WHO TO KNOW
Robert Rodriguez: Rodriguez was an undercover ATF agent who had infiltrated the Mount Carmel compound. When the Davidians got wind of the initial ATF raid intended to uncover an illegal weapons stash (a local news cameraman who had been tipped off about the raid unwittingly asked Koresh’s brother-in-law for directions), Rodriguez maintains he warned his superiors to abort the operation (they denied this). He later filed a lawsuit against the ATF for conspiring to scapegoat him and won an out-of-court settlement.
Gary Noesner: Though 21 children were successfully released during the siege, this FBI chief negotiator has claimed tensions within the agency’s negotiation team stopped them from securing the release of more Davidians. In the end, Noesner also spoke of a “controlling” Koresh and the difficulty of getting through to followers in the sect leader’s power. Nevertheless, he publicly blamed the “impatience” of authorities for the event’s fatal end.
Steve Schneider: Koresh’s top lieutenant handled FBI negotiations and helped Davidians who wanted to leave. On the one hand, Schneider told media he found spiritual truth in Koresh, and some suspect him of forcing followers to stay in the compound when it started to burn. But others claim he hated Koresh for taking his wife, Judy, as his own, and was won over by negotiators. Both Koresh and Schneider were found dead from bullet wounds — one theory is that Schneider killed Koresh and then turned the gun on himself.
Timothy McVeigh: Two years to the day after the fatal Waco fire, Timothy McVeigh bombed the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma, killing 168 people. McVeigh had traveled to Waco to watch the 1993 standoff, and his legal defense centered on the bombing as revenge (McVeigh hoped to lead a revolt against what he considered an overly powerful federal government). Though right-wing paramilitary groups hailed McVeigh as a hero, Davidians didn’t support his actions. The bombing remains the deadliest domestic terrorist incident in U.S. history.