Copyright 1990 The San Diego Union-Tribune
The San Diego Union-Tribune
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November 8, 1990, Thursday
SECTION: NEWS; Ed. 1,2,3,4,5; Pg. A-12
LENGTH: 385 words
HEADLINE: South is relieved by
Bomb indictment
SOURCE: AP
BODY:
Civil-rights leaders are breathing easier with theyesterday of a Georgia man in
a series of mail bombings that killed a federal judge and an NAACP lawyer and
put the South on edge just before Christmas last year.
The indictment also accuses Walter Leroy Moody Jr., a 56-year-old self-employed
editor, of sending racist and threatening letters.
He is to be arraigned in federal court today.
The bombings and threats spread a wave of pre-Christmas terror that had
lawyers, judges and civil-rights officials contacting authorities when they
received unexpected packages.
"We are relieved that federal authorities believe that a suspected perpetrator
has been identified, and cautious that no other persons are or may be
implicated," said Earl Shinhoster, Southeast director of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People.
He said the bombings
"created a climate of uneasy apprehension for many of us in the civil-rights
community that will not be easily abated even with the indictments."
Moody, for months a leading suspect in the case, was charged in the killing of
appeals Judge
Robert Vance of Mountainbrook, Ala., on Dec. 16, 1989, and the slaying of civil-rights
lawyer Robert Robinson of Savannah, Ga., two days later.
The nail-packed
bombs bore marked
similarities to one that Moody was convicted of possessing in 1972, federal
authorities said. They said all three
bombs were built by a method not used in any of more than 10,000
bombs they had examined over the years.
The indictment also accuses Moody of sending
bombs to the 11th U.S. Circuit courthouse in Atlanta -- Vance was a member of the
11th Circuit -- and to the NAACP in Jacksonville, Fla. Those two
bombs were safely defused.
In addition, Moody was charged with sending dozens of threatening letters to
NAACP officials, lawyers, judges and TV stations, and with sending a tear-gas
Bomb that went off at the NAACP's Atlanta office.
U.S. Attorney General Richard Thornburgh and FBI Director William Sessions, who
announced the indictment in Washington, said authorities believe Moody acted
alone. been speculated that racism or revenge
against the judicial system prompted the attacks. Moody is white, as was Vance.
Robinson, a Savannah city alderman who did legal work for the NAACP, was
black.