You know, the kids have forgot about it, let's let 'em move on. So I went to Huntsville, Ala., to Redstone Arsenal. Mark Junge: How many actual bombs have you had experience with? She was a total torch! That's what it was designed to do was to go out and be particles and that gasoline was gonna ignite it and blow it up. It killed her instantly. Anything? Rich? ", All told, 79 of the hostages suffered injuries, mostly second-degree burns, smoke inhalation, and other injuries from the exploding bomb. I have no doubt about my friends witness testimonies - even though I saw or heard nothing such as they did. [7] Geography [ edit] What is your assessment of these two people who did this? Amy Bagaso Williams was a fifth-grader when a couple used a bomb while taking hostages at her Wyoming school on May 16, 1986. So he did try that device. The two died after the bomb. Educated at Chadron State College in Nebraska, he had earned a degree in criminal justice, and was hired as Cokevilles town marshal in the 1970s. The Wyoming History one may be the best. When the children became increasingly loud, Doris Young began begging the teachers to settle the group down. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts. Cokeville Bombing. Undated scrapbook. He shot and killed her. Mark Junge: Do you think he took up thatwanted to take that up because of you? No. When I looked up to see if David had heard me (which he had, and scowled down at me) I noticed that the florescent white light overhead was not white, but a yellow hazy light. Associated Press. Shortly after their wedding, David and Doris left Cokeville and headed to Tucson, Ariz. During their time in Tucson, according to Doris daughter Bernie Petersen, David became increasingly reclusive, focusing on his philosophical readings and writings. New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast. COKEVILLE, Wyo. Mark Junge: Today is the 23rd of September, 2010. ", Mark Junge: So it took you three days, three and a half days. [6] With permission, the teachers brought in books, art supplies and a television to help keep the children occupied. One of the miracles that day was that not a single person was lost. Had a small pin-hole leak in it and it dripped into both containers and they both became paste. He came out of the bathroom, is what we figured. The Cokeville Town Hall is located at 110 Pine St. For more information, visit the website of the Cokeville Chamber of Commerce at http://www.cokevillewy.com or call (307) 459-4195. Mark Junge: Well, and it burned some of the kids. Rich Haskell: No. All the hostages escaped, though 79 were hospitalized with burns and injuries. Rich Haskell: Absolutely. Rich Haskell: Yes, absolutely. After a stand-off lasting two and a half hours, the gasoline bomb the couple had brought into the school went off prematurely, badly burning Doris Young while David Young was out of the room. And then what? When you say what cut the wire? How has that experience shaped your life? And it burned some children. That's a true line in the movie. it is VERY LDS, and yet there are at least 3 other churches in town: Episcopal, Catholic, Baptist (and sometimes a non-denominational church). They did a good job telling this story. ITT: people who want to pick a fight with someone who survived an incredible experience. P. O. David set himself near the center of the room with the grocery cart bomb nearby, as Doris went from room to room rounding up people. That's what David Young forgot to realize just how important families were. It was there for a long time, all that support. Mark Junge: That's a mighty powerful gun! David returned to the restroom and killed himself, ending the hostage crisis. TC, I think, saw it the same way. Some of the children just sat right all around and just watched him. Sue Castaneda: Carla said that some people were mad that we were there. Mark Junge: Had you seen anything like what took place in this classroom before? SHARE Cokeville recollects 'miracle' of 1986. Amy Bagaso Williams with her husband and four children. I mean, okay, you lose the Twin Towers, you might get the Pentagon damaged, but if somebody's town hall or school is blown up in Star Valley [Wyo.] I mean, we're talking about from kindergarten kids up to 10-, 11-, 12-years old. As well as I can. So many of 'em thatI don't know. One teacher was shot when he tried to flee,. The gasoline bottle was leaking. They do now - ever since the Youngs barged in on the Cokeville Elementary School with guns and a bomb to demand . Rich Haskell: And fourteen and a half great-grandchildren. As I come to the junctionI'm sorry, I don't know what the road is that goes over to Bear Lakebut as I was passing that intersection, they did inform me that the bomb had exploded. The bomb did detonate and fire, thick black smoke and toxi fumes filled the room. Once all the hostages were contained in the first grade classroom, David Young informed them that they were leading a revolution and distributed copies of his philosophy Zero Equals Infinity to everyone present. Well, you know how fine that dust is. Because of the tiles and the window? Hey, I am not the survivor, but I spent my summers in Cokeville, my family is from there, and I have been helping on