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washingtonpost.com > Nation > Special Reports > Eric Rudolph


Accused serial bomber Eric Robert Rudolph is led from the Cherokee County jail by federal agents in June 2003. (Tami Chappell - Reuters)
Eric Robert Rudolph
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Eric Robert Rudolph
The capture of the alleged bomber ends one of the most intense manhunts in U.S. history.

Timeline: A Seven-Year Manhunt
On the Web: FBI's Wanted Poster

Multimedia
 Video: U.S. Attorney Robert Conrad Discusses Developments
 Video: Press Conference on Capture
 Video: Capture Ends Lengthy Manhunt
 Audio: Reporter Donald P. Baker on Search
From FindLaw
 Superceding Indictment (U.S. v. Eric Rudolph)
 Alabama Indictment: (U.S. v. Rudolph)
 Georgia Indictment: (U.S. v. Rudolph)
Background
 Carolinians Doubt Rudolph Is Hiding in Their Mountains (The Washington Post, 3/31/99)
 A Man Fades, a Manhunt Doesn't (The Washington Post, 10/27/98)
 FBI Charges Survivalist Fugitive In Atlanta, Olympic Bombings (The Washington Post, 10/15/98)
 Bomb Suspect Is Outfoxing His Pursuers (The Washington Post, 7/22/98)
 Terrorism's New Profile: The Lone Wolf (The Washington Post, 7/22/98)
 FBI Increases Reward For Bombing Suspect (The Washington Post, 5/6/98)
Rudolph To Plead Guilty To Bombings 
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
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