SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) _ Nine years after a federal agent shot and killed the wife of white separatist Randy Weaver at Ruby Ridge, an Idaho prosecutor says he's prepared to put the case to rest.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. FILE - This Aug. 23, 1992, file photo shows Randy Weaver supporters at Ruby Ridge in northern Idaho. It's been a quarter century ...
On Aug. 21, 1992, a gun battle erupted on ridge not too far from Bonners Ferry. When it was over, a 14-year-old boy and a U.S. marshal were both dead. In the following days, a mother of four would be ...
"A federal law enforcement official called it Weaver Fever. That's what they try to avoid - this thing where something gets so blown out of proportion that people die because you're dealing with ...
It takes just two words to call it all up: Ruby Ridge. The gunfight and 11-day standoff. The deaths of a teenage boy, a suspect’s wife, a federal agent. The chasms ...
Shortly before dawn on August 21, 1992, six heavily armed U.S. marshals made their way up to the isolated mountaintop home of Randy and Vicki Weaver and their children on Ruby Ridge in Northern Idaho.
After violence in Charlottesville last August, a Washington Post article asserted that alienated right-wingers had “sparked the deadly standoff in Ruby Ridge, Idaho” in 1992. Ruby Ridge has recently ...
The Weaver family, who were at the center of the FBI standoff in 1992, moved into the home in Ruby Ridge, ID, in the 1980s and largely kept to themselves. Former US Army engineer Randy, his wife, ...
SPOKANE — It’s been a quarter-century since a standoff in the mountains of northern Idaho left a 14-year-old boy, his mother and a federal agent dead and sparked an expansion of radical right-wing ...