The
Flir Project: Revealing Danforth’s Deceit
by
Cletus Nelson
"Everyone
thought that the issues surrounding the WACO tragedy were finally
dead and buried…We are here today to proclaim the rise of the Phoenix
and to offer the truth…"
~
Press Statement, COPS Productions
It
was a stirring victory for the leviathan state when Independent
counsel John Danforth produced the interim findings of his WACO
investigation on July 21, 2000. In starkly unequivocal language,
the former Senator inveighed with complete certitude that "the blame
rests solely on the shoulders of [Davidian leader] David Koresh"
His allegedly definitive account of the worst law enforcement debacle
in modern history would constitute the second legal blow against
the Davidian faithful. One week earlier, Judge Walter Smith determined
that federal officials were not liable for the deaths of the 76
men, women, and children who perished during the fatal climax of
the April 19th, 1993 BATF-FBI siege. As the Washington political
establishment breathed a collective sigh of relief, it would seem
the ranks of "extremists" and "conspiracy theorists" who showed
the temerity to challenge the media-sanctified "mass suicide" theory
had finally been silenced or so it was believed. Enter the FLIR
Project.
The
brainchild of Emmy-winning Investigative journalist Michael McNulty,
the man considered to be the driving force behind the critically
acclaimed 1997 documentary WACO:
The Rules of Engagement (1997) and its groundbreaking sequel
WACO: A New Revelation (1999), the third installment of his
investigative trilogy is no less provocative. Unlike his two previous
efforts which exhaustively dissect the initial BATF raid and its
brutal aftermath, this tightly edited video centers on a singular
question which strikes at the very heart of this unsettling conspiracy:
were Branch Davidians deterred from exiting the burning Mt. Carmel
complex by bursts of FBI gunfire?
To
the many state apologists who seem all-to-willing to justify the
ill-conceived tear-gas attack, the placement of a few stray rounds
may seem an insignificant matter. Nevertheless, the law is unambiguous
about the illegality of such an act. "Ordinary citizens can use
deadly force to defend themselves and others from imminent harm.
But if someone fired a gun to keep others from fleeing a burning
building, he would be subject to prosecution for murder" observes
CATO Institute legal analyst Timothy Lynch (No Confidence, An Unofficial
Account of the WACO Incident, Cato Institute, April 9, 2001).
This
is no mere speculative claim. There is a great deal of circumstantial
evidence which lends credence to this troubling thesis. A post-mortem
autopsy has revealed that nearly two-dozen of the deceased showed
suspicious gunshot wounds. Moreover, on the day of the deadly fire,
author Carol Moore reports that "CNN and other news outlets reported
that as many as 20 Davidians were seen fleeing out of the back of
the building" but "Such claims ceased as soon as the FBI announced
there were only nine survivors"(The Davidian Massacre, Legacy Communications,
1995). The bureau’s recent admission that agents fired over 300
deadly "ferret rounds" into a building containing women and children
provides further evidence that a "shoot to kill" mentality characterized
the relentless attack on the embattled religious sect.
However,
in perhaps the cruelest of ironies, the FBI’s own Forward Looking
Infrared Red (FLIR) footage of the paramilitary assault is central
to this allegation. Prior to the conflagration which overtook Mt.
Carmel, an FBI FLIR camera mounted to an observation plane documented
several ephemeral flashes of light directed toward the rear of the
building. A battery of experts have subsequently analyzed the staccato-like
emissions and attributed their unique thermal signature to automatic
weapon fire.
These
aren’t the half-baked ramblings of armchair experts or Internet
rumor mongers, but the qualified assertions of highly credible specialists
like Dr. Edward F. Allard, former Deputy Director of the US Defense
Department’s Night Vision Laboratory, and the late Carlos Ghigliotti,
a renowned expert in thermal imaging technology.
Nevertheless,
without even acknowledging this wealth of contradictory data, Danforth
avers with "100% certainty" that no evidence exists to refute the
FBI’s claim that agents didn’t fire a single shot. However, the
learned Senator’s rhetorical hyperbole hangs on a slim evidentiary
thread: the March 19, 2000 WACO "recreation" conducted at Ft. Hood
TX. The costly field test, which allegedly replicated the dramatic
final moments at WACO, was later examined by Vector Data Systems
(VDS) a British firm retained by the Office of Special Counsel
(OSC). VDS (whose parent company possesses contracts with some 50
federal agencies), predictably ascribed the rhythmic flashes on
the FLIR tape to "glint" and ruled out allegations of FBI treachery
because the muzzle flashes captured on the eight-year-old surveillance
tape are "too long to be gunfire."
