Before the internet came into being, I had NO LIFE. I was a nobody.
Like a person that was invited to a party, and if I didn't show up,
nobody would noticed. Now, I am known world wide! I post hateful crap
everyday about blacks, Jews, and minorities. I even put a little humor
in it.
Back to Eric Rudolph. Eric believed in keeping the White Race pure, so
do I. Eric beieved that White Males are the superior to all other
races, so do I.
Eric believed in using underhanded action against others to prove his
point, I do not! That is where we differ. Also, there are a lot of
people that feel as I do, that is why Eric survived for a long time.
Something like the way, Wilkes Booth, the killer of Lincoln survived
for a long time.
Brojack
http://www.msnbc.com/news/920361.asp?0dm=C13PN
Rudolph to be tried in Birmingham
Eric Rudolph is led Monday from the county jail where he was being
held in Murphy, N.C. He was later flown by helicopter to Asheville,
N.C., for a federal court appearance Monday morning.
June 2 -- NBC's Kerry Sanders reports from Murphy, N.C., with
exclusive details on Rudolph's hideaways -- including a weapon found
in one of them -- and people who may have helped him hide.
MSNBC STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS
June 2 — As Eric Rudolph was transported to Birmingham, Ala.,
on Monday by U.S. marshals to stand trial for allegedly bombing an
abortion clinic in 1998, federal authorities began trying to determine
whether the survivalist received assistance during his five years on
the run — and from whom.
Two people were killed and about 150 were injured in the four
bombings. Rudolph could face the death penalty if convicted.
RUDOLPH ARRIVED Monday in Birmingham, where the Justice
Department said he'll be tried first for the January 1999 bombing of
the New Woman All Women Health Care clinic. An off-duty police officer
was killed and a clinic nurse was critically injured. A truck
registered to Rudolph was spotted moments after the blast.
Rudolph will later be tried in Atlanta, where he's suspected of
bombing a second abortion clinic and a gay nightclub.
Arrested in North Carolina on Saturday after evading
authorities for nearly five years, Rudolph appeared before a federal
judge in Asheville, N.C., on Monday morning. Wearing a bulletproof
vest over an orange prison jumpsuit, he spoke only briefly at the
30-minute hearing before U.S. District Judge Lacy Thornburg.
Rudolph waived his right to challenge his removal to Alabama
and when Thornburg asked if he was Eric Robert Rudolph, he responded
"Yes, your honor." He sat next to court-appointed attorney Sean
Devereux as the charges against him were read.
Afterward, U.S. Attorney Robert Conrad said Rudolph had waived
his right "to enter a plea of guilty here and instead will face
charges where those charges are pending." Two people were killed and
about 150 were injured in the four bombings. Rudolph could face the
death penalty if convicted.
HARDLY A SPARTAN DIET
On Monday the FBI searched the hideout where it's believed
Rudolph spent warm weather months. They found dried bananas, onions,
tomatoes, books and current magazines. His camp was only a half-mile
away from the local grocery store where he was captured, NBC's Kerry
Sanders reported from Murphy, N.C.
Early in the search for Rudolph, agents found camping sites
believed to be his and found other evidence of a not-quite spartan
diet: cartons of oatmeal and raisins, jars of peanuts and vitamins,
and cans of tuna they said were the same brands Rudolph ate, The
Associated Press reported.
Mike Curtis, a long-time hunter and tracker in the Natahalia
National Forest, where Rudolph hid, doesn't believe Rudolph could have
hidden out for five years on his own.
"No. I don't believe he stayed out here," Curtis told NBC's
Sanders. "No, I don't believe he stayed out here two weeks."
June 2 — Olympic park bombing suspect Eric Rudolph arrived Monday in
Birmingham, Ala., where the Justice Department said he'll be tried
first for another bombing. NBC's Pete Williams has details.
Curtis said he once knew Rudolph and said that when he saw a
healthy-looking Rudolph in his latest mug shot, he was convinced
Rudolph could never have lived off mountain berries, acorns and
lizards while using caves for shelter — as the FBI once suspected.
"When you see a cave like this, do you really think someone
could live back here? He might be able to stay in here about a week or
something like that," Curtis said. "Could stay dry… keep the
mosquitoes from eating you up. But it's a big difference from a week
to five years."
Timeline: An arduous hunt
RETRACING HIS MOVEMENTS
On Sunday, investigators began trying to retrace Rudolph's
steps during his years in hiding, concentrating their search a short
distance from where Rudolph was arrested as he was digging in a trash
bin behind a grocery store.
More than two dozen law enforcement vehicles lined U.S. 74 near
a trail into the woods, where investigators examined a campsite
thought to have been used by Rudolph.
The questions according to experts would have been surviving
inhospitable terrain. The only way to do it, they said, would have
been with the hospitality of someone who lives here.
That support was evident near Murphy, N.C.
Roy Dernall said that, had he known where Rudolph was, he would
not have called police. "Knowing what I know today. … No, I would not
have turned him in," Dernall told NBC's Sanders.
FBI agent Chris Swecker said he believed that Rudolph's entire
time on the run had been spent in the same mountains where he had
worked as a carpenter, roofer and handyman.
A HAVEN FOR EXTREMISTS
Sources told NBC News that Rudolph refuses to talk to federal
officials, but will talk to local police — another sign, they said, of
his disdain for the federal government.
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.
"My heart aches for him. What he did was wrong, I know, but I
understand where he was coming from," Sarah Greenfield, 63, of nearby
Marble, told The AP. "People around here, they take care of their own.
