI VACATION SPOT: VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA Wyoming Highway Patrol Finds Motorhome for FBI Clueless In Spokane ****** ASSOCIATED PRESS FBI Tracks Fugitives to Wyoming 97-03-01 20:35:39 EST CASPER, Wyo. (AP) - FBI agents were expected in central Wyoming Saturday following the discovery of a motor home believed to have been abandoned by two brothers sought in a nationwide manhunt. The Wyoming Highway Patrol on Friday ran a check of the late-model Dodge motor home, which had not moved for days, and connected it to Chevie O'Brien Kehoe, 24, and Cheyne C. Kehoe, 20, both of Colville, Wash. The two are sought in connection with shootouts with police in Ohio. Chevie Kehoe is also accused of having guns that were stolen from an Arkansas gun dealer who, along with his wife and daughter, were killed last year. The vehicle was left along Interstate 25 about 20 miles north of Casper. Wyoming Department of Transportation spokesman Garth Oldham said it wasn't clear if the Kehoes were still in the area. Authorities told people to be on the lookout for the fugitives, who might be traveling with their wives and four small children. ``I think the public should be concerned if they see four adults who fit this description,'' Oldham said. ``But given the length of time between when this motor home was abandoned there and now, it would be logical to assume they probably have gone elsewhere.'' Chevie Kehoe was described as a white male, 5 feet 10 inches tall with blue eyes, weighing about 145 pounds. Cheyne Kehoe was described as a white male, 5 feet 10 inches to 6 feet 1 inch, weighing 150 to 170 pounds. The FBI regional office in Denver referred questions about the investigation in Casper to the highway patrol. Oldham said the motor home was stored in a Department of Transportation building, which was being guarded. He didn't know whether the FBI agents had arrived in Casper. The motor home was in the same spot for several days, Oldham said. A highway patrol officer ran a check on the vehicle late Friday afternoon. The National Crime Information Center Database connected the vehicle to the fugitives, Oldham said. Authorities didn't know who the vehicle was registered to. The Kehoes were indicted on charges related to shootouts Feb. 15 with police in Wilmington, Ohio, about 50 miles northeast of Cincinnati. They are accused of shooting at a state trooper, a Clinton County deputy sheriff and two Wilmington police officers in two separate shootouts after a traffic stop. The shootout involving the trooper and the deputy was filmed by a camera mounted in a patrol cruiser. A police camera recorded the other shooting, in which the windshield of a cruiser was shattered by a bullet. Chevie Kehoe has also been indicted by a federal grand jury in Spokane, Wash., on three firearms violations. He is accused of possessing a pistol and a rifle that was stolen from Arkansas gun dealer William Mueller, who was slain last year, along with his wife and daughter. The three disappeared in January 1996. Their decomposed bodies were dredged from the Illinois Bayou near Russellville, Ark., on June 28. Authorities in Pope County, Ark., said they want to know how Chevie Kehoe ended up with the guns. ************************* JDT Commentary: Hey, inquiring minds want to know.... ************************* > See ATTACHED FILE FOR THE DALLAS MORNING SNOOZE ARTICLE ON McVEIGH "REVELATIONS" --PART.BOUNDARY.0.5504.emout10.mail.aol.com.857376237 Content-ID: <0_5504_857376237@emout10.mail.aol.com.71713> Content-type: text/plain; name="JDT4-9A.TXT" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
The John Doe Times

Volume IV, No. 9, Attachment #1

1 March 1997

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A JOHN DOE TIMES DISCLAIMER:

CAUTION-- STUFF YOU READ IN THE NEWSPAPER AIN'T NECESSARILY TRUE......

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Report: McVeigh Admitted Bombing

97-02-28 17:51:12 EST

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The Associated Press

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      DALLAS (AP) - Timothy McVeigh has admitted to members of his

defense team that he was responsible for bombing the Alfred P.

Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in April 1995, The Dallas

Morning News reported Friday. The newspaper said his goal was a

``body count.''

      The Morning News, quoting confidential defense documents, said

McVeigh also implicated his co-defendant James Nichols, although

insisting that he alone drove the truck carrying the explosives

that destroyed the building, killing 168 people and injuring more

than 500 more.

      McVeigh is scheduled to go on trial March 31 in Denver on murder

and conspiracy charges. If convicted, he could receive the death

penalty.

      Stephen Jones, McVeigh's attorney, told the News he could not

confirm the contents.

      ``I don't presume to know everything everybody has said,'' Jones

said. ``But none of that sounds familiar to me.''