Neither
the establishment press nor the Congress have attempted to reconcile
this analysis with expert opinion a vast conspiracy of silence
which compelled McNulty to conduct his own shadow investigation
last Fall. After staking out locations in two western states, the
Colorado filmmaker assembled a team of experts to assess the available
evidence. The results are distilled in this intense 35-minute video
which surgically demolishes the credibility of the Ft. Hood Reenactment,
challenges the legitimacy of the Danforth report, and offers the
disquieting counter-theory that FBI agents did indeed open fire
on the trapped Davidians.
Perhaps
the greatest advantage of the documentary medium is its inherent
ability to convey a particular message by using powerful photographic,
video, and other graphic images. In this instance, McNulty builds
his case against the OSC investigation by incorporating data from
the 1993 FBI FLIR tape, footage taken at Ft. Hood, and test shots
taken by the FLIR Project team. The resulting analysis demonstrates
the surfeit of oversights, anomalies, and outright falsehoods which
permeate the Danforth probe. For example, the former Senator’s mendacious
claim that "People are Not Visible on FLIR" is adeptly undermined
within seconds by the presentation of FLIR imagery depicting highly
visible FBI shock troops prowling through the Mt. Carmel wreckage.
Repeated
assertions that reflective materials or "glint" produced the noticeable
flashes which appear on the FBI tape are proven equally untenable.
Having attached a FLIR camera to a stable hoist, McNulty and his
crew provide extensive Infrared footage of aluminum foil, hubcaps,
window glass, and other highly reflective objects which seem utterly
unlike the thermal signatures which appear on the contested FBI
footage.
Yet
this is merely the tip of the iceberg. It is revealed that Danforth’s
investigative team issued M-16 A-2 assault rifles for the reenactment
despite the fact that photos of the WACO assault team depict agents
toting short-barreled M-4 caribines. This dissimilitude in barrel
length effectively inhibited the amount of heat detected by the
Ft. Hood FLIR camera. As if to fabricate a greater disparity in
the muzzle flash produced by each weapon, military rounds were dispensed
for the March reenactment. Once again, FBI photos provide evidence
that FBI and BATF agents used highly volatile commercial ammunition
during the initial raid and its tragic end. The questionable decision
to use military ordinance which contains chemical additives designed
to limit muzzle flash throws into question the Special Prosecutor’s
glib assurance that the variance in test results constitutes de
facto proof that federal law enforcement didn’t fire at Davidians.
The
film climaxes with the FLIR Project’s attempted WACO reproduction.
Using M-4 carbines loaded with commercial ammunition and allowing
for a number of important variables ranging from temperature to
the highly visible dust clouds caused by tanks ramming the Mt. Carmel
structure, the lengthy and sustained muzzle flashes recorded at
Mt. Carmel are eerily duplicated. "It is with a high degree of certainty
that COPS, Productions and the scientists who conducted the tests
depicted in the FLIR Project" allege the "FBI did fire on the trapped
Branch Davidians in the burning building as women and children burned
to death in the inferno" states the movie’s web page.
While
the more skeptical viewers may dispute the exactitude of this replication,
few will contest the presence of FBI gunfire on the initial FLIR
tape, the overwhelming evidence debunking the Danforth report, or
the existence of a massive cover-up. Indeed, the FLIR Project suggests
that the high-profile investigation was cleverly rigged from the
outset with government investigators using alternative weapons,
different ammunition, a malfunctioning camera, and other stratagems
to ensure the exoneration of FBI officials.
Meticulous,
even-handed, and subtle in its execution, the FLIR Project effectively
illuminates yet another chapter in the WACO cover-up. Whether this
powerful documentary will spur another investigation into the state-sponsored
massacre at Mt. Carmel remains to be seen, but this highly recommended
film offers one definite certainty: the WACO killers are still at
large.
August
8, 2001
Cletus
Nelson [send him mail]
is a journalist in Los Angeles.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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