Copyright 1991 Gannett Company Inc.
USA TODAY
June 5, 1991, Wednesday, FINAL EDITION
SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 3A
LENGTH: 679 words
HEADLINE: Mail-Bomb murder trial opens;
2 killed in 1989 explosions
BYLINE: Kevin T. McGee
DATELINE: ST. PAUL, Minn.
BODY:
Walter Leroy Moody Jr. went on trial Tuesday in what a prosecutor called the
racially motivated mail-Bomb deaths of a federal judge and a civil rights lawyer.
Prosecutor Howard Shapiro told the 12 jurors and four alternates, including one
black, that Moody's failure to get a 1972
Bomb conviction overturned triggered in him a hatred for blacks, whom he saw as
able to get action in court.
''As the details are pieced together, you will hear the story of one man
responsible for the awful and awesome carnage,'' Shapiro said in opening
arguments.
Moody, 57, of Rex, Ga., is charged with the 1989 deaths of 11th U.S. Circuit
Court Judge
Robert Vance of Mountain Brook, Ala., and civil rights lawyer Robert Robinson, an alderman
in Savannah, Ga.
''He saw Vance and Robinson as part of a system that guaranteed rights for some
while denying others,'' Shapiro said. ''He saw the NAACP as enforcing double
standards.''
Vance was targeted because ''he championed black civil rights'' in his rulings
and Robinson because he did civil rights legal work, Shapiro said.
Vance, who was white, was killed Dec. 16, 1989, by a package mailed to his
home. Robinson, who was black, died two days later after opening a package sent
to his office.
A 71-count indictment also charges Moody with injuring Vance's wife, Helen, and
mailing threats to 17
federal judges in Georgia, Alabama and Florida,
bombs to NAACP offices in the South and death threats to civil rights officials.
If convicted, Moody faces up to life in prison.
The prosecution's case includes letters sent to judges reading in part:
''Judge: Americans for a Competent Federal Judicial System shall assassinate
you because of the federal court's calloused disregard for the administration
of justice.''
Defense lawyer Edward Tolley said in his opening statement that there were
significant flaws in the government's case, including that no witness would
testify to having seen Moody mail
Bomb packages.
The trial was moved after all federal judges in the 11th Circuit - Alabama,
Georgia and Florida - disqualified themselves and the defense argued Moody
couldn't get a fair trial in the South.
The trial is being conducted under tight
security - newly installed metal detectors at courthouse entrances and a
bolstered U.S. marshals staff including sharpshooters on the courthouse roof.
No threats have been received.
Moody was diagnosed in 1967 with psychiatric problems, Tolley confirmed before
the trial began. Tolley also said before the trial that he urged Moody to plead
insanity, but Moody wouldn't.
''He sees insanity as an admission of guilt,'' the lawyer says.
Moody, a literary agent, became a suspect in January 1990 after investigators
noticed similarities between the mail
bombs and a
Bomb he was convicted of possessing in 1972. The failure to get that conviction
overturned is what led to his frustration and mail-Bomb attacks, Shapiro said.
Investigators were led to a Chamblee, Ga., house where Moody stored belongings,
and found what they call a prototype of the 1989
bombs.
Eventually,
agents wiretapped Moody's home and cars. According to court documents, the
wiretapping revealed Moody whispering to himself, ''Now you've killed two
people. Now you can't pull another bombing.''
Before Moody's indictment, the investigation focused on Enterprise, Ala., junk
dealer Wayne O'Ferrell after the typing on threatening letters reportedly
matched a typewriter owned by O'Ferrell.
Under news media scrutiny, the FBI interviewed O'Ferrell, searched a lake on
his property and confiscated numerous items from his warehouse. He has since
been cleared.
THE SUSPECT
GRAPHIC: PHOTOS; b/w, AP (2); PHOTOS; b/w, WUSA-TV (2)
CUTLINE: ON TRIAL: Walter Leroy Moody Jr. arrives at court Tuesday in St. Paul,
Minn., where he's standing trial for two mail-Bomb deaths. SCENE OF ONE CRIME CUTLINE: POLICE INVESTIGATE: Police search for
clues at Judge
Robert Vance's Mountain Brook, Ala., home. THE VICTIMS CUTLINE: VANCE: Alabama judge killed
at home Dec. 16, 1989. CUTLINE: ROBINSON: Georgia lawyer killed Dec. 18, 1989,
at work.