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Location: Mothership -> Ufomind Mailing List -> 1998 -> Mar -> "Dr. Jason Leigh" crashes in Waco - big time! [news]

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"Dr. Jason Leigh" crashes in Waco - big time! [news]

From: campbell@ufomind.com (Glenn Campbell, Las Vegas)
Date: Tue, 10 Mar 1998 14:42:45 -0800

"Dr. Jason Leigh," a self-promoted UFO expert associated with the
Roswell Intl. UFO Museum, made big news in Waco, Texas, on
Sunday by crashing his truck into a Veteran Administration building
and holding police at bay for 14 hours.

The articles below are from www.accesswaco.com

Other articles:
http://kwtx.cbsnow.com/prd1/now/template.display?p_who=kwtx&p_story=25185
http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/archives/1998/mar/08/030800595.html

------- Forwarded Message Follows -------

MAN BEHIND STANDOFF NOT WHAT HE APPEARED TO BE

By JEN SANSBURY, Waco Tribune-Herald staff writer
March 10, 1998

Copyright 1998 by the Waco Tribune-Herald. May not be reproduced in
any fashion without crediting the Waco Tribune-Herald newspaper.

Jason Leigh liked to put a Ph.D. behind his name.

But his phony doctorate fell away in court Monday as the man who held
police at bay outside Waco's Veterans Affairs Regional Office for 14
hours Sunday told U.S. Magistrate Dennis Green that he's still shy of
his associate's degree.

Leigh, 49, is not quite who he seems to be.

In fact, he used to be Randal Leigh Brown, born Nov. 30, 1948, in
Corsicana.

During his court appearance Monday morning, he told federal officials
he legally changed his name in 1980.

On his Internet web page, Leigh claims to have a "degree in
electronics" and appends "Dr." or "Ph.D." to his name. But Monday he
said his "electronics education" at Delgado Community College in New
Orleans did not result in a degree. He said he attended several other
universities.

Leigh apparently spent a good deal of time online. An Internet search
of Leigh's name turns up scores of references to UFOs and the
paranormal, but not a single reference to veterans' issues. Even
fellow believers appear to question Leigh.

The Ufomind Paranormal Research Index web page lists Leigh among the
"UFO researchers and witnesses whose educational credentials are
challenged by evidence to the contrary."

On the computer bulletin boards of ParaScope, a site featuring UFO and
conspiracy theory reports, he was criticized as "a person who blows a
lot of hot air."

The director of the International UFO Museum and Research Center in
Roswell, N.M., which gives Leigh the computer memory space for his
website, said he has misrepresented himself.

"Basically, we don't have any connection to him other than that he had
a UFO sighting," director Deon Crosby said. "He needed to hang his hat
on someone and I understand that he has actually claimed to be a
representative of this museum and he's not."

Leigh also purports online to be "absent any police record," but court
records show he was convicted in 1992 for carrying a 22-caliber
handgun into the Johnson County Community Credit Union. He was given a
year's probation and a $300 fine on the misdemeanor charge, said Karen
Alexander, chief deputy for court services for the Johnson County
clerk's office in Cleburne.

In writings found on the Internet, Leigh says he is a Vietnam Veteran
who served as a military policeman and Navy SEAL.

Leigh served in the U.S. Navy from November 1966 to May 1967,
according to Rick DuCharme, regional director of public affairs for
the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

"That's not long enough to even become a SEAL," said Lt. Cmdr. Hal
Pittman, director of the news desk for the Navy Office of Information
in the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.

In fact, in six months in the Navy, one could accomplish "pretty
little," Pittman said.

Neither VA nor Naval officials could confirm Monday what Leigh's rank,
specialty or assignment was in the Navy.

However, DuCharme said Leigh's assertion that the VA has lost his
claim for benefits is not true. "It's present and accounted for," he
said.

Officials have not discussed details about Leigh's complaints against
the VA, but U.S. Attorney Bill Johnston said more information will
come out Thursday during a scheduled hearing.

A federal agent close to the case said Leigh appears to have "a very
active imagination."

Tribune-Herald staff writers Brian Anderson, Jodi Wetuski and Tommy
Witherspoon contributed to this story.

=====================================================================

JUDGE ORDERS LEIGH HELD WITHOUT BOND

By BRIAN ANDERSON and TOMMY WITHERSPOON, Tribune-Herald staff writers
March 10, 1998

Copyright 1998 by the Waco Tribune-Herald. May not be reproduced in
any fashion without crediting the Waco Tribune-Herald newspaper.

