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washingtonpost.com
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Eric Rudolph
Man who eluded federal capture for more than five years in the North Carolina woods has agreed to plead guilty to four attacks, including the deadly explosion at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. At Home, Rudolph Wins Sympathy Few people in the hamlets that dot western North Carolina are willing to firmly denounce serial bombing suspect Eric Robert Rudolph, who was apprehended in the area after one of the largest manhunts in U.S. history. From The Post
Judge Rules Rudolph Must Be Tried in Alabama First: Alleged Perpetrator of Bombings at Abortion Clinics, 1996 Olympics Will Then Face Charges in Atlanta (Post, June 3, 2003)
Is Terrorism Tied To Christian Sect?: Religion May Have Motivated Bombing Suspect (Post, June 2, 2003) Police Scour Mountains for Clues: Searchers Seek Answer to How Rudolph Survived on Lam (Post, June 2, 2003) Olympics Bombing Suspect Caught: Also Sought in Attacks on Abortion Clinics and Gay Club, Fugitive Hid for 5 Years (Post, June 1, 2003) Steered to Extremism at an Early Age: Widowed Mother And Father Figure Cast Influences (Post, June 1, 2003) A Look at the Four Bombing Attacks (Post, June 1, 2003) Carolinians Doubt Rudolph Is Hiding in Their Mountains (Post, March 31, 1999) A Man Fades, a Manhunt Doesn't (Post, Oct. 27, 1998) FBI Charges Survivalist Fugitive In Atlanta, Olympic Bombings (Post, Oct. 15, 1998) Bomb Suspect Is Outfoxing His Pursuers (Post, July 22, 1998) Terrorism's New Profile: The Lone Wolf (Post, July 22, 1998) FBI Increases Reward For Bombing Suspect (Post, May 6, 1998) © 2002-2005 The Washington Post Company |
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