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The Unabomber Pages

Sentencing Document - 1998

 

                                                             
1                        SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA

2                  MONDAY, MAY 4TH, 1998 - 9:05 A.M.

3                              ---o0o---

4          THE CLERK:  You may remain seated.  Court is again in

5    session.   

6          THE CLERK:  Calling Criminal Case S-96-259, 

7    United States versus Theodore Kaczynski. 

8          THE COURT:  Please, state your appearance for the 

9    record.

10          MR. CLEARY:  For the Government, Robert Cleary, Steven 

11    Lapham, Steven Freccero, Douglas Wilson, Bernard Hubley.  And 

12    Mr. Freccero will be speaking on behalf of the government 

13    today. 

14          THE COURT:  Thank you. 

15          MS. CLARKE:  Judy Clarke and Quin Denvir with 

16    Mr. Kaczynski.  He's present in court, Your Honor.

17          THE COURT:  Thank you. 

18          This is the time set for pronouncement of judgment and 

19    sentence.  Is there any reason why we should not proceed with 

20    sentencing? 

21          MR. DENVIR:  No, Your Honor.

22          MR. FRECCERO:  No, Your Honor. 

23          THE COURT:  On January 22nd, 1998, defendant pled guilty 

24    to the crimes alleged in the Sacramento and New Jersey 

25    indictments.  The matter was referred to the United States 



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1    Probation Office for a presentence evaluation and report.  

2          I have read and considered the Presentence Report, the 

3    updated information for the report on restitution, which 

4    probation provided to the parties on April 20, 1998, and the

5    government's sentencing memorandum filed April 28, 1998.  

6          Counsel, have each of you received and read a copy of 

7    the Presentence Report and had an opportunity to discuss it 

8    with your prospective clients in detail?  

9          MR. FRECCERO:  On behalf of the government, we have, 

10    Your Honor. 

11          MR. DENVIR:  Yes, Your Honor. 

12          THE COURT:  Mr. Kaczynski, have you received and read a 

13    copy of the Presentence Report and discussed it with your 

14    attorney in detail? 

15          THE DEFENDANT:  Yes, I have. 

16          THE COURT:  Okay.  Counsel, are there any objections to 

17    any of the statements of material fact, sentencing 

18    classifications, sentencing guideline ranges or policy 

19    statements contained in or omitted from the Presentence 

20    Report? 

21          MR. FRECCERO:  None from the government, Your Honor. 

22          MR. DENVIR:  No, Your Honor. 

23          THE COURT:  Since there are no objections, I adopt the 

24    findings of the Presentence Report and determine them to be 

25    true and correct.  Therefore, the applicable Offense Level is 



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1    45, the Criminal History Category is I, and the Guideline 

2    Determinations are a term of Life in Prison, plus a 30 year 

3    consecutive prison sentence to that life term, plus three 

4    additional life prison terms that must be served consecutively 

5    with all other sentences and with each other. 

6          I will comply with Rule 32 of the Federal Rules of 

7    Criminal Procedure even though the sentence in this case is 

8    mandatory.  

9          Rule 32 requires me to afford defendant's counsel an 

10    opportunity to speak on the defendant's behalf prior to 

11    imposition of sentence, to address the defendant personally 

12    and determine whether the defendant wishes to make a statement 

13    and to present any information in mitigation of the sentence, 

14    to afford the attorney for the government the opportunity to 

15    speak to the court, and to address the victims personally, if 

16    the victims are present at the sentencing hearing, to 

17    determine if any of them wish to make a statement or present 

18    any information in relation to the sentence. 

19          As revealed in United States versus Smith, 893 F. Supp. 

20    187, 188, (Eastern District of New York 1995), this process is 

21    designed to help the court gauge the effects of the 

22    defendant's crimes on the victims and may also act as a 

23    catharsis facilitating quicker dissipation of bitterness over 

24    the injury or loss suffered by the victim. 

25          Probation informed me earlier this morning that the 



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1    victims wishing to speak will be introduced by the 

2    prosecution, and that they desire to make statements from the 

3    prosecutor's counsel table.  

4          Is that correct, sir? 

5          MR. FRECCERO:  Yes, Your Honor.  Some may wish to do it 

6    from the podium.  There are some who wish to sit at the 

7    prosecutor's table, if that's acceptable to the Court.

8          THE COURT:  They have three choices; the two mentioned, 

9    and they can also take the witness stand if that is their 

10    desire. 

11          Does counsel for defendant wish to speak on defendant's

12    behalf before I pronounce sentence? 

13          MS. CLARKE:  No, Your Honor. 

14          THE COURT:  Does the defendant wish to make a statement 

15    before I pronounce sentence?

16          THE DEFENDANT:  Yes, Your Honor.  

17          Your Honor, may I come to the podium? 

18          THE COURT:  You may. 

19          THE DEFENDANT:  My statement will be very brief.  

20          A few days ago the government filed a sentencing 

21    memorandum, the purpose of which was clearly political.  By 

22    discrediting me personally, they hope to discredit the ideas 

23    expressed by the Unabomber.  In reality, the government has 

24    discredited itself.  The sentencing memorandum contains false 

25    statements, distorted statements and statements that mislead



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1    by omitting important facts.  

2          At a later time I expect to respond at length to the 

3    sentencing memorandum and also the many other falsehoods that 

4    have been propagated about me.  

5          Meanwhile, I only ask that people reserve their judgment 

6    about me and about the Unabom case until all the facts have 

7    been made public. 

8          THE COURT:  Let the record reflect Mr. Kaczynski has 

9    finished making his statement and returned to counsel table.   

10          Does the government wish to make a statement before I 

11    pronounce sentence? 

12          MR. FRECCERO:  Your Honor, the United States stands by 

13    the statements it made in its sentencing memorandum, and we 

14    would submit it based on that. 

15          THE COURT:  Any victim wishing to make a statement or to 

16    present any information in relation to sentence may come 

17    forward through the prosecution following the procedure I 

18    explained earlier. 

19          MR. FRECCERO:  Your Honor, Susan Mosser, the wife of

20    Thomas Mosser who was murdered in December of 1994.  

21          THE COURT:  Miss Mosser, can you pull the microphone --  

22    Maybe counsel can help her pull the microphone closer to her.  

23          When you are ready, you may make whatever statement you 

24    want, ma'am.

25          MRS. SUSAN MOSSER:  Can I put it on this side because my 



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1    pages will be turning that way. 

2          Nails.  Razor blades.  Wire.  Pipe.  Batteries.  

3    Everyday household items.  Pack them together, explode them 

4    with the force of a bullet from a rifle, and you have a bomb.  

5    Hold it in your hand while it is exploding, as my husband Tom 

6    did, and you have unbearable pain.  

7          Not the unbearable pain the defense lamented Kaczynski 

8    would feel should he be portrayed as mentally ill, Your Honor, 

9    but the excruciating pain of a hundred nails, cut up razor 

10    blades and metal fragments perforating your heart, shearing 

11    off your fingers, burning your skin, fracturing your skull,

12    and driving shrapnel into your brain.  

13          December 10th, 1994, was the day my husband felt 

14    unbearable pain.  It was supposed to be the day my family 

15    picked out a Christmas tree.  The day we celebrated Tom's 

16    latest promotion.  Instead it was the day my husband was 

17    murdered, the day I had to tell the children "Daddy, is dead."  

18    It was unbearable pain for me to say it, and it was unbearable

19    pain for them to hear it.  Their ages were 21, 19, 13 and 

20    15-months-old. 

21          December 10th was a Saturday, but the story begins with 

22    the day before when a package was delivered to our home.  It 

23    was addressed to my husband.  I put it with the other mail on 

24    the table in the foyer.  

25          Tom was due back from a week-long business trip later 



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1    that day.  He came back tired, but he was happy to be home 

2    with us.  That evening, my daughter Kim, 13-years-old, had 

3    some friends over.  They laughed and played around the piano 

4    just feet from a bomb disguised as a package. 

5          They left, and we went to bed.  One of Kim's friends 

6    stayed over.  The next morning the baby and I were the first 

7    ones up.  Tom got up and had breakfast.  He read books to 

8    Kelly and played in her toy castle.  Our plan that day was to 

9    go buy a Christmas tree.  