A Navy veteran who said he crashed his truck into the Veterans Affairs
Regional Office Sunday because he was frustrated by federal
bureaucracy was ordered held without bond Monday.

U.S. Magistrate Dennis Green granted a request from federal
prosecutors and ordered Jason Leigh, 49, jailed at least until after a
detention hearing in Green's court on Thursday.

Local and federal officials said Leigh, who is charged with carrying a
firearm in a federal facility during the commission of a crime, was
trying to focus media attention on his problems with veterans
officials and on the plight of homeless veterans nationwide.

Leigh, a Corsicana native with a Denton address and family in
Cleburne, appeared intent on continuing that message Monday morning as
federal authorities led him into court.

"SOS. Save our soldiers," Leigh said as he was being led past a host
of television cameras. "There is no reason why millions of American
soldiers should be living in the streets."

Leigh began a 14-hour standoff with police about 6:45 a.m. Sunday,
using a cellular telephone to call police after he backed his 1984
Jeep Cherokee through a sliding glass door of the new VA building at
701 Clay Ave.

"It's a four-wheel-drive. It worked great. I love that truck," Leigh
said. "What did you expect me to do, use my head?"

The disgruntled vet apparently left his Denton apartment about 1:30
a.m. Sunday to begin the drive to Waco, authorities said. His
girlfriend called Denton police after finding three notes with
suicidal overtones taped to the front door of the apartment she shared
with Leigh, officials said.

Special Agent James Gunnels of the Federal Protective Service, the
agency responsible for the security of federal facilities, said the
notes contained "heavily veiled" threats against the VA. However, he
said the notes were not specific enough to give police advance warning
that the Waco Veterans Affairs Regional Office was Leigh's intended
target.

Gunnels said Leigh had never been identified as a security threat
before Sunday's standoff.

"We handle threats to the VA on a weekly basis, but we never had
threats from this guy before. We had never heard of this guy," Gunnels
said.

Armed with a .45-caliber Colt revolver, a 30-30-caliber Winchester
rifle and a large black backpack he claimed contained military C-4
plastic explosives, Leigh told police negotiators he wanted money and
government action to aid veterans.

According to an affidavit filed in the case by Special Agent Jeff
Brzozowski of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Leigh
demanded $750,000 from the United States and said he would blow up the
building if his demands were not met.

Twenty-one state, local and federal law enforcement agencies
surrounded the veterans building in the hours that followed,
evacuating homes and businesses within a six-block radius.

Nearby church services were canceled, and freight trains that travel
through downtown near the building were stopped for the duration of
the standoff.

Following his peaceful surrender about 8:45 p.m., bomb technicians
X-rayed the black backpack to find only a harmless purple smoke bomb
similar to those sold at fireworks stands, officials said.

Leigh reportedly detonated an identical smoke bomb inside the building
shortly after nightfall Sunday, lighting the fuse with a cigarette,
officials said. It was not clear why Leigh chose to ignite the smoke
bomb, but no damage was reported as a result of the device.

ATF Special Agent Michael Reyes said a bomb squad robot and dogs
trained to sniff out explosives were sent back into the building early
Monday, but no other explosives were found. The facility was
officially declared safe about noon.

"We can't have people coming into Waco, Texas, and threatening to blow
up a building just to make a point," Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill
Johnston said following Leigh's hearing on Monday. "That kind of
behavior won't be tolerated."

Judge Green appointed Waco attorney Jack Hurley to represent Leigh,
and Hurley asked immediately to have access to Leigh's VA records.
Hurley said he would not speculate on Leigh's competency to stand
trial until after reviewing his medical records.

Hurley also asked the judge to instruct McLennan County jail officials
to provide Leigh access to pain medications for his ailing back.

Waco police negotiator Patrick Swanton said Leigh complained of back
pain during the standoff, asking to stop talks with police about 11:45
a.m. so he could search the building for a wheelchair to sit in. Leigh
later warned police not to be alarmed as he was walking back to his
Jeep, claiming he was only fetching his walking cane.

Leigh wore an orange jail jumpsuit, was shackled with handcuffs and
leg chains and had an olive-drab blanket wrapped around his shoulders
as he shuffled to the courtroom Monday.

Leigh's brother, Charles Brown, attended the magistrate's hearing but
declined comment about his brother.

Leigh, who is expected to be indicted today by a federal grand jury,
faces a maximum five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000 if
convicted.

Gunnels said it would be "business as usual" at the veterans building
today. The facility was to reopen this morning, though the building's
west entrance that was damaged by Leigh's Jeep is not expected to be
repaired for several days.

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