      He suggested the reports were either stolen or faked and claimed

the newspaper obtained the documents illegally.

      Ralph Langer, executive vice president and editor of The Dallas

Morning News, said the newspaper obtained the documents legally.

      The newspaper, which made its story available on its World Wide

Web site on the Internet, said prosecutors had no comment. Neither

did attorneys for Nichols, who has pleaded innocent and denied any

part in any illegal activity related to the bombing.

      During an interview with a defense team member last July,

McVeigh was asked about an anti-government activist's assertion

that he would have been a hero if he had bombed the building at

night when fewer people would have been killed.

      ``Mr. McVeigh looked directly into my eyes and told me, `That

would not have gotten the point across to the government. We needed

a body count to make our point,' '' the staff member wrote in notes

of the interview with McVeigh, the paper said.

      The Morning News said the reports were based on meetings with

McVeigh between July and December 1995 at El Reno Federal

Correctional Institution in Oklahoma, where he was held before his

transfer to the Denver area in March 1996.

      Jones and Justice Department spokeswoman Leesa Brown declined to

comment until they could review a copy of the copy.

      Because the reports were based on McVeigh's meetings with a

defense team member, they are not available to prosecutors and will

probably never be introduced to the jury.

      In one meeting, the paper said McVeigh disputed a waitress'

claim that she knew the identity of another man who actually drove

the bomb truck.

      ``Mr. McVeigh again insisted that he was the one who drove the

Ryder truck,'' the interviewer wrote.

      The paper said the reports contain several references by McVeigh

to Nichols' participation and knowledge of the bomb plot, but

denied any involvement by Terry Nichols' brother. James Nichols, of

Decker, Mich., was arrested after the bombing and held for a month

as a material witness.

      Federal prosecutors have accused McVeigh and Terry Nichols of

starting in September 1994 to assemble components for the bomb,

allegedly built the day before the blast at a lake near Mr.

Nichols' home in Herington, Kan.

      The reports show the government may have been low in estimates

that about 4,800 pounds of fertilizer went into the bomb.

      McVeigh told the defense interviewer the device was built with

5,400 pounds of ammonium nitrate fertilizer - purchased for $540 -

blended with about $3,000 worth of high-powered racing fuel.

      ``Mr. McVeigh states that 108 50-pound bags of ammonium nitrate

fertilizer were mixed with the nitro fuel purchased by Terry

Nichols. . .,'' says one report.

      The reports also detail McVeigh's account of a November 1994

robbery that prosecutors say helped bankroll the bombing. In one

report, McVeigh said that Terry Nichols was the gunman in the

holdup of Arkansas gun dealer Roger Moore.

      The indictment alleges McVeigh and Nichols ``caused'' the

robbery and got the proceeds from stolen guns, but does not

identify the robber.

      ``Mr. McVeigh stated that he laid out the plan and that Terry

Nichols alone broke into Moore's house and stole the weapons,'' a

report says.

      McVeigh's account of what was done with the Moore loot closely

tracked a statement given in August 1995 by Michael Fortier, a

former friend and Army associate and now a key witness against him.

Fortier pleaded guilty to helping transport the stolen weapons and

failing to warn the government of the bomb plot.

      McVeigh described how he and Fortier picked up the guns from

Council Grove, Kan., where Nichols had stored them. He said Fortier

took the weapons to sell in Kingman, Ariz., where both men once

lived and worked.

      McVeigh also detailed a burglary broadly outlined in the federal

indictment. McVeigh said that he and Nichols stole explosives from

a storage building at a Marion, Kan., quarry during an October 1994

break-in.

      The New York Times reported the month after the bombing that Mr.

McVeigh acknowledged responsibility for the blast to two people -

not named in the article - who had visited him in prison.

      In published interviews, Mr. McVeigh has avoided directly

answering the question of his guilt or innocence.

      ``The only way we can really answer that is that we are going to

plead not guilty,'' McVeigh was quoted in July 1995, after Newsweek

magazine reporters asked him, ``Did you do it?''

      Reminded that he had an opportunity to flatly deny his guilt,

McVeigh said, ``We can't do that.''

      Though Jones has described his client as ``all-American'' and

McVeigh has said he is not racist, the documents say McVeigh once

sought to join the Ku Klux Klan.

****************************

JDT Commentary:  His Klan card was signed by Thom Robb of Harrison, Arkan=

sas

****************************

      AP-NY-02-28-97 1746EST

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