10          Still in his bathrobe, Tom went to the foyer, looked at 

11    the mail, and brought one of the packages back in the kitchen 

12    where Kelly and I were standing.  He put it on the counter,  

13    and as he reached for a knife to open it, Kelly, just on a 

14    whim, bolted out of the room.  I followed unsure where she was 

15    headed.  I helped her down the step into the living room.  She 

16    wanted to have a tea party. 

17          As we started having it, a thunderous noise resounded 

18    throughout the house.  It had originated in the kitchen.  

19    Stunned, I scooped Kelly up and put her near the front door.  

20    A white mist was pouring from the kitchen doorway.  I raced 

21    through it to find out what happened.  

22          The dust settled slowly revealing the kitchen counter,  

23    but Tom wasn't standing there.  When the mist settled to the 

24    floor, a horrifying image emerged.  My husband's body, face up 

25    on the floor, his stomach slashed open, his face was partially 



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1    blacked and distorted.  Blood.  Horror.  There was no time to 

2    take it all in.  I knew he needed help. 

3          Fearing the kids would come into the kitchen, I yelled 

4    for them to get out of the house.  I dialed 911 and screamed 

5    "I need an ambulance."  I headed over to Tom, grabbing some 

6    towels and the baby's blanket she'd dropped on the floor 

7    earlier in the morning.  

8          I knelt down.  He was moaning very softly.  I wasn't 

9    sure what I could touch or where I could touch.  The fingers 

10    on his right hand were dangling just by skin.  They had been 

11    cut through the bone.  

12          I did what I could, and I held his left hand.  I told 

13    him help is coming, that he would be okay, and that I loved 

14    him. 

15          Within two minutes the police arrived.  One went to Tom, 

16    the other asked me what happened.  I started telling him, but 

17    became hysterical, my mouth saying, "Oh, my God.  Oh, my God.  

18    Oh, my God.  Oh, my God."  As I looked at Tom, my brain was 

19    telling me to shut up, but I couldn't.  The officer told me to 

20    get a grip on myself, and that was the slap in my face I 

21    needed.  I could function again. 

22          Thinking we would be going to the hospital, I finally 

23    dialed for someone to stay with the kids.  That done, I headed 

24    back for Tom.  I was told I had to get out of the house on my 

25    way over to see him, but I wanted to stay with him. 



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1          Paramedics were working on him.  I didn't want to be in 

2    their way, but I wanted Tom to know I was there.  I knelt down 

3    next to him remembering something about a pulse point behind 

4    the knee.  I felt for it behind his left leg.  There was a 

5    pounding sensation.  I realized it was my own heart. 

6          A fireman said he smelled gas then, and again asked me 

7    out of the house -- ordered me out of the house.  I stood up 

8    from where I was next to Tom and smelled it too.  Out the 

9    window I could see firemen on alert, hoses pointed at the 

10    kitchen, ready to douse it should it blow. 

11          I knew then that I had no choice.  I had to leave.  If 

12    the kitchen exploded, my children would have no one, no

13    father, no mother.  But first I needed a few things for the 

14    baby.  I grabbed the diaper bag, some formula, and headed for 

15    the cabinet where the baby bottles were.  The force of the 

16    bomb had blown the bottles out of the cabinet.  They were on 

17    the floor in a pile of glass and debris.  I left them there. 

18          The bottles themselves were plastic so they weren't 

19    broken, but I figured I might have time to tell someone to 

20    wash them out before they gave the bottle to Kelly. 

21          In the street there was organized chaos.  Fire trucks, 

22    cars, ambulances everywhere.  Fire hoses crisscrossed my lawn 

23    and driveway.  People were scurrying every which way.  I was 

24    told a medivac chopper was on its way.  It would land at the 

25    baseball field and take Tom to a trauma center.  I was so 



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1    relieved.  There was hope.  

2          But moments later it seemed like someone had pulled a 

3    plug out of the whole thing.  Everything came to a screeching 

4    halt.  It just didn't feel right.  My eyes went to the front 

5    door of my house.  "Bring him out," I was yelling inside me.  

6    The door opened, but a stretcher didn't come out.  A firemen 

7    came out.  He walked in slow motion down the steps and to the 

8    driveway.  He was not anxious to get to his destination, Your 

9    Honor.  I realized his destination was me.  

10          Before he had a chance to say it, I did.  "He's dead, 

11    isn't he," I said.  The fireman shook his head yes.  "I'm 

12    sorry," he said.  "He didn't make it." 

13          I went totally ballistic.  All these hands were coming 

14    at me.  I just wanted to run.  They calmed me down, and I knew 

15    then I had to extend this unbearable pain to my children. 

16          They were safely inside my neighbor's house and they 

17    knew very little about what was going on.  Kim had been told 

18    that Tom had cut his hand.  She called her older sister Abbey 

19    to let her know, and told her that Tom and I were going to the 

20    hospital.  

21          Abbey, concerned that Kim and Kelly might be frightened, 

22    came over.  She had to walk down our barricaded street on 

23    foot.  Abbey was not at all prepared for what she would see. 

24          When I saw her, I went over and pulled her into the car 

25    they put me in.  "Daddy's dead," I said.  "It was a bomb.  I'm 



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1    so sorry honey."  "No.  No.  No.  Not my daddy," she cried as 

2    I held her in my arms and we cried together.  

3          After absorbing the shock, her first words were concern 

4    for Kim.  And I told her that Kim didn't know yet.  I wanted 

5    to give the youngest ones a few more minutes of peace before I 

6    changed their lives forever.  

7          Someone said that Kim was starting to ask questions.  I 

8    knew my time had run out.  We headed for the neighbor's door.  

9    Someone opened it for us.  Inside I could hear the sounds of 

10    my children playing and laughing.  How can I do this to them, 

11    I thought, destroy their world.  Nothing will ever be the 

12    same.  

13          The minute we walked in, Kim knew something was wrong.  

14    The priest, the fireman, Abbey, me.  We told her Tom had been 

15    hurt.  "Fix him," she yelled.  I told her he couldn't be 

16    fixed.  It was a bomb.  He was dead.  

17          She screamed and cried and flailed around and then 

18    dropped on the floor.  I went down with her, Kelly in my other 

19    arm.  I held them both, my brokenhearted children.  They were

20    inconsolable.  Kelly didn't understand what I was saying what 

21    had happened, but she knew whatever it was, it was terrible. 

22          Kim started to hyperventilate.  We got her up.  Kelly 

23    was screaming so loudly I had to take her out of the room.  

24    There was no calming her down.  Her blanket might have helped, 

25    but that was back in the house soaked with Tom's blood. 



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1          My stepson, Timmy, learned of the news of his father 

2    over the phone.  He had a five hour drive.  A friend drove him 

3    home, and Timmy cried the whole way. 

4          The afternoon was spent answering questions, explaining 

5    what happened, describing the package, describing Tom,  

6    getting phone numbers.  

7          We thought it was a corporate conspiracy at first.  

8    Teams of experts flew up from Washington to review the 

9    evidence.  FBI, ATF, local law enforcement.  The bomb squad 

10    searched ever inch of my home for more bombs and found a

11    package which upon x-ray looked suspicious.  They warned me 

12    that they would have to detonate it.  When they did, it lifted 

13    me right off the ground.  

14          We spent the early morning hours waiting for the 

15    evidence to be collected.  They named the murderer.  It was 

16    the Unabomber.  

17          I was anxious for Tom to have last rights.  At 5:00 a.m. 

18    on Sunday we were finally able to get back into our house with 

19    a priest.  Tom was in a body bag on a gurney near the piano.  

20    We were allowed into the foyer.  We said the prayers, touched 

21    the bag and like zombies headed back to our neighbor's house.  

22          When we got back to the house, I sat in the kitchen, my 

23    head on the table.  My sister said I let a wail out of my body 

24    that sounded like it came from my soul.  I started to cry and 

25    I don't know when I stopped.  



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1          It was the worst day of my life, Your Honor.  Not only 

2    the beginning of this nightmare that is the Unabomber.  My 

3    children are bleeding from their souls.  Sometimes it's only a 

4    pin prick, sometimes it's a hemorrhage.  To lose your father 

5    this way is unfathomable.  And even after three and a half 

6    years we are still processing the horror.  If it is processed 

7    all at once, you would go jump off a bridge.  

