FBI Hostage Rescue Team (HRT)
Operations and Exercises
Ruby Ridge
Randy Weaver
lived in a remote, plywood cabin, in the woods of
Idaho. He was a white racist, believing that whites
were the real Jews of the Old Testament. And while
he expressed these racist views, they never turned
into actions. He was also present at several meetings
of the Aryan Nations, but never joined. In 1986, at
one of these meetings, Weaver befriended a Bureau
of Alcohol Tobacco & Firearms (BATF) informer.
A full three years later, the informer persuaded Weaver
to cut off the barrels of two shotguns below the legal
limit.
A few months
later, the BATF threatened to indict Weaver for several
offenses, for possessing, making and transferring
illegal weapons. Rather than arrest him, they wanted
him to become an informer on the Aryan Nations, which
Weaver refused. Weaver's wife then warned the Aryan
Nations what the BATF was up to, and suddenly, the
description of Weaver. He was now a violent conspirator
against the government and a bank robbery suspect.
In 1990 he was indicted for gun violations. Weaver's
trial was scheduled for March 20, 1991, to which he
failed to appear. The reason could most likely be
that Weaver was told that the trial is on March 20,
1991, but he had expressed that he was not going to
show up either way. When he failed to show up for
court, the task fell over to the United States Marshals
Service (USMS), which is charged with bringing in
fugitives from US courts.
For the next
sixteen months, the USMS conducted surveillance of
the Weaver property but didn't attempt an arrest.
Instead, they threw in drug trafficking charges to
gain the use of military hardware. A military airplane
overflew the property to take photographs of it. The
USMS attempted negotiations with Weaver, but there
were problems with Weaver's court-assigned lawyer
so they never got anywhere.
The "fueling
fire" of the siege arrived in August of 1992.
Six deputy marshals, one of which was a member of
the SOG, snuck onto the Weaver property in full camouflage
gear and carrying M-16 rifles and a silenced 9mm machine
pistol. One marshal threw rocks at the house, which
caused the Weavers' dog to come barking in their direction.
Weaver's 14-year old son, thinking it was a deer,
grabbed his rifle and followed the dog, along with
Weaver's friend Kevin Harris. Randy Weaver meanwhile
ran to where he hoped Sammy and Kevin would drive
the deer into range. The following events have been
described in two versions. The first is, that one
of the marshals shot the dog, which caused an outraged
Sammy to squeeze a few blind shots into the bushes,
before Randy yelled at him to run home. When Sammy
shot at the marshals, Marshal William Degan, a SOG
operator, shot back, hitting Sammy in the arm. As
Sammy was running off, Marshal Larry Cooper hit Sammy
with a 9mm bullet in the back, killing him. Kevin
Harris the family friend, claimed that he shot in
the direction of a heavily camouflaged man, killing
Degan. The USMS claims that the marshals yelled "US
Marshals, stop!" and that Harris killed Degan
in cold blood. The marshals then reported that they
were pinned down, when in reality no shots were fired
at them. They were 'rescued' by the FBI at night.
The FBI was
called in, along with state and local law enforcement
officers. The marshals' briefing for the FBI was too
brief and misleading. They gave an impression that
Weaver was 'Rambo' running around in the woods armed
to the teeth. The Hostage Rescue Team (HRT) was called
in, but were deceived about the nature of the shootout.
New rules set by Larry Potts, the FBI supervisor in
Washington, D.C., allowed the FBI to shoot any armed
male on sight outside the cabin. Six two-man HRT sniper
teams were stationed around the cabin. When Weaver,
Harris and Weaver's daughter Sara left the cabin to
prepare Sammy for burial, FBI sniper Lon Horiuchi
shot at Weaver, hitting him in the back. He claimed
he shot Weaver in order to keep him from shooting
the helicopter which was overhead, but the helicopter
was in fact well behind Horiuchi, and therefore behind
Weaver. Weaver's wife, Vicki, then came outside with
their 10-month-old daughter and yelled at Weaver,
Harris and Sara to run back inside. The FBI sniper
fired again, at a man who he incorrectly identified
as Weaver. The shot, however, hit Vicki Weaver, blowing
her face off. Skull fragments hit Harris with such
force that he was injured. Vicki was instantly dead
from the .308 bullet.
Over the next
few weeks, the FBI 'taunted' the family through microphones,
saying things like, "Good morning Mrs. Weaver.
We had pancakes for breakfast. What did you have?"
Then, Bo Gritz, a highly-decorated Vietnam veteran,
a Green-Beret to be exact, showed up at the cabin
to negotiate an end to the siege. The FBI had sent
a robot vehicle with a telephone to Weaver, which
he refused to answer, and was later criticized for
it. But besides the telephone, the robot was armed
with a shotgun, pointed directly at the door. Eight
days after Vicki was shot, Gritz negotiated a settlement,
and Weaver surrendered. Had Weaver not surrendered,
the FBI was planning to launch a CS gas attack on
the cabin.
The FBI's, BATF's
and USMS' images were tarnished, several people were
dead, and an outrage had been sparked. A similar 'blunder'
would be performed soon after at Waco, Texas.
Sources:
No More Wacos: What's Wrong with Federal Law Enforcement
and How to Fix It by David B. Kopel & Paul H.
Blackman
Deadly Force: On the Streets with the US Marshals
by Carsten Stroud
Exercise Equus Red
Information Provided courtesy of Rexer.
This exercise was
a part of the HRT's certification demonstration. Held
in Albuquerque, New Mexico in 1983 on a remote part
of Kirtland Air Force Base. The scenario involved terrorists
with nuclear weapons, and demanded a simultaneous assault
on two hostile positions.