publicity for the film. She has published several articles in peer-reviewed journals on the history and heritage of Germans from Russia on the Northern Plains. Cokeville Elementary School is located at 205 N. Sage St. in Cokeville. So if the state didn't pay him, he figured the Mormon church would pay him because the Mormon church has money also. Rich Haskell: I don't know. I had just cracked a little joke with a toy tank of legos as I drove it "across the death line" or the masking tape square on the floor. The Cokeville Elementary School hostage crisis occurred on Friday, May 16, 1986 in Cokeville, Wyoming, United States, when former town marshal David Young, 43, and his wife Doris Young, 47, [1] took 136 children and 18 adults hostage at Cokeville Elementary School. [2] Before leaving the room, David attached the bomb's detonation device to his wife's wrist. [5][10][8], When the bomb detonated, the majority of the explosive force was channeled through loose ceiling tiles into the roof, and open windows acting as vents. Mark Junge: Curious, Rich. Also, what do you want us to know about it that isn't covered in the film? Rich Haskell: Not really that often, but every time I think about it I get very emotional. I actually have a pretty clear memory of the events that day, being 12 years old. I think he went in the Marine Corps because of me and served 25 years and retired. The two brought in a bomb attached to themselves with a lanyard. The only thing I bristle at is that TC has me suggesting that we say a prayer. Although many were burned, some severely, only the perpetrators of this horrible incident died. over there. And that's what we in this country have that these other fanatics or whatever is the family is the import factor. Both men were handcuffed in a van outside the school.[1]. Have there been any lingering psychological effects from going through something so traumatic while so young? David had the makeshift bomb attached to his body and housed inside a grocery cart, while Doris and Princess carried an arsenal of rifles, handguns and ammunition, as well as the Zero Equals Infinity handouts. Throughout the standoff, David grew increasingly agitated and irritable. SHARE Cokeville miracle marking 25 years. Princess, Deppe, and Mendenhall were never charged in relation to this crime because of their refusal to participate.[6]. Journal entries also indicate that he saw opportunity in the close-knit community; he wrote, "Threaten one and all are at your mercy." This allowed gasoline to drip into the tuna fish cans, turning the aluminum-flour mixture into paste, unable to aerosolize. Well, he had went into the bathroom and she was out with the bomb, and they said she was complaining of a migraine headache. Witnesses later testified that just before the explosion David Young had connected the explosive to his wife. You went back home? On May 16, 1986, when former town marshal David Gary Young and his wife Doris Young took 154 children and 13 teachers hostage at Cokeville Elementary school in Wyoming, and kept them at bay with a shopping-cart sized bomb attached to five hairpin-trigger blast caps, it should have ended in great tragedy - one of the worst in American history. A Project of the Wyoming Historical Society. Rich Haskell: Okay, I'll buy that! Well, when I arrived and saw that body layin' on the front lawn, I was told that was Doris. Jessica Clark, Ph.D., is an assistant professor of history and political science at Western Wyoming Community College in Rock Springs, Wyo. It just embedded into the walls from the ammunition from the heat. But he knew the culture, he knew the type of people, and I'm not sayin' that Mormon people are better than anybody else, but their way of life is family is first. Do you ever think about that? In their minds they could start another world. At that time all of the different agencies was pretty much on the same radio frequency and I was stayin' in touch with them, lettin' them know what my location was and they were in turn telling me what was taking place. Do you think this is a historical event? It is a touchy topic for us, and could come across the wrong way. On May 16, 1986, David and Doris Young entered Cokeville Elementary School with a gasoline bomb, a variety of rifles and handguns, David's philosophical writings and demands for $300 million in ransom. But I walked up to the window and looked inside the window and didn't hardly see anything out of the ordinary except it was all black inside. And I didn't know about the angel thing comin' to the kids until many days later. Rich Haskell: I think it could be a spiritual experience that I have with church, or being around the kids, I don't know. At least 74 people, most of them children, suffered second-degree burns when the bomb went off at about 4 P.M. at the Cokeville Elementary School. On May 16, 1986, a man and his wife with a bomb took . I remember watching that when I was a younger kid, and when they were interviewing the witnesses, I remember several of them referencing "Heavenly Father " instead of "God," and I knew immediately they were LDS. She is one of the survivors whose story has become a part of The Cokeville Miracle. When they asked pointed questions like "what did