8          Every holiday has pain.  Every Father's Day, every 

9    birthday, every graduation, every reward, every everything.  

10    We try to be strong, but every time Kaczynski perpetrates some 

11    new evil, it's another stab in our souls. 

12          My children began their life sentence without their 

13    father three and a half years ago.  For the baby, it's a 70 

14    year sentence.  For Abbey, Tim and Kim, maybe 50 years.  

15    Kaczynski will do less than that.  

16          He has ravished my children, but will suffer less for 

17    it.  For while the past is troubling me, the future troubles 

18    me too, Your Honor.  Even in a jail, a serial killer wants to 

19    kill.  And Kaczynski will use his manipulating mind to try and 

20    figure out how, if he hasn't already done that.  

21          He is diabolical, evil, cunning.  A murderer.  He has no 

22    cause except his own, and that is to kill anyone.  

23          Please, Your Honor, make this sentence bullet proof, 

24    bomb proof, if you will.  Don't let Kaczynski murder justice 

25    the way he has murdered others.  Please keep this creature out 



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1    of society forever, in every possible way.  Make this sentence 

2    as permanent for him as he has made our sentences permanent. 

3          His so-called causes are a smokescreen for his only 

4    objective, to kill anything that is alive.  Lock him so far 

5    down that when he does die, he'll be closer to hell.  That's 

6    where the devil belongs.  

7          Just one more thing, Your Honor, that I would like to 

8    say and that is this:  

9          God, thank you for letting us see this day.  It is 

10    hopefully the beginning of the end.  Bless everyone who has 

11    worked on this case.  Bless everyone who has ever been touched 

12    by this case.  Bless everyone who has ever prayed for any of 

13    us.  But most of all, God, bless our children, keep their 

14    world safe from people like this.  

15          Thank you, Your Honor. 

16          THE COURT:  You're welcome. 

17          MR. FRECCERO:  Your Honor, Dr. Lois Epstein, the wife of 

18    Dr. Charles Epstein, who was injured in June of 1993. 

19          MRS. LOIS EPSTEIN:  I have thought long and hard about 

20    what I should say to you, Ted Kaczynski, as you are the person 

21    who sent a bomb to my home in an attempt to murder Dr. Charles 

22    Epstein, a gentle and brilliant man, a man who has never done 

23    you a moment of harm, but has done the world a lot of good.  A 

24    man who has been my husband for the past 42 years and the 

25    father of our four children and the grandfather of our three 



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1    children. 

2          I speak to you today as his wife, as a mother, and a 

3    grandmother.  I am also a Harvard University educated 

4    physician's scientist.  And as such, have spent decades of my 

5    life doing experiments in my cancer research laboratory and 

6    hours of my life taking care of children who are ill in a 

7    clinic setting. 

8          Let me remind you that the construction of the bomb you 

9    sent to my husband was described in your notebooks of horror

10    and terror as Experiment Number 225.  Let me remind you that 

11    in your callous, contemptuous, quasi-scientific method you 

12    described the results of that experiment as "adequate but no 

13    more than adequate."  

14          I am so incredibly thankful that because of my husband's 

15    resilience, determination and courage, and because of the 

16    support and love of our family, and literally thousands of 

17    friends, colleagues and even strangers, that he has recovered 

18    from the physical effects of your bomb. 

19          I am also incredibly grateful that our, as then 

20    18-year-old daughter, who brought the package with the bomb 

21    into our home, decided not to open it, left the house, and so 

22    never saw what happened to her father when the bomb actually 

23    exploded in his hands. 

24          My thoughts result not only from the difficult 

25    experiences which my husband, our family, and I endured during 



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1    his long recovery, but also from the profound impact on us of 

2    the tragedies endured by the other victims of your crimes and 

3    their families. 

4          That you have been sentenced to life imprisonment 

5    without the possibility of appeal or parole is, in my opinion, 

6    almost too kind a sentence for a man who has been successful 

7    in murdering three human beings and seriously injuring an 

8    additional 22. 

9          The Bible speaks in Leviticus 24 of an eye for an eye 

10    and a tooth for a tooth.  Our tradition of Judaism rejects the 

11    literal meaning of these words in favor of a more metaphoric 

12    interpretation.  Thus, to me this concept of justice, when 

13    thought about in a symbolic way, seems to be very appropriate 

14    for you. 

15          Therefore, as you serve out your life imprisonment and 

16    your life sentence in prison, I wish the following for you in 

17    the hope that you eventually truly understand the seriousness 

18    and consequences of your crimes and how your victims and their 

19    families have suffered.  

20          Given that your victims were blinded by your bombs, may 

21    your eyes be blinded by being deprived of the light of the 

22    moon, the stars, the sun and the beauty of nature for the rest 

23    of your life; 

24          Given that your victims lost their hearing because of 

25    your bombs, may your ears become deaf as your eardrums implode 



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1    from the stony silence of your surroundings for the rest of 

2    your life; 

3          Given that your victims were maimed by your bombs, may 

4    your fingers, your hands, your arms, your legs and your body 

5    be shattered by the violence and hatred you wrought against 

6    others, the violence and hatred which have already mangled and 

7    distorted your mind; 

8          Given that your victims were killed by your bombs, may 

9    your own eventual death occur as you have lived, in a solitary

10    manner, without compassion or love.    

11          MR. FRECCERO:  Your Honor, I would introduce to the 

12    Court Dr. Charles Epstein.

13          DR. CHARLES EPSTEIN:  As far as I know, I am the only 

14    person in modern times who was targeted for death just for 

15    being a geneticist.  It's nearly five years since you, 

16    Theodore Kaczynski, attempted to kill me because I am, 

17    according to one of your letters, a genetic engineer.  

18          I do not know what your understanding of the term 

19    "genetic engineering" is, but I personally think that I might 

20    better be described as a physician and scientist who has spent 

21    his whole professional life trying to help patients and 

22    families who are confronted with a host of difficult, often 

23    tragic problems and choices.  

24          True, my tools are genetic ones, but while they're used 

25    in the service of people who need help should mark me for 



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1    death is beyond my understanding.  Perhaps it was not so much 

2    for what I did myself, but for what you thought I stood for.  

3    The use of science, genetics in my case, to try to improve the 

4    lot of mankind. 

5          Well, I must admit that is exactly what I stand for.  In 

6    your distorted view of history and the world, if we are to 

7    believe any of what you wrote in your manifesto, the use of 

8    science to improve the human condition is merely a deception 

9    aimed at ultimately enslaving and controlling society.  

10    Rather, it would appear that you would prefer mankind to exist 

11    in some blissful state devoid of science and technology. 

12          Well, I can tell you there is nothing blissful about the 

13    things I deal with on a day-to-day basis; birth defects, 

14    mental retardation, degenerative brain disease and so much 

15    more.        

16          What right then do you have hiding in your shack in a 

17    forest to try to prevent me and my kind from trying to relieve 

18    the suffering of those who are afflicted by attempting to kill 

19    me and to intimidate the others? 

20          No right at all.  You have no right at all. 

21          And even had you succeeded in killing me, it would not 

22    have advanced your cause one iota, your political agenda.  To 

23    the extent that you really were trying to make some sort of 

24    statement about the potential problems engendered by science 

25    and technology, your murderous approach doomed you to failure,



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1    and fail you did.  And no matter how much you sit in prison 

2    and write, fail you will. 

3          Greek tragedies are characterized by hubris and nemesis.  

4    We both learned this at Harvard, I'm sure.  Hubris, sometimes 

5    defined as an overweening pride, you have plenty enough of 

6    that, and assuredly your nemesis has come.  But there is no 

7    Greek tragedy at work here because the tragic figure was 

8    always someone with nobility of character.  And that is what 

9    made his ultimate fall tragic.  

