US Randy Weaver, victim in Ruby Ridge terrorist attack, dies at 74 - the sniper fired a second bullet, which passed through Vicki Weaver's head as she held an infant and wounded Harris in the chest

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Randy Weaver, the object of the Ruby Ridge siege, visits with the media at the main FBI roadblock outside the Freemen compound in Montana on April 27, 1996. Weaver, who served as a spark for the growth of anti-government extremists, has died at the age of 74. Jim Mone/AP
Randy Weaver, patriarch of a family that was involved in an 11-day Idaho standoff with federal agents 30 years ago that left three people dead and helped spark the growth of anti-government extremists, has died at the age of 74.

His death was announced Thursday in a Facebook post by daughter Sara Weaver, who lives near Kalispell, Montana.

"Love you always Dad" was written on Sara Weaver's Facebook page, posted with a picture of an older Randy and a smiling Sara, along with the dates Jan. 3, 1948, and May 11, 2022.

Sara Weaver did not immediately return Facebook messages and email requests for information. Details of Randy Weaver's death were not immediately available.

The standoff in the mountains near Ruby Ridge in the Idaho Panhandle transfixed the nation in August of 1992.

Randy Weaver moved his family to northern Idaho in the 1980s to escape what he saw as a corrupt world. Over time, federal agents began investigating the Army veteran for possible ties to white supremacist and anti-government groups. Weaver was eventually suspected of selling a government informant two illegal sawed-off shotguns.

To avoid arrest, Weaver holed up on his land near Naples, Idaho.

On Aug. 21, 1992, a team of U.S. marshals scouting the forest to find suitable places to ambush and arrest Weaver came across his friend, Kevin Harris, and Weaver's 14-year-old son Samuel in the woods. A gunfight broke out. Samuel Weaver and Deputy U.S. Marshal William Degan were killed.
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The next day, an FBI sniper shot Randy Weaver. As Weaver, Harris and Sara ran back toward the house, the sniper fired a second bullet, which passed through Vicki Weaver's head as she held an infant and wounded Harris in the chest.
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Randy Weaver holds the door of his cabin showing holes from bullets fired during the 1992 siege of his Ruby Ridge, Idaho home during testimony before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Capitol Hill in Washington on Sept. 6, 1995. Joe Marquette/AP
During the siege, Sara Weaver crawled around her mother's blanket-covered body to get food and water for the survivors until the family surrendered on Aug. 31, 1992.

Harris and Randy Weaver were arrested, and Weaver's three daughters went to live with their mother's family in Iowa. Randy Weaver was acquitted of the most serious charges and Harris was acquitted of all charges.

The surviving members of the Weaver family filed a wrongful death lawsuit. The federal government awarded Randy Weaver a $100,000 settlement and his three daughters $1 million each in 1995.

"Ruby Ridge was the opening shot of a new era of anti-government hatred not seen since the Civil War," said Mark Potok of the Southern Poverty Law Center in a 2012 interview on the 20th anniversary of the siege.

After Ruby Ridge, federal agents laid siege to the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas. It ended violently after 51 days on April 19, 1993, when a fire destroyed the compound after an assault was launched, killing 76 people.

Timothy McVeigh cited both Ruby Ridge and Waco as motivators when he bombed the federal building in Oklahoma City in 1995. Ruby Ridge has been cited often by militia and patriot groups since.

In the 30 years since the standoff, Ruby Ridge remained a rallying cry for anti-government extremists. The Spokesman-Review reported Weaver remained popular among white supremacists and extremists in the years following the standoff, and was often seen selling his book, "The Federal Siege at Ruby Ridge," at gun shows and survivalist expos.

Sara Weaver lives near Kalispell, Montana, a city in the northwestern part of the state that is the gateway to Glacier National Park and more than 100 miles (160 kilometers) east of Ruby Ridge.

Sara Weaver said she is devastated each time someone commits a violent act in the name of Ruby Ridge. "It killed me inside," she told The Associated Press in 2012, regarding the Oklahoma City bombing. "I knew what it was like to lose a family member in violence. I wouldn't wish that on anyone."

After graduating from high school in Iowa, Sara Weaver moved to the Kalispell area in 1996. Her sisters and father followed shortly after.

She has been back to Ruby Ridge, to the land her family still owns. All that remains of the family's modest home is the foundation, she said.
 