At 2am, on an
October night, operators from the FBI's Hostage Rescue
Team (HRT), and a local SWAT Team sneaked into their
pre-determined positions. This was it, either they
would do this right, or the city would disappear in
a mushroom cloud. A few days earlier, a terrorist
group with a nuclear weapon on hand had made certain
demands, and threatened to blow up the nuke if they
were not met. A HRT advance team arrived on scene
ahead of the main force, set up a Tactical Operation
Center, and started collecting intelligence on the
suspects. Shortly after, the main HRT force arrived
in a C-130 loaded with vehicles and weapons. As negotiations
drag on for the next few days, investigators find
the location of the nuclear weapons. This is further
confirmed by a Nuclear Emergency Search Team (NEST)
helicopter with a gamma ray sensing device. The bomb
is located in a building in the downtown area, while
the terrorists have a hideaway not far from there.
Previous surveillance has identified all booby-traps
at the terrorists location, and each terrorist has
been identified. The HRT has also built a replica
of the hideaway in the desert where they practice
assaulting it.
That night the
HRT crept up to the hideaway, while the local SWAT
Team prepared themselves outside the building with
the nuclear weapon. The attack was to be simultaneous
as the terrorists had a remote detonator, but the
HRT planned to use electronic jamming to interfere
with the detonator's signal. The HRT operators placed
charges in two different locations and stormed the
building, tossing flashbangs into rooms as the went.
Thirty seconds later the terrorists lay dead, and
the bomb was not detonated.
This completed
the HRT's certification exercise, after which they
were officially recognized and incorporated into the
FBI.
Exercise Joshua Junction
This three-day
exercise, held by the FBI and Delta Force, was the start
of the counter terrorist partnership between these two
units/agencies. Held in 1978, one year after Delta's
creation, this was one of their first training exercises.
For the FBI, it was a chance to practice and refine
their hostage negotiation skills. The exercise was planned
and carried out at Jackass Flats on the Nevada Test
Site. The terrain was desert, and it had important structures
such as roads, bunkers, and an airport nearby. Actually,
the airport is not specified, but Delta did assault
an aircraft.
The scenario
of the exercise went something like this. Middle Eastern
terrorists have seized an underground nuclear weapons
site, along with several hostages (role-playing FBI
agents). They demand a safe passage to their home
country, along with the nuclear weapon, I suppose.
At first, the FBI negotiates several hostages, in
return for two buses and an airplane. The buses carry
the hostages and some of the terrorists to an airplane
waiting on a nearby strip. When the last terrorist
boards the airplane, Delta Force operators do an assault.
The hostages are recovered intact. Next, the FBI convinces
the terrorists that the first group had reached the
airplane safely. Now, the second group of terrorists
loads up into another bus. En route to the airfield,
Delta Force does a mobile assault on the bus. All
terrorists are subdued and hostages rescued. The scenario
ended up being so realistic, that during the assault
on the last bus, some of the hostages exhibited the
Stockholm Syndrome and opened fire on the Delta operators.
This was one
of the earliest joint training exercises between Delta
and the FBI, starting a partnership that would continue
to this day, with the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team and
Delta, who hold training exercises together.
Exercise Olympic Charlie
Prior to the 1996
Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta, the United States counter-terrorism
force staged a massive exercise in what was the largest
peacetime security force in history of the Games. Present
were BATF, FBI, Secret Service, local SWAT Teams, the
Hostage Rescue Team, the US Army's Delta Force and even
rumors of SEAL Team Six for maritime security. Even
the Chemical/Biological Response Team were summoned
for fear of terrorist attack. Olympic Charlie was a
specific exercise dealing with the threat of chemical
weapons attack, but I will also provide some information
on the general security emplacements for that period
of time.
Olympic Charlie
simulated a gas attack in a subway, and was led by
the FBI. Atlanta's subway service MARTA also has their
own SWAT Team which according to a MARTA spokesman
is trained in chemical response.
While this is
all about Olympic Charlie in particular, a series
of other exercises were run before the olympics. I
am not sure if these are all a part of Olympic Charlie.
Just before the Olympic Games, CNN ran a special on
"Guarding the Games," which featured the
look into the security organization behind the games.
Amazingly, they ran a fairly long video clip of Delta
Force operators in training, storming buildings, blowing
in windows and performing evacuation of hostages under
fire. It was quite amazing to see. Read more highlights
of the documentary here.
It ran quite
a long segment on an assault by the MARTA SWAT Team
on one of their subways with FBI agents role-playing
terrorists sympathetic to Timothy McVeigh. Another
part was all about suicide bombers, and the story
of one who turned away from it all. Next was a feature
about chemical weapons, and how one man acquired a
deadly sample of the black plague through the US mail.
It was this sort of thing that officials feared the
most. That is why the 1996 Games were going to be
the safest ever, with multiple agencies standing by
in case of attack. The security was run, as I said
before, many agencies, including the CIA's counter-terrorism
branch, and experts were called in. One counter-terrorism
expert, Jeff Beatty, a former Delta Force, CIA and
HRT operator, (and who incidentally helped develop
the Delta
Force computer game released in Oct. '98), worried
that all these agencies running the show would lead
to confusion.
Other scenarios
trained for were a Royal couple kidnapped, a French
diplomat held hostage, chemical attacks and even nuclear
attack.
Even though
all these preparations were held, someone did manage
to set off a pipebomb in the Centennial Olympic Park
during a concert, and although the blast was luckily
nothing compared to the OKC bombing, did kill 2 people
and injured hundreds more.
FBI
Takes Lead in Developing CT Effort
- Chemical & Engineering News, focuses on the
chemical and biological side of security.