10          Both your words and actions have shown us that this is 

11    not what is at work in your case.  But there has been tragedy 

12    enough associated with your actions, real life tragedy 

13    involving families who do -- who do possess the nobility of 

14    character that you lack.  Tragedy visited upon them for no 

15    fault of their own.  Wives whose husbands were murdered, 

16    children who lost their fathers, relatives and friends who 

17    lost their loved ones.  These are tragedies that will last a 

18    lifetime.  

19          And for those who have survived your murderous attempts, 

20    there has been, to be sure, pain and disfigurement, but that 

21    is really the least of it.  There is the knowledge of the 

22    terrible effects that your actions have had upon their wives

23    and children and friends and loved ones.  There is the fearful 

24    knowledge that you are so indiscriminate and callous in how 

25    you attempted to kill them, that you did not care whom you 



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                                                                20

1    placed at risk.  

2          On most any other evening than June 22nd, 1993, my 

3    daughter, who brought in your bomb from the mailbox, and my 

4    wife, would have been standing next to me as I opened my 

5    mail.  

6          Your defense lawyers would have us believe that you did 

7    not really know what you were doing, or if you did, that you 

8    couldn't stop yourself from doing it.  

9          Having sat in this courtroom during the several sessions 

10    in which you very nicely managed to throw the proceedings into 

11    an uproar, and having read and heard, as we all, what you 

12    wrote with your own hand, I reject the notion that your mental 

13    state, whatever label's put on it, somehow justifies or 

14    excuses or even explains what you did.  

15          In fact, I feel that such an assertion does an enormous 

16    disservice to the thousands of people with psychiatric 

17    illnesses who manage to conform to the norms of society.       

18          However, the repeated assertion of mental illness did 

19    have one effect which has a severe impact on those whom you 

20    attacked and on their families.  By some convoluted form of 

21    logic, you were portrayed as the victim, the victim of a 

22    system of justice thirsting for your blood, of prosecutors who 

23    would see a deranged man put to death.  

24          What a message.  Theodore Kaczynski the victim.  

25          And what of Gil Murray and Hugh Scrutton and Thomas 



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                                                                21

1    Mosser, all of whom were destroyed, literally demolished by 

2    your bombs?  What of their wives and children who forever will 

3    be alone?  What of all the rest of us?  

4          Somehow all were forgotten in the clamor for a plea 

5    bargain that didn't even exist.  In the end, you took a plea 

6    bargain.  In the end you showed that you would rather save 

7    your own neck than even take the risk of dying for ideas for 

8    which you killed or attempted to kill, or at least you said 

9    you killed. 

10          But we're beyond all of that now.  The truth is out.  

11    You did everything you were accused of and more, and you did

12    it in cold blood.  Despite all of the attempts to suppress the 

13    evidence, even to the bitter end, the story is out.  And the 

14    whole world knows just who and what Theodore Kaczynski is. 

15          So as I'm frequently asked when we leave the courtroom 

16    today, will justice have been served?  

17          I do not really know how to answer that questions -- 

18    that question.  With crimes as egregious as yours, carried out 

19    as they were without any sense of remorse or compassion, I'm 

20    not sure that there can ever really be true justice.  And for 

21    those who are dead and those whom they leave behind, no 

22    punishment can repair their losses.  

23          I'm afraid, therefore, that we have to settle for an 

24    imperfect justice, one that will put a stop to your reign of 

25    terror, that will give you the rest of your life to consider 



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                                                                 22

1    the evil of your actions, and that will permit your victims to 

2    go on with their lives as best they can. 

3          Thank you. 

4          MR. FRECCERO:  Your Honor, Dr. David Gelernter could not 

5    attend today.  He did ask if I would read to the Court a 

6    statement on his behalf. 

7          THE COURT:  Permission is granted. 

8          MR. FRECCERO:  The statement says:  

9          "I'm grateful to the FBI and the prosecutors and will 

10    always remember them and be inspired by their dedication.  

11    They did their job, but we failed to do ours, we, the American 

12    people, and our legal system in this court.  

13          When an evil man destroys what is priceless out of the 

14    lowest, cheapest, ugliest motives, to get attention, be 

15    famous, be a star, and does it in the most cowardly 

16    conceivable way, the only decent response is unqualified 

17    revulsion.  

18          We ought to have said your cowardness and evil shame 

19    every human being.  We ought to have said it right out with 

20    absolute clarity, with no waffling and no equivocation.  

21    To make this unequivocal declaration, we ought to have 

22    condemned the murderer to death.  

23          Imposing a death sentence isn't easy.  It never was.  

24    And for us today it is especially difficult.  Murdering people 

25    with bombs is easy, but doing the right and decent thing is 



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                                                               23

1    usually hard.  

2          We ought to have done it anyway, ought to have screwed 

3    up our courage and resolution and done it for the good of the 

4    country and out of our duty to the three murdered men.  

5    We were called upon to speak up loud and clear on the topic of 

6    terrorists and murder, but we failed to do it.  We

7    took the easy way out.  

8          But we've decided to let him live, so let him be our 

9    living symbol of cowardice and evil.  He gives us a chance to 

10    look cowardice and evil in the face, forces us to grasp what 

11    is almost ungraspable, that a man exists who has dedicated his 

12    life to creating misery, who prides himself on being in the 

13    same line of work as plague and cancer, creator of suffering, 

14    of widows and orphans and pain and death.  

15          Looking at him reminds us that there is nothing easier 

16    than creating misery.  There is no trick to it.  Looking at 

17    him reminds us that nothing is easier than to injure or kill a

18    man if you are cowardly enough to hide while you do it.  He 

19    reminds us that killing is cheap and easy.  It's no 

20    achievement to create orphans, no big deal to create widows.  

21    They are easily created. 

22          I hope we always remember the men he murdered and the 

23    misery he caused and the happiness he took away.  Evil will 

24    always exist, but we ought to take this occasion to reaffirm 

25    that we will never accept it.  We will always fight it.  



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


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1          I'm grateful to the man's brother for his heroic 

2    decency.  I'm especially grateful to the FBI and the 

3    prosecutors for their devotion, integrity and moral

4    seriousness, and for attempting to do what was right.  And I 

5    hope we go on fighting this man and the cowardice, misery and 

6    evil he stands for.  And God willing, that we beat them 

7    somehow in the end." 

8          Your Honor, I would introduce Gary Wright who was 

9    injured in Salt Lake City in February of 1987. 

10          MR. GARY WRIGHT:  Your Honor, People of the Court, and 

11    Fellow Victims, good morning.  It's good to see you. 

12          I have waited for over eleven years for this moment.  In 

13    all that time I've wondered what I would say, and I tried to 

14    prepare myself for the barrage of emotions that would overcome 

15    me when I was finally able to look in the eyes of the man who 

16    tried to kill me, when at last I could try to place some 

17    closure on an event that so dramatically changed my life and 

18    the lives of the people I love. 

19          My name is Gary Wright.  I'm the eleventh victim of the 

20    Unabomber, who is now known as Theodore Kaczynski.  

21          As you look at me today, you do not see the physical 

22    wounds that were inflicted as a result of razor sharp pieces 

23    of metal and debris that were moving over 20 thousand feet per 

24    second.  

25          You do not see the trauma, the nerve damage, 



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                                                                25

1    lacerations, or physical restrictions that were inflicted.     

2          And unless you are recipient of one of Mr. Kaczynski's 

3    devices, you will never comprehend the hardships of learning 

4    to live with permanent physical impairment and the emotional 

5    pain associated with these types of injuries. 

6          The bomb that I picked up was a carefully disguised 

7    handmade weapon of death and destruction that Mr. Kaczynski 

8    personally placed at my business with a single intent, to kill 

9    whoever happened to be passing by with enough curiosity to 

10    stop and pick up an object that through its very nature seemed 

11    out of place. 

12          The physical injuries that I received were spread across 

13    my entire body and are consistent with what you would expect 

14    to occur when a bomb explodes.  

15          I required three separate surgeries to try and 

16    reconstruct nerves and to move tendons in my left arm and 

17    hand.  I had extensive plastic surgery to my face.  And 

18    hundreds of metal and wood fragments were moved from areas 

19    throughout my body.  To this day, I still remove pieces of 

20    shrapnel that continue to rise from below the surface of the 

21    skin. 