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The article leaves out some key points.

The FBI wanted Randy Weaver to infiltrate a local white supremacist group and he refused.
So the FBI concocted this goofy entrapment scheme where by an informant would buy two shotguns from Weaver and asked him to cut the barrels 1/4 inch below what was legal
Days later US marshalls hiding in bushes shot the family dog which caused the 14 year old to return fire killing the US marshal. The 14 year old son was killed by other US marshalls

The entire thing from start to finish was the bungling federal government.
 
The article leaves out some key points.

The FBI wanted Randy Weaver to infiltrate a local white supremacist group and he refused.
So the FBI concocted this goofy entrapment scheme where by an informant would buy two shotguns from Weaver and asked him to cut the barrels 1/4 inch below what was legal
Days later US marshalls hiding in bushes shot the family dog which caused the 14 year old to return fire killing the US marshal. The 14 year old son was killed by other US marshalls

The entire thing from start to finish was the bungling federal government.
A few more things, they changed his court date without telling him until after the new court date. He had every intention of showing up, but they fucked him over making him think he was losing everything. Oh and that friend of his that shot the US Marshall? Not only did he not get charged for it, he actually sued the government and won. He literally got paid for killing a fed.
 
After Ruby Ridge, federal agents laid siege to the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas. It ended violently after 51 days on April 19, 1993, when a fire destroyed the compound after an assault was launched, killing 76 people.
Kinda glossing pretty hard over the fact that the ATF fucked up (lol, it was on purpose) exactly the same way, ie they tried to ensnare Koresh in another retarded too-clever-to-work arrest scheme that was totally unnecessary. When that failed, they then seiged the church and eventually set it on fire, killing 76 people including 25 kids and two pregnant women.
Then the ATF posed for pictures with the charred, still smouldering skeletons of infants and children like they were big game trophies.
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Then they have the temerity to ask 'lol why u no trust gunberment?'
 
Kinda glossing pretty hard over the fact that the ATF fucked up (lol, it was on purpose) exactly the same way, ie they tried to ensnare Koresh in another retarded too-clever-to-work arrest scheme that was totally unnecessary. When that failed, they then seiged the church and eventually set it on fire, killing 76 people including 25 kids and two pregnant women.
Then the ATF posed for pictures with the charred, still smouldering skeletons of infants and children like they were big game trophies.
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Then they have the temerity to ask 'lol why u no trust gunberment?'
Not correcting, just going into how fucking inept the feds were.

David Koresh had a known routine; even the local sherriff was like "He goes for a morning run by himself along this route." But the feds wanted a spectacle and couldn't even fucking arrest a dude with a know pattern where he steps outside his "compound," and alone. This wasn't Osama hiding up in some rural place and people don't know what's what, the dude went outside every fucking day, and they couldn't even do that shit right.
 
RIP you glorious sperglord.

Now you can blow up a federal building (in heaven (in minecraft)).
That might be fun but I don't think it's what he wanted. Was he ever violent--in a criminal sense--before glowies started murdering his family?

A few more things, they changed his court date without telling him until after the new court date. He had every intention of showing up, but they fucked him over making him think he was losing everything.
The version I read said he didn't intend to show up, but it doesn't change the completely ridiculous actions taken by the government.

For those not familiar with the case, and I only have a surface understanding, Weaver did three things wrong:
  1. An ATF informant paid him to shorten a couple shotgun barrels and showed him where to make the cuts. These cuts were 1/4 inch shorter than allowed on normal shotguns, requiring registration and a $200 tax. Weaver didn't file the paperwork or pay the tax.
  2. He refused to be an informant against the Aryan Nations, a white separatist group he and his wife had visited several times. After that, he was charged with the offense in 1.
  3. He missed a court date, which might not have been his fault.
In response, the government deployed an armed task force against him that would make JSOC jealous. Snipers, overflights by military intelligence, remote listening devices, psyops, and the loosest rules of engagement you'll see outside Troops In Contact. All for a nonviolent offender. A guy who skipped some paperwork and didn't pay $400 in taxes.

After killing his kid, his wife, and his doggo, the FBI tried to cover up their culpability. The chief of the violent crimes section took the fall and was sentenced to 18 months (the same as Weaver's sentence). More of them should have been punished.
 
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