the angels look like?" I'm currently the Sheriff of Sweetwater County. She is a trained rural historian who specializes in oral history, childhood history and memory studies. (Laughs) Yeah, I understand what you're saying, but it was. This is actually the first time I have heard of this. The mood did not lift with the singing and teachers quickly negotiated with the hostage takers to get items from the library to help the kids get their minds off the siege,[8] and help to pass the time. Go to school and learn how to do it." On May 16, 1986, David and Doris Young took 154 people hostage at the Cokeville Elementary School in tiny Cokeville, Wyo. Because in the bus, everything was solid in the school bus. 2 Recreation Board, Indigenous People in Wyoming and the West, http://news.google.com/newspapers/p/deseret_news?id=nz1TAAAAIBAJ&sjid=BYQDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4165,3587249&dq=cokeville+bombing&hl=en, http://archive.org/details/SurvivorIsMyName-VoicesOfTheCokevilleElementarySchoolBombing, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=udNB_xdPiYE, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=mz1TAAAAIBAJ&sjid=BYQDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6656,2193766&dq=cokeville+trying+to+rebuild&hl=en, http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=oD1TAAAAIBAJ&sjid=BYQDAAAAIBAJ&dq=cokeville&pg=7027%2C3851642, http://wyospcr.state.wy.us/MultiMedia/Display.aspx?ID=86&icon=1, http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1928&dat=19870529&id=-AogAAAAIBAJ&sjid=c2UFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1067,6238243, http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1499&dat=19870521&id=w4sfAAAAIBAJ&sjid=zH4EAAAAIBAJ&pg=4596,6209063, https://www.deseret.com/2006/5/15/19953524/cokeville-recollects-miracle-of-1986, http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_18072820, http://trib.com/news/state-and-regional/article%E2%80%943077bf4a-a45e-5dad-ae3a-a99aa8fcf3aa.html, http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=336&dat=19960515&id=Ke5LAAAAIBAJ&sjid=fuwDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5227,9406392, http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=336&dat=19940404&id=GoQwAAAAIBAJ&sjid=iuwDAAAAIBAJ&pg=2778,1992787, http://www.deseretnews.com/article/705372484/Cokeville-miracle-marking-25-years.html, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qe_ZX4Qbsi4, Emergency Management Coordinator Kathy Davison on the 1986 Bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, EMT Glenna Walker, Mother of Three Young Children, on the 1986 Bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, Public Works Director and Fireman Kevin Walker, Father of Three Young Children, on the 1986 bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, Lead Investigator Ron Hartley, Father of Four Student Survivors, on the 1986 Bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, Certified Bomb Technician Rich Haskell on the 1986 Bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, Secretary Tina Cook on the 1986 Bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, First grade teacher Janel Dayton on the 1986 bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, Second grade teacher Carol Petersen on the 1986 bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, Third grade student Rachel Walker Hollibaugh on the 1986 Bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, Third grade student Jamie Buckley King on the 1986 Bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, Fourth grade teacher Kliss Sparks on the 1986 bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, Fourth grade student LeaKae Roberts on the 1986 Bombing of Cokeville Elementary School, Law and Order in Cokeville: A Woman Mayor and Prohibition, Green River Historic Preservation Commission, Natrona County Board of Cooperative Educational Services, Natrona County Recreation Joint Powers Board, Sublette County Historical Preservation Board, University of Wyoming School of Energy Resources, A Projectile Killed Doris Young, Not Bomb Blast, Police in Cokeville Say., Castaneda, Sue and Mark Junge. I did see the lighting had changed in the room, and it was right in the same timeline as everyone else's witness. Where's he running? As long as that piece of wood was in there to keep those separated, it would not detonate. Contact us at [email protected] for information on levels and types of available sponsorships. I don't know how many people under the age of 35 know about the Chicago Tylenol murders, but for a few weeks in 1982, it was a national news sensation. Others miracles were reported and some of those are recorded in this compilation.." Cokeville had so little crime that many folks didn't bother to lock their doors. Rich Haskell: Well, after I arrived it took probably three to four hours to make sure everything was neutral and everything was not going to be a threat any longer. I mean, Columbine, it wasn't that way. And I think it's made me a stronger person. Well, when I arrived at Cokeville, of course they had the roads all blocked off and there was not a lot of people around the school at the time. I walked into the bathroom and there was the suspect that had