22          Some of the life-long side effects caused by my injuries 

23    are I have no feeling in the lower left half of my left arm 

24    and hand, and permanent nerve and muscle damage prevents 

25    lateral motion in my fingers.  



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                                26

1          I cannot feel areas of my lower lip, and I have an 

2    extremely painful and constant condition called thoracic 

3    outlet syndrome, which is leakage of the electrical impulses 

4    from your nerves and the surrounding muscle tissue. 

5          For a moment I would like you to set aside the physical 

6    injuries and concentrate on an even greater injustice, the 

7    emotional and psychological damage that was caused by the 

8    terroristic actions of Mr. Kaczynski.  

9          Imagine what it is like to constantly wonder what would 

10    make a person want to kill you; go to work one day, bend down 

11    to pick up a piece of debris, and suddenly think you have been 

12    shot; to look down at injuries that shock you beyond belief 

13    and wonder what has happened and why; to continually search 

14    your memory for any small indiscretion or act that could 

15    trigger this kind of anger; to be overwhelmed with the 

16    feelings of rage and the heartache of knowing that you will 

17    never again be the same as were you before. 

18          I lost my innocence to this man, and I fight daily to 

19    find the carefree happiness of a child that was so unjustly 

20    taken from me.  

21          While I do have a faith, he stole my ability to fully 

22    trust the people around me, perhaps to make me a little less 

23    tolerant and a lot more cynical.  When he delivered his reign 

24    of terror, Ted inserted his insolence and unhappiness directly 

25    into my life and the lives of the people who are dearest to 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


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1    me. 

2          Unless you have lived through an incident of this type, 

3    you have no idea of the stress that is placed on a 

4    relationship, any relationship, be that brother to sister, 

5    father to daughter, or above all, husband and wife.  

6          The injured person may be concerned with the fact that 

7    they have a little less pain today or that a bodily part 

8    functions a fraction better than last week, while the loved 

9    one is worried about whether they are safe and wonders if this 

10    can and will happen again.  

11          Communication is severely tested as the constant barrage 

12    of the media and the necessity to work with the appropriate 

13    agencies begins to wear on you.  

14          You can become lonely and short-tempered because there 

15    is no way any of us can ever truly understand the very 

16    different emotions that each person is feeling.  Years later 

17    you may begin to realize that you have lived distinctly 

18    different experiences. 

19          There are many types of victims present in the courtroom 

20    today.  Webster's Dictionary defines a victim as "Someone or 

21    something killed, destroyed, sacrificed, et cetera.  One who 

22    suffers some loss."  

23          With this definition in mind, I want you to realize that 

24    there are countless people who are directly and indirectly 

25    affected by Ted's actions.  Victims like my wife and children, 



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                                                                28

1    the children of Thomas Mosser, the dreams of John Hauser, 

2    David Gelernter and all the others.  The entire country, which 

3    was held captive wondering when and where he would strike 

4    again.  

5          And finally, there is another set of victims, the people 

6    who are so often forgotten or dismissed altogether.  These are 

7    the family members of the accused.  People like the 

8    Kaczynskis, who have endured a living hell, and are no less 

9    victims than the rest of us.  

10          Realize Mr. Kaczynski has affected hundreds of thousands 

11    of people in one way or another, the most directly affected by 

12    his actions being the immediate families of the victims who 

13    received his deadly devices.  

14          As for all of the victims in this case, I hope and pray 

15    that they will be able to find comfort and continually seek 

16    ways that will allow them to heal.  

17          Ted, maybe you did accomplish something.  Through your 

18    brutality you captured the attention of an entire nation.  You 

19    spread fear and mayhem into the hearts of innocent people for 

20    a cause that only you understand.  In any terroristic act, how 

21    do you effectively determine the extent of the sacrifice that 

22    is necessary in order to satisfy your cause.          

23          Was there going to be three people, thirty people, 3000 

24    people or more?  

25          At what point would it have been to put an exclamation 



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1    point on the statement you were trying to make?  

2          Ted, I do not hate you.  I learned to forgive and heal a 

3    long time ago.  And it's because of this ability that I have 

4    found a way to go on and not become kindling to your cause.  

5          I would like to publicly thank David Kaczynski, his wife 

6    Linda, and his mother for their extraordinary act of courage, 

7    and for the way they presented and handled themselves through 

8    the entire length of this ordeal.  

9          Without their honesty, integrity and ability to do what 

10    was right, Ted would still be in a position to kill or maim

11    additional innocent victims.  They have been model citizens.  

12    When you see them, shake their hand and say thank you.  My 

13    prayers and the prayers of my family will always be with 

14    them. 

15          Your Honor, I ask you to do what is in accordance with 

16    the law of this land to ensure that Mr. Kaczynski will never 

17    be in a position to do harm to himself or others again, and 

18    ensure that a message is sent to all who desire to practice 

19    terrorism or hate crimes in any form that they will not be 

20    tolerated. 

21          Make sure that you set a precedence that will provide  

22    relief for the victims, all of the victims, not just those of 

23    us who have been physically injured, but all who have been 

24    unjustly wronged.  

25          Thank you.  



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1          MR. FRECCERO:  Your Honor, William Dennison of the 

2    California Forestry Association, he was the individual to whom 

3    the bomb was addressed that killed Gil Murray in April of 

4    1995. 

5          THE COURT:  Okay. 

6          MR. WILLIAM DENNISON: 

7          Your Honor and People of the Court, I would like to make 

8    a short statement and then a combined statement for CFA staff, 

9    if I may, please?

10          THE COURT:  Permission granted. 

11          MR. WILLIAM DENNISON:  I might add, I've lost any 

12    composure I thought I might have had coming into this based on 

13    what I heard from the witness just previously, and I thank 

14    you for what you said.  I agree with everything that you have 

15    said. 

16          At the same time, I have watched you, Ted Kaczynski.  

17    You're not remorseful.  And for that I'm sorry.  I'm sorry for 

18    you.  And I'm sorry for the other victims that you've shown no

19    remorse.  

20          You deserve a greater punishment than you are going to 

21    be given.  To be put into a ten foot by twelve room without 

22    visitors is no punishment for you.  That was your chosen 

23    lifestyle.  The greatest punishment that you could have, and 

24    that I would wish for you personally, is to be put away and 

25    never heard or seen again ever. 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


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1          This statement is made on behalf of myself, William M. 

2    Dennison, past President of California Forestry Association 

3    and the CFA, California Forestry Association, staff who worked 

4    for Gil Murray at the time of his death. 

5          Your Honor, we appreciate the opportunity to be before 

6    the court today.  Our presentation is not intended to 

7    influence the sentencing decision, but rather to emphasize an 

8    important part of the case that first became evident in the 

9    guilty plea. 

10          We come before you as a means of presenting our views 

11    and concerns to the court and to others who may be able to 

12    assist in minimizing future terrorism because we believe that 

13    there is a tie between Kaczynski's last two bombings and those 

14    actions of existing eco-terrorists which threaten families, 

15    businesses, communities and even threaten our nation. 

16          We submit to you that although Kaczynski's early actions 

17    to maim and kill may have been attributed to his 

18    anti-technology philosophy, he ended his era of terrorism as 

19    an eco-terrorist by murdering Gil Murray and Thomas Mosser. 

20          Since April of 1995, when CFA President, husband, 

21    father, brother, and friend Gilbert Murray was murdered, we 

22    have been searching for answers to such questions as why would 

23    someone send a bomb to our office?  Since the package was 

24    addressed to me, my questions were even more personal.  But 

25    why would someone send a bomb into an office where anyone or 



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1    everyone could be killed? 

2          Those who are surviving victims, their families and the 

3    families of those three who were killed by Ted Kaczynski may

4    never know why we were the chosen target.  His diaries have 

5    displayed Kaczynski's desire to kill a scientist, to kill a 

6    computer expert, a government official, and to kill a business 

7    big shot. 

8          He had written in one of his journals that "Revenge 

9    attempts have been gobbling up much of my time, impeding other 

10    work."  "But, I must succeed, I must get revenge," he said.  