You can't put a price on a man's head, and I don't know anybody who
would have given him up, even for a million dollars."
A Florida native who moved to western North Carolina in 1981,
Rudolph was believed to adhere to the teachings of Christian Identity,
a white supremacist sect 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."
On Monday, sources told NBC News that Rudolph is refusing to
talk to federal officials, but will talk to local police — another
sign, they said, of his disdain for the federal government.
WashPost: Rudolph's religion a factor?
GANDHI BOOK AT CAMPSITE
Federal prosecutors told Thornburgh that they intended to
prosecute Rudolph first in Birmingham because that bombing offers the
best evidence against Rudolph. The evidence includes a witness who saw
a man — later determined to be Rudolph — walking away from the
Birmingham bombing.
• Birmingham: Rudolph faces trial in Alabam first
After the North Carolina hearing, Devereux told reporters that
Rudolph "is not uncaring" and indicated he knew nothing about the
Birmingham bombing.
"If I didn't know what I know about this case and having spent
about two hours with him, I would never believe that he would hold any
kind of radical beliefs," he added.
He also said Rudolph told police the location of his campsite,
and that a copy of the autobiography of Mahatma Gandhi, the father of
nonviolent civil disobedience, was found there.
NOT SEEN SINCE 1998
Rudolph, a former soldier, hadn't been seen since July 1998
after he took supplies from a health store owner in Andrews, N.C., a
town near Murphy. Federal agents suspect Rudolph spent much of his
spare time in the woods hiking and rappelling down the same old mine
shafts and limestone caverns that later complicated the search for
him.
The aftermath of the bombing in Atlanta during the Olympics.
"We always thought he was up here in the mountains," Swecker
said. "We had no credible sightings elsewhere in the country."
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 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.
Rudolph is thought to have planted a bomb in a backpack at the
Centennial Olympic Park during the 1996 summer Olympics in Atlanta.
One person was killed and 111 others were injured.
Two years later, Rudolph was charged with that attack and
implicated in three others: the 1997 bombings of a gay nightclub in
Atlanta and a building north of Atlanta that housed an abortion
clinic; and the 1998 abortion clinic bombing.
Text of Ashcroft's trial decision
HOW HE WAS CAUGHT
Rudolph was captured Saturday when Murphy Police Officer Jeff
Postell spotted a man going through a trash bin around 3:30 a.m. local
time.
Postell, who has been on the Murphy force about a year, was
alone when he approached the man. Rudolph offered no resistance and no
weapons were found.
Police said Rudolph first gave them a false name. When that
didn't check out and they asked him again for his name he admitted he
was Rudolph.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 / 8
FBI agent on investigation
June 2 -- FBI agent Chris Swecker tells "Today" show host Katie Couric
that Eric Rudolph seemed "very calm and very relieved" after his
capture.
2 / 8
Recollections of Rudolph
June 2 -- Deborah Rudolph, who was married to Eric Rudolph's brother,
tells "Today" host Katie Couric what she recalls of her former
brother-in-law.
3 / 8
Christian Identity scrutinized
May 31 -- Some of Eric Rudolph's acquaintances say he was influenced
by Christian Identity, a movement that spreads a message of racism and
hate.
4 / 8
Victims and families react
May 31 -- For years, those injured and the families of those killed in
the Olympic and three other bombings have waited for the capture of
Eric Rudolph. NBC's Jim Cummins reports on some of their reactions to
his arrest.
5 / 8
Critical witness in Birmingham
June 1 -- NBC's Pete Williams explains the importance of the
Birmingham bombing in the hunt for Eric Rudolph.
6 / 8
Rookie cop describes capture
May 31 -- Murphy Police Officer Jeffrey Postell discovered Eric
Rudolph hiding behind milk crates. He described Rudolph as very
cooperative and respectful.
7 / 8
Where did he hide?
June 2 -- Investigators now think Eric Rudolph hid in and around
Murphy, N.C., for nearly five years. NBC's Don Teague reports.
8 / 8
Rudolph may have had assistance
June 1 -- 'Dateline NBC' correspondent Chris Hansen reports on whether
Eric Rudolph might have had help as he hid from authorities.
Rudolph was taken early Monday from the county jail in Murphy,
N.C., to federal court in Asheville, 90 miles away.
Earlier Monday, FBI agent Swecker told NBC's "Today" show that
Rudolph "has been very calm and very relieved" since his arrest
Saturday in Murphy. "I think he's enjoying the human interaction"
after his time on the run, Swecker said.
Rudolph had been on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list and the FBI
had offered a $1 million reward for his capture. "The most notorious
American fugitive on the FBI's most wanted list has been captured and
will face American justice," U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft said
shortly after his capture.
Among those who have prayed for Rudolph's capture was Emily
Lyons, the nurse who was crippled and nearly blinded from shrapnel and
nails in the 1998 bombing of the Birmingham clinic. She said she's
looking forward to seeing Rudolph when he goes to trial.
"You don't have to go to the Middle East to find terrorists,"
she said. "Rudolph is one of them. He terrorized and he murdered. I
know he can't hurt anyone anymore."
LOL ... Now you just TROLL the internet with BAIT like this ...
>Before the internet came into being, I had NO LIFE. I was a nobody.
>Like a person that was invited to a party, and if I didn't show up,
>nobody would noticed.
You still are that person.
Slinging crap like a monkey gets you noticed, but nothing more. We
wouldn't mind if the crap disappeared, it has no value.
Look around, whites are the minority in the world.
Ignorance isn't something to be proud of.