Steve O’Brien’s author of Redemption
Day is offering the Kindle version FREE on Amazon from April 15th
– 19th . It would be great if you could help spread the word. Check out my review.
Here is a little write up from Steve about April 19 and its
significance in Redemption Day.
April 19 has become a date marking horrific violence in this country's history.
The date is not well known like September 11 or December 7,
the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
Unlike dates that commemorate great military victories or
the end of World Wars, April 19 is about a different kind of violence.
Violence between citizens of this nation and the government
itself.
Like most traditions it began as a coincidence, but later
transitioned into a date of significance for members of sovereign citizen groups
like the Posse Comitatus.
It began in 1985. Jim Ellison was the leader of a sovereign
group called CSA (The Covenant, the Sword and the Arm of the Lord. On April 19,
1985, three hundred federal officers surrounded his compound in northern Arkansas. Ellison
surrendered and was later convicted of conspiracy and weapons charges. Aside
from traditional firearms, the federal officers rounded up hand grenades,
plastic explosives, blasting caps, land mines and even a US Army anti-tank
rocket. One of Ellison’s men, Richard Wayne Snell was charged with murder and
his execution took place ten years later as fate would have it, on April 19.
April 19, 1993 the FBI stormed the Branch Davidian complex
outside Waco Texas, killing seventy six members,
including seventeen children. David Koresh, the leader of the Branch Davidian
group was sought for illegal weapons charges, something sovereign groups
adamantly believed was not a crime, but a right. This came on the heels of
the Ruby Ridge shootings which had enraged members like Tim McVeigh. Terry
Nichols and McVeigh saw Waco
as yet another illegal intrusion by a corrupt government.
Following Waco,
April 19 became a date of significance for sovereign groups. They would use the
date as a symbol and cause to retaliate against the government.
On April 19, 1994 militia leader Linda Thompson issued a
call for sovereign citizen groups to assemble in Washington DC,
armed and in uniform. The purpose of the assembly was the forced repeal of the
Brady Bill and the arrest of Congressmen and Senators for treason. She
identified herself as the acting adjutant general of the Unorganized Militia of
the United States.
Although later rescinded, her call to arms became known as the Thompson
Ultimatum.
At nine pm April 19, 1995, CSA member, Richard Wayne Snell,
was put to death by lethal injection in Arkansas.
Twelve hours earlier, Tim McVeigh and Terry Nichols had ignited a truck bomb
outside the Murrah Federal Building
in Oklahoma City
killing 168 people.
For McVeigh and Nichols the date was not a coincidence.
This book may have been received free of charge from a publisher or a publicist. That will NEVER have a bearing on my recommendations.
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