started this whole mess, layin' there on the floor with ahe had a pistol in his hand and you could tell he had shot himself in the head. I don't know. So if it can happen there it can happen anywhere in the United States. They increasingly spoke about their memories in public with professional psychologists, church officials and community counselors. May 24, 1986 12 AM PT. It was cut. Rich Haskell: Well, I got a lot of it while I was in the Marine Corps and in the Army National Guard. And they had trouble keeping people away from the building. It would have killed them. Too many of 'em to try to remember their birthdays. And that's exactly what took place in Cokeville. Mark Junge: They don't want it brought up again. On May 16, 1986, David and Doris Young entered Cokeville Elementary School with a gasoline bomb, a variety of rifles and handguns, David's philosophical writings and demands for $300 million David, Doris and Princess proceeded to the elementary school and entered the building shortly after 1 p.m. that Friday. Cokeville seems like a pretty small town. Some of them believed the assembly was about weapons; others began realizing something was seriously wrong. TC is one of my heroes. Mark Junge: EOD. Retro Report took a look back at this episode, with a focus on how Johnson & Johnson and . He was so open to their input, and feelings. We know for a fact that he had tried that device because he did it in Arizona and totally destroyed a school bus. Have you seen the Unsolved Mysteries episode that had a segment on this? And what happens if they trigger something accidently?" Angelic Intervention save all 153 in bomb blast - Cokeville Wyoming - Unexplained Mysteries - Angels Brain Boyle 2.05K subscribers Subscribe 928 158K views 11 years ago All 153 Children &. I was later told that everybody had been taken to different hospitals, ambulance services from all over, from Utah, from Idaho, from Wyoming was transporting people all over the place and there was only two fatalities. Rich Haskell: Absolutely! Everyone else survived, including the injured John Miller. On May 16, 1986, David and Doris Young took 154 people hostage at the Cokeville Elementary School in tiny Cokeville www.wyohistory.org 25 years after school bombing, Wyoming town remembers the . It's just something that you just have to stay on top of. . Then, several years later, Jennie Sorensen identified what she thought was a teacher who led her out of the building after the blast. You can't think, well, maybe something could happen, because yes it could. They just didn't let it die out. "We could tell that he was becoming very nervous. Totally destroyed it! Debbie Sparks and Steven Moore, both EMTs, discuss on May 9 the elementary school bombing. Returning, David Young shot his wife, then himself. She fled the building and drove the Youngs vanwith Deppe and Mendenhall still insideto the town hall, where she reported her fathers plan. In 1986 , 154 children and teachers survived the bombing of Cokeville Elementary School. And he didn't even ask me if I wanted to do that. The Power of Faith: 25 Years After School Bombing, Town Remembers Story of Survival., Mitchell, Ruth Ann. The jug of gasoline had a pinhole-sized leak on its bottom. Mark Junge: And you're sheriff in Sweetwater? I cannot explain it! I believe there was a hundred-and-sixty-plus people involved that was being held. Mark Junge: What do you want to do with the rest of your life? He demanded a ransom of two million dollars per hostage ($308 million, $720 million adjusted for inflation), and an audience with President Ronald Reagan. In the movie, it shows the tension building towards the prayer and then shortly after the bomb went off. The Cokeville Elementary School was the site of a horrific hostage situation on May 16, 1986 when David and Dorris Young took a homemade bomb inside the school. Doris accidently triggered the bomb by motioning to her hostages with her arms. Rich Haskell: Well, as we were talking before we started recording, because of my knowledge with the explosives and with the law enforcement and everything else, I've had many opportunitiesbecause of the explosivesI've been with Vice President Cheney when he was here in Wyoming up in Pinedale. I think it's because of the ages of the kids, to start with. It's made me, I think, more open-minded to things and don't take so much for granted anymore. On that Friday afternoon in their quiet, rural town, a deranged couple entered the community's elementary school, took those inside hostage and detonated a bomb in a first grade classroom. The kids couldn't have done it. The Hartley story didn't come out publicly until my parents (who wrote the book in the year after the bombing) began asking questions about this kind of thing. Vengeance for having been fired did not seem to have been the motive, but rather a philosophy recorded in journal entries referring to a Brave New World where he wanted to reign over intelligent children. This all happened about 8 months after the bombing. Students, teachers, visitors, staff who survived the ordeal and bystanders began recounting their memories of this event as it was still unfolding. Thus, when David and Doris Young entered the towns only elementary school