11    He had to get revenge against someone.  He had to find someone 

12    to blame for his belief that the industrial revolution and its 

13    consequences have been a disaster for the human race.  He 

14    bemoaned the fact that science had greatly increased the life 

15    expectancy, that life had been rendered "unfulfilling" and 

16    that the result has been, and I quote, "severe damage on the

17    natural world."  This theme closely parallels that of 

18    eco-terrorists.  

19          His solution was not to conduct a political revolution 

20    to overthrow the government, but the total disruption of,

21    quote, ". . . the economic and technological basis of the 

22    present society."  This is also the main thrust of 

23    eco-terrorism. 

24          In his book, Eco-terrorism - The Violent Agenda To Save 

25    Nature, Ron Arnold states, and I quote, "My point is always 



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1    the same.  This is not to blame radical environmentalists as a 

2    whole for the Unabomber.  This is to show that the apocalyptic 

3    beliefs shared by the Unabomber and radical environmentalists 

4    can be used to justify desperate acts by anyone -- the 

5    preaching of hate for industrial civilization is an incitement 

6    to violence."

7          Ron Arnold goes on to say, and I quote again, "This is 

8    to declare that radical environmentalists have a First 

9    Amendment right to their extreme rhetoric, no matter how 

10    reprehensible, no matter who may use it to kill or maim or 

11    coerce or intimidate."

12          "But the public has a similar right," he says, "to 

13    scrutinize every word they say for its influence on criminal 

14    behavior."  "And a right to prosecute every desperate act that 

15    flows from their extreme rhetoric and apocalyptic beliefs."  

16          We add today that law enforcement agencies have the 

17    obligation also to scrutinize every word of these groups and 

18    to prosecute every desperate act that flows from their extreme 

19    rhetoric as well.  

20          I believe that my name on Kaczynski's experimental bomb 

21    Number 245 was symbolic.  The bomb was meant for anyone and 

22    everyone who believes in free enterprise and technological 

23    progress.  

24          Ted Kaczynski, thankfully, will be locked up and away 

25    for the rest of his years on this earth.  However, even though 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                                34

1    he may be totally responsible for the bombs and killings, 

2    there are reasons to believe he was influenced by radical 

3    environmental organizations.  Kaczynski's boasting to Earth 

4    First of the maiming of individuals and the killing of 

5    Gil Murray is an example, and I quote what he said to them:    

6          "This is a message from FC.  The FBI calls us Unabom. 

7    We are the people who recently assassinated the president of 

8    the California Forestry Association."  

9          Prior to that, following the killing of Thomas Mosser, 

10    he wrote to Earth First again and said:

11          "As for the Mosser bombing . . . our attention was 

12    called to Burson-Marsteller by an article that appeared in 

13    Earth First."  

14          It's now known that the evidence found by the 

15    government -- was found by the government that Ted Kaczynski 

16    attempted to communicate with radical environmental groups to 

17    use them in support of his murderous activities.  The 

18    following evidence was presented by the prosecution, and from 

19    that I quote:

20          "Furthermore, during the search of the defendant's 

21    cabin, the government found a letter written to Earth 

22    First!ers.  Its title was 'Suggestions for Earth First!ers 

23    from FC.'"  

24          Brent Smith, Associate Professor of Criminal Justice and 

25    Sociology in the Department of Criminal Justice at the 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


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1    University of Alabama states on page 27 and 129 in his 1994 

2    book Terrorism In America, and I quote:

3          "Environmental extremism may become common fixture in 

4    American Terrorism during the next decade."  "Until law 

5    enforcement agencies develop the necessary information to 

6    combat this type of terrorism, environmental terrorists may 

7    contribute a unique brand of violent extremism well into the 

8    21st century."  

9          We know that Ted Kaczynski killed three men and injured 

10    23 others.  I can tell you, Kaczynski, that you maimed the 

11    hearts and souls of many others.  If that was your intent, you 

12    accomplished that.  And again, I'm sorry for you.  

13          The capture of Ted Kaczynski was a miracle that may not 

14    have happened except for the publication of Kaczynski's

15    manifesto and the subsequent intervention of his brother.  We 

16    are thankful and appreciative to David Kaczynski.  

17          However, the FBI and this court must not turn their 

18    backs on the facts that still exist.  There are groups today 

19    who still espouse the beliefs of Ted Kaczynski.  

20          As an example, David Barbarash and Darren Thurston were 

21    charged in March 1988 in Vancouver, British Columbia, of 27 

22    counts of mailing an explosive or object with intent to do 

23    bodily harm.  While in an Edmonton jail waiting a hearing on 

24    an earlier conviction of vandalizing a university animal 

25    laboratory, Barbarash wrote articles for the Earth First! 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                               36

1    Journal.  In one he urged fellow eco-terrorists, and I quote:

2    "Be tribal.  Go for the jugular."  

3          We don't know how many others like Barbarash and 

4    Thurston have adopted Kaczynski's views.  It's crucial, 

5    though, that the public understand how these views can lead to 

6    crimes, such as those of Barbarash and Thurston.  Therefore, 

7    we believe that it is essential that all the materials found 

8    in Kaczynski's cabin be made public.  

9          We believe this is important, Your Honor, that 

10    understanding the connection between his philosophy and his 

11    activities may help many thousands of others guard against 

12    similar crimes that may be directed at them.  

13          Therefore, I respectfully urge the court, Your Honor, to 

14    open all the Kaczynski materials, including the decoded 

15    journals, to public scrutiny in the expectation that valuable 

16    public safety information may be obtained and used to save

17    many lives.  Academician analysts will certainly be able to 

18    draw a more accurate picture of the mind of a killer and the 

19    connections to eco-terrorism if the original materials are in 

20    their hands.  

21          In closing, Your Honor, I again wish to thank the court, 

22    the prosecution, the FBI, for the part each has played in 

23    bringing closure to this case which has had an ever lasting 

24    impact on our lives and that of many, many others. 

25          There is an overriding need for continued vigilance also 



          CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


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1    against crimes committed by those other than Ted Kaczynski, 

2    and we thank you.  

3          MR. FRECCERO:  Your Honor, Nicklaus Suino, who was 

4    injured in November of 1985.

5          MR. NICKLAUS SUINO:  Thank you for this opportunity, 

6    Your Honor.

7          THE COURT:  You're welcome. 

8          MR. NICKLAUS SUINO:  My name is Nicklaus Suino, and I

9    was in Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1985.  I opened a package that 

10    was addressed to Dr. James McConnell.  Dr. McConnell passed 

11    away a few years ago, otherwise I expect he would be here. 

12          Following up all these great people is going to be 

13    difficult, but I'm going to say a few things about my own 

14    injuries and then urge you to take a course of action that may 

15    be difficult. 

16          Among the select group of people in this room, those who 

17    have opened explosives sent by Mr. Kaczynski, I was relatively 

18    lucky.  Others have lost fingers, limbs or even lives, while I 

19    received only minor injuries. 

20          On my left arm and my belly I was cut in many small 

21    places.  I was bruised and burned.  I have since healed. 

22          Because of the loud sound of the explosion inside the 

23    house, I lost my hearing almost totally that day.  I had some 

24    degree of difficulty hearing for about three months, with odd 

25    sounds and vibrations in my ears from time to time until my 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


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1    hearing returned to normal.  

2          The single most unpleasant part of the whole experience 

3    for me was having my eyes washed out at the hospital.  I was 

4    told that I had gun powder and paper particles in my eyes, and 

5    they needed to be cleaned out. 

6          A nurse washed them out with saline.  The process 

7    consisted of me lying on my back with my head resting over the 

8    edge of the hospital sink.  A long plastic tube ran down from 

9    a bag of saline solution which was suspended from a hook above 

10    me.  

11          The nurse held the eyelids of one eye open with one hand 

12    while she ran the saline down into my eye with the other.  And

13    an entire bag of saline was used in each eye.  That was one of 

14    the most unpleasant experiences I have ever experienced. 

15          But my emotional injuries have taken a little longer to 

16    heal.  Of course I developed a fear of opening packages.  

