Date: Fri, 14 Jul 1995 17:55:50 -0400 From: [Hbar 556] at [aol.com] To: [N--B--N] at [Mainstream.com] Subject: Potts Canned over Ruby Ridge WASHINGTON (Reuter) - FBI chief Louis Freeh Friday removed Larry Potts from the law enforcement agency's number two post because of controversy over his role in a 1992 shootout in Ruby Ridge, Idaho. ``I believe that Mr. Potts is unable to effectively perform his duties as deputy director due to controversy surrounding the Ruby Ridge matter,'' Freeh said in a terse, three-paragraph statement. The FBI director transferred Potts, who had been promoted just 10 weeks ago with the approval of Attorney General Janet Reno, to a job in the training unit, effective immediately. In his previous position as one of several assistant FBI directors, Potts supervised the Idaho siege, in which the wife of white separatist Randy Weaver was accidentally killed by an FBI sharpshooter, and the disastrous 1993 raid on the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas. Controversy over the Idaho incident escalated this week when the Justice Department disclosed it was investigating whether a suspended FBI official, E. Michael Kahoe, destroyed a document about the shooting. Kahoe had worked under Potts and the document may shed light on Potts' role in the affair. Potts has said he never approved new rules allowing the agents in Idaho to shoot on sight, but two FBI officials said he did. Freeh said he would soon name a successor to Potts. His decision to remove Potts came before next's week congressional hearings into the Waco raid, which ended in a fire that killed cult leader David Koresh and about 80 followers. The FBI tried to end the siege by using tanks to fire tear gas into the compound. The FBI says Koresh's followers set the building on fire rather than surrender while the cult members say the tanks knocked over lanterns, starting the blaze. The Waco incident was not mentioned by Freeh in announcing Potts' transfer. The Idaho and Waco sieges have fueled the anti-government views of far-right militia groups and Republicans in Congress also have seized upon the issue. Sen. Arlen Specter, a Republican from Pennsylvania who seeks the 1996 presidential nomination, said of the Potts transfer, ''I think that this is a very wise move.'' Reut16:56 07-14-95