The Justice Department claimed that Weaver conspired to have an armed confrontation with the government. Bizarrely, the feds claimed that his
moving from Iowa to near the Canadian border in 1983 was part of that plot. After a jury found
Weaver not guilty on all major charges, federal Judge
Edward Lodge issued a lengthy catalog of the Justice Department’s and the FBI’s misconduct and fabrication of evidence in the case. A top FBI official was later sent to prison for
destroying key evidence in the case.
WASHINGTON — The former chief of the FBI's violent crimes section was sentenced to 18 months in prison Friday for destroying a report that criticized the bureau's role in the 1992 fatal shootout at a white supremacist's cabin in Ruby Ridge, Idaho.
E. Michael Kahoe, a 26-year FBI veteran, had pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice.
Kahoe, who is now retired from the FBI, was sentenced by Judge Ricardo Urbina, who could have imposed a two-year sentence. The judge also fined Kahoe $4,000 and ordered him placed on probation for two years after his release from federal prison.
In a statement immediately before the sentence was imposed, Kahoe again acknowledged his guilt and expressed remorse. He asked for leniency, however, citing what he said was his otherwise unblemished law enforcement record.
"I will always be known as the agent who obstructed justice in the Ruby Ridge incident," Kahoe told the judge. "I must live every day of my life with the realization of what I have done."
http://articles.latimes.com/1997/oct/11/news/mn-41736