17    Strongest triggers of that fear were packages that were 

18    roughly the same size, shape and color as the one from the 

19    Unabomber.  But any package made me nervous. 

20          I would never have opened a package that was unexpected, 

21    and even today, I won't open a package unless I know who it is 

22    from.  

23          Loud noises and camera flashes bothered me for a couple 

24    of years after the incident, but that reaction gradually 

25    faded. 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                                39

1          I am probably no more shocked by loud noises than I was 

2    before opening Mr. Kaczynski's device. 

3          The long-term effects of opening a package bomb have 

4    been noticeable.  Believe me, I wouldn't attempt to compare my 

5    own situation with that of those victims who were severely 

6    injured.  I know I'm much better off.  

7          Still it was probably the first time in my life I 

8    realized I could die at any time.  Of course, I knew it 

9    intellectually before that, but to really feel it emotionally 

10    at age 25 is quite a shock. 

11          I'm less trusting now, especially of strangers.  My 

12    opinion about people now is there are some out there who 

13    really aren't good people, who will hurt you if they are given 

14    the chance.  

15          Maybe that's realistic, not suspicious.  But I didn't 

16    come around to that view until I was forced to by being one 

17    victim of a terrorist attack. 

18          Theodore John Kaczynski has admitted on paper to being 

19    the Unabomber.  In his plea agreement with the U.S. 

20    Government, he admitted to each incident.  Some of his spots 

21    and plans are contained in the settlement documents.  There is 

22    no doubt in my mind that he's the man who sent the package I 

23    opened in 1985. 

24          He will pay society for his crimes by spending the rest 

25    of his life in jail.  Some people have asked me if I hoped for 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                                40

1    the death penalty.  My answer is this:  If there was ever a 

2    model candidate for the death penalty, Mr. Kaczynski is that 

3    candidate.  He committed multiple, ruthless crimes.  He showed

4    cowardice, cunning and disregard for human life.  I would have 

5    shed not a single tear had he been executed. 

6          However, the most important goal for me in seeing him 

7    prosecuted was to ensure that he is unable to send his 

8    dangerous packages to anyone else.  That goal has been 

9    accomplished. 

10          I'm sure those who have lost a loved one or lost 

11    significant use of their bodies have stronger feelings than I 

12    do.  For myself, considering this matter from a personal 

13    viewpoint, I don't wish him dead.  

14          I'm not really sure if he understands the nature and 

15    gravity of his crimes, or relates them to his punishment in 

16    the way you or I would do.  And truthfully, wishing somebody 

17    dead, however evil they may be, is not an easy thing. 

18          In fact, I feel sorry for him.  Imagine being as 

19    isolated from the rest of the human race as he is.  What could 

20    go so wrong it would make a person lash out randomly sending 

21    explosives to people he's never met.  

22          How lonely he must have been then, and how lonely he 

23    must be now having no friends, living with a hatred for 

24    society so deep that he is driven to kill. 

25          Imagine being so despicable that your own brother feels 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                               41

1    morally bound to turn you in to the police.  Imagine living in 

2    the squalor this man lived in in his little cabin in the 

3    woods.  

4          He has nobody and nothing now except his writing, which 

5    is fairly well tailored, but empty of any real meaning, human 

6    emotion or warmth.  

7          He has actually become the very thing he once seemed to 

8    fear.  Not a victim of progress, but an empty machine, devoid 

9    of conscience, like the specter of scientific progress 

10    itself. 

11          Truly Mr. Kaczynski writes not about us, not about the 

12    world, but about himself.  He must be in a living hell already 

13    so the fact that the justice system didn't send him there 

14    early bothers me not at all. 

15          Finally, this is what I have to say to my friends in

16    this room and everybody listening all over the world.  

17          I would like to say to you that revenge is an illusion.  

18    It's an empty feeling, a dark flame that gross and consumes 

19    you.  And it can replace all that is good and worthy within 

20    you.  When you finally hold it in your hand, you hold nothing 

21    but the sorrowful event that caused you to be angry in the 

22    first place.  The time you lose chasing your own anger can 

23    never be replaced.  

24          Please, don't let yourself become a victim.  Life is a 

25    struggle.  But in order to excel, in order to go on, you have 



          CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                                42

1    to do more than merely play the hand you're dealt.  You have 

2    to strive to make the most out of every day.  

3          Put revenge behind you and embrace the good richness of 

4    life.  When evil rears its head, immerse yourself in the joy 

5    of living.  If you are a carpenter, build.  If you are a 

6    fisherman, fish.  If are you a parent, raise your children. 

7          Our role here is not to dwell on evil, but to strive 

8    toward becoming better people.  The keys to enlightenment are 

9    found in every day living.  Mastery of the little things 

10    brings knowledge, then wisdom, and then finally joy.  

11          There is no time for us to go on hating Mr. Kaczynski.  

12    Don't join him in that prison cell.  Set him down.  Leave him 

13    in there to live out his days in whatever fashion he can.  

14          You and I, we have more important things to do.  When we 

15    leave here today, we can go out of here and live. 

16          Thank you. 

17          Thank you, Your Honor. 

18          THE COURT:  You're welcome. 

19          MR. FRECCERO:  Your Honor, I believe that is all -- 

20    those are all the individuals who had expressed an intention

21    to address the court.  

22          THE COURT:  If there is another victim of the offenses 

23    present who wishes to make a statement or otherwise address 

24    the court, please indicate that by raising your hand. 

25          (Brief pause.)



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                                43

1          Let the record reflect there is no response. 

2          Is the question of sentencing submitted for my 

3    determination? 

4          MR. DENVIR:  Yes, Your Honor.

5          MR. FRECCERO:  Yes, Your Honor.  

6          THE COURT:  It is the judgment of the Court that the 

7    defendant, Theodore John Kaczynski, shall be imprisoned for 

8    crimes he committed and which were charged in Sacramento 

9    Criminal Action Number S-96-259, hereinafter referred to as 

10    the Sacramento Action, and in New Jersey Criminal Action, now 

11    in this district, as Criminal Action Number S-98-21, 

12    hereinafter referred to as the New Jersey Action.  

13          The defendant is hereby committed to the custody of the 

14    Attorney General of the United States or her authorized 

15    representative for imprisonment on Count One of the Sacramento 

16    Action for a maximum prison term of life under the provisions 

17    of Title 18, United States Code Section 4205(a).  

18          Further, pursuant to the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, 

19    the defendant is also hereby committed to the custody of the 

20    Bureau of Prisons for the service of four additional life 

21    terms on Counts Eight and Nine of the Sacramento Action and 

22    Counts One and Two of the New Jersey Action.  These four life 

23    sentences shall run concurrently with each other and with the 

24    life term imposed for Count One of the Sacramento Action. 

25          In addition, the defendant is committed to four 20-year 



          CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                               44

1    prison terms on Counts Two, Three, Five and Six of the

2    Sacramento Action.  These 20-year sentences shall be served 

3    concurrently with each other and with the life sentences 

4    imposed to this point.  

5          Moreover, pursuant to Title 18, United States Code 

6    Section 924(c), the defendant is sentenced to one 30-year 

7    prison term on Count Four of the Sacramento Action, which 

8    shall be served consecutively to all sentences previously

9    imposed.  The defendant is additionally sentenced to three 

10    consecutive life prison terms on Counts Seven and Ten of the 

11    Sacramento Action, and Count Three of the New Jersey Action.   

12          Therefore, the defendant is sentenced to a total term of 

13    imprisonment for life, plus -- excuse me -- plus 30 years to 

14    run consecutively, and three life terms to run consecutively 

15    with all other sentences and with each other. 

16          The defendant shall pay a special assessment of $650.  I 

17    find the defendant is without the ability to pay a fine in 

18    addition to the restitution that will be required, therefore 

19    the requirement to pay a fine is waived. 

20          Pursuant to Title 18, United States Code Section 3681, 

21    and in accordance with the Plea Agreement, it is ordered that 

22    the defendant shall forfeit all or any part of proceeds 

23    received or to be received by him, or a transferee of his, 

24    from a contract relating to a depiction of his crimes in a 

25    movie, book, newspaper, magazine, radio or television 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                                45

1    production, or live entertainment of any kind, of an 

2    expression of his thoughts, opinions, or emotions regarding

3    such crimes.  The person with whom the defendant may contract 

4    shall pay to the Attorney General of the United States any 

5    proceeds due the defendant under such contract. 

6          Pursuant to the recommendation of the Probation Office 

7    on page 52 of the Guideline Presentence Report, defendant is 

8    hereby ordered to pay restitution owed to the listed victims 

9    in the amount of fifteen million and twenty-six thousand 

10    dollars.  

11          A term of supervised release is not ordered since the 

12    sentence imposed will not allow for release at any time. 

13          Is there any further thing to cover by any party before 

14    I address your dispute on the recommendations and I confine 

15    the defendant? 

16          MR. FRECCERO:  None from the government. 

17          MS. CLARKE:  Just one moment. 

18          THE COURT:  Okay. 

19          (Brief pause while counsel confer with Defendant         

20           Kaczynski.) 

21          MR. DENVIR:  We have nothing further at this point.  You 

22    had something you said you did want to deal with at this 

23    point. 

24          THE COURT:  When you say you have nothing to cover at 

25    this point, does that indicate that you have something that 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                               46

1    you are waiting to tell me?

2          MR. DENVIR:  I don't know if you -- We have already 

3    indicated, Your Honor, we would like a recommendation as to 

4    placement.  I believe that's covered in the Presentence 

5    Report.  I didn't know if the Court was going to deal with 

6    that or not.

7          THE COURT:  I am going to deal with that.  

8          Do you want to be heard on that, or is that question 

9    submitted? 

10          MR. DENVIR:  We'll submit it, Your Honor. 

11          The reason for placement would be so that there would be 

12    some access for Mr. Kaczynski to see people he knows and 

13    people who worked on this case.  So we're asking for those 

14    placements.  

15          Submit it on that. 

16          MR. FRECCERO:  Government would submit it, Your Honor. 

17          THE COURT:  All right.  And I assume that once I resolve 

18    the question as to where he will be placed and the other 

19    dispute concerning the recommendations you have asked me to 

20    make to the Bureau of Prisons, that there is nothing further 

21    to cover and I can end the proceeding; is that correct? 

22          MR. DENVIR:  Your Honor, my understanding, the only 

23    matter open was the question of the recommendation as to 

24    placement.  I didn't know there was another recommendation 

25    that was before you. 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                                47

1          THE COURT:  The government's sentencing memorandum 

2    actually has a two-fold type of a recommendation, at least I 

3    read it as a two-fold type recommendation.  

4          They asked that I recommend that the defendant be placed 

5    -- Perhaps the government should state it because I don't have 

6    my note on that precise recommendation. 

7          MR. FRECCERO:  Yes, Your Honor.  

8          We are requesting that the Court make a recommendation 

9    to the Bureau of Prisons that Mr. Kaczynski be incarcerated in 

10    a maximum-security facility so that he can be closely 

11    monitored during the term of his imprisonment. 

12          THE COURT:  That's the recommendation I assumed was a 

13    two-fold type of a recommendation, or it's actually two 

14    recommendations in one. 

15          Does he have to only be placed in such a facility to 

16    have his activity monitored.  The monitoring activity, I 

17    thought, could occur in any federal institution. 

18          MR. FRECCERO:  Your Honor, the government -- the 

19    government is not asking this Court to make any 

20    recommendations concerning the monitoring of communications.   

21          It is our understanding that the BOP will accept any 

22    communication directly from the United States, and we intend 

23    to do that, to ask that his communications be monitored 

24    consistent with Federal Guidelines, with the CFR's on that. 

25          THE COURT:  All right. 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                                48

1          I typically make recommendations in criminal cases when 

2    there is no dispute, when I think my recommendation will be 

3    helpful to the Bureau of Prisons so far as its placement and 

4    determination is concerned. 

5          Here there is a dispute, and I question whether my 

6    recommendation could be of assistance to the Bureau of 

7    Prisons.  I know that pursuant to the parties stipulation, 

8    which may not be public at this point, but soon will be, that 

9    the parties agreed that probation could release the 

10    Presentence Report to the Bureau of Prisons sometime around 

11    April 17, 1998.  And I assume that the stipulation was reached 

12    in order to allow the Bureau of Prisons time to expedite the 

13    placement process. 

14          If I make a recommendation, then it seems to me that 

15    it's possible that the placement process could be delayed 

16    while the Bureau of Prisons considers my recommendation under 

17    Federal Law, specifically Title 18, United States Code Section 

18    3621(b)(4)(B). 

19          Further, in light of the Bureau of Prisons' expertise on 

20    prison affairs, the amount of time it has had to analyze the 

21    placement issue, and the fact that the Bureau of Prisons has 

22    unique access to information from the psychiatrist who 

23    performed the competence examination in this case, I think it 

24    has received or has available special insight to guide its 

25    placement decision in this case. 



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                               49

1          For all of these reasons, I decline to make a placement 

2    recommendation.  I think it's unnecessary. 

3          However, Title 18, United States Code Section 

4    3621(b)(4)(A) reveals that when the Bureau of Prisons has 

5    determined a suitable placement, it still considers -- I'm now 

6    quoting from the section -- "any statement by the court that 

7    imposed sentence concerning the purposes for which the 

8    sentence to prison was determined."  

9          In light of that statutory provision and in the event 

10    such a statement could assist the Bureau of Prisons in 

11    discharging its oversight functions and placement decision it 

12    may have already made, I make the following statement: 

13          Many victims and their family members suffered 

14    overwhelming losses at the hands of the defendant's bombing 

15    activities.  The defendant committed unspeakable and monstrous

16    crimes for which he shows utterly no remorse.  Therefore, I 

17    believe if he had the opportunity, he would use his 

18    resourcefullness to repeat such acts.  His crimes were vicious 

19    acts of terrorism that wreaked havoc and brought grief into 

20    the lives of many innocent people, tragically ending the lives 

21    of three and permanently scarring the lives of many others.  

22    Because of the callous nature of his crimes, the defendant 

23    presents a grave danger to society and should be incarcerated 

24    in a prison facility where he can be closely monitored to

25    prevent any future acts of violence or intimidation.  



           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347


                                                                50

1    Undoubtedly, he deserves the life sentence imposed. 

2          Therefore, the defendant is remanded to the custody of 

3    the United States Marshal for the purpose of his ultimate 

4    delivery to the Bureau of Prisons, the entity that will decide 

5    where he shall serve the sentence imposed.  

6          The matter is adjourned. 

7          (Off the record at 10:30 a.m.)

8                              ---o0o---







           CATHERINE E. F. BODENE, CSR NO. 6926 (916) 446-1347




                    THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT      

                  THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

                               -- oOo --

          BEFORE THE HONORABLE GARLAND E. BURRELL, JR., JUDGE 

                               -- oOo --  



    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,     )
                                  )
                Plaintiff,        )  
                                  )
       vs.                        )   No. Cr. S-96-259 GEB
                                  )
    THEODORE JOHN KACZYNSKI,      )
                                  )
                   Defendant.     )
    ______________________________)




                               -- oOo --



                        REPORTER'S TRANSCRIPT

                           RE:  SENTENCING 

                        MONDAY, MAY 4TH, 1998



                               -- oOo -- 









     Reported by:  CATHERINE E.F. BODENE, CSR No. 6926 




                        A P P E A R A N C E S  

                              ---o0o---



      For Plaintiff UNITED STATES OF AMERICA:

           OFFICE OF THE U.S. ATTORNEY
           650 Capitol Mall
           Sacramento, CA  95814
           BY:  ROBERT J. CLEARY
                STEPHEN P. FRECCERO 
                R. STEVEN LAPHAM 
                J. DOUGLAS WILSON
                BERNARD HUBLEY,
                      Special Attorneys to the
                      United States Attorney General


     For the Defendant:

           OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL DEFENDER
           801 "K" Street, Suite 1024
           Sacramento, CA  95814
           By:   QUIN A. DENVIR
                 Federal Defender, Eastern District of California
                 JUDY CLARKE
                 Executive Director, Federal Defenders of Eastern 
                 Washington and Idaho


                              -- oOo --  

-------------------------

 

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