with an arsenal of weapons and a gasoline bomb in a grocery cart, no one saw it coming. Transcriber's notes: I have added some reference footnotes to this transcript where I thought appropriate. Well, after interviewing some of the people, what had happened, the bombDavid Young had set the bomb to have what they call a dead-man switch. Mark Junge: One of the things that Sue and I found out is that people don't regret doing this because they think it's important for history. I was, and I still am, a certified bomb technician at the time, and I was, as far as I know, the only bomb technician in the southern half of the state of Wyoming. You know their names but not their birthdays. Mark Junge: And you know, in Sue and I's conversation with these dozen people we've talked to now, seems like they also feel the same way you do. It was just shootin' everywhere. Mark Junge: Did you find the bullet that killed him, too? I know that for a fact! This wasn't a simple bomb. You HAVE to find the positives or the negatives can eat you up the rest of your life. While he was writing his philosophy, Zero Equals Infinity, Doris took part-time jobs including housekeeping and waitressing to support their meager lifestyle. But it still sent flames all over in the room and you can see where all the flames were in that room. In the West? Rich Haskell: It's a combustible. Sept. 21, 2010. You know something about bombs. She is a trained rural historian who specializes in oral history, childhood history and memory studies. Of course, I can imagine the noise that it made. In addition, national reporters began arriving within hours of the explosion. Just like with a pair of pliers, pair of snips. Rich Haskell: Because of the response and because of the emails and everything that took place. May 16, 1986, will never be forgotten by the residents of Cokeville, Wyo. The Cokeville hostage crisis began the afternoon of May 16, 1986, David and Doris Young took 154 children and adults hostage at the Cokeville Elementary School in tiny Cokeville, Wyo. On that Friday afternoon in their quiet, rural town, a deranged couple entered the communitys elementary school, took those inside hostage and detonated a bomb in a first grade classroom. On one hand people didn't want money to be made off of suffering, but on the other hand it felt ungrateful to not share it in the way that TC would or could. Rich Haskell: No, I don't think it exited. I went from within two feet of the bomb to right near the door within ten minutes before the bomb went off. Then he went to the restroom, which was attached to the classroom. Rich Haskell: I'm Rich Haskell. Davids writings reveal that he hoped life would be better for him and Cokevilles children in this imaginary place. Rich Haskell: That's my oldest boy, Steven. One thing to mention is that the tension in real life seemed much more present at first, and then once prayers were said the mood really lifted. Rich Haskell: Approximately an hour and ten, hour and fifteen minutes. Weredo you think it had something to do with angels? Windows were opened to rid the room of gasoline fumes, and prayers were offered in small groups among the children. The first chapter is titled A Town of Trust.. Rich Haskell: I was cookin' right along, yes I was! I've been involved with law enforcement since 1977 in Sweetwater County. Thank you for doing this! Used with thanks. They're the ones that died from the whole thing. It was a great movie, very well directed and acted. He had just big rings of perspiration. Mark Junge: to go through all this? No need to troll. Returning, David Young shot his wife, then himself. Because they weren't in a gun, the pressure wasn't chambered enough to where you could direct it. You could walk across the street and get run over as far as that's concerned, but I don't know if my wife has any more gray hairs because I've chosen this profession. Rich Haskell: Were above the level of the kids, yeah. In Cokeville, Nowhere, Wyo. Davids friends did not know that the Biggie was a plan to take over Cokeville Elementary School, hold each of the children hostage for $2 million dollars apiece and then detonate the bomb, transporting the money and children to his Brave New World, where he would be God. At 1:00 pm, they pulled up to the Cokeville Elementary School and unloaded a gasoline bomb, along with four rifles and nine handguns. Cook, the school's secretary and the first person taken hostage, could tell Young's threats were serious. Now you've got problems. This wasn't a pipe bomb. Survivor is my Name: Voices of the Cokeville Elementary School Bombing. Produced by Wyoming State Archives for Wyoming State Parks and Cultural Resources, the package includes interviews with 14 people about the events of May 16, 1986. Cokeville Elementary School is located at 205 N. Sage St. in Cokeville. Well, he had put wooden shelves for layers. Doris tried numerous times to calm the children by telling them to "think of it as an adventure movie," or that they "would have a great story to tell their grandchildren." He did it right. When the thing went off, when the bomb exploded, they just started chuckin' people out the windows. The top basket contained a gallon milk jug of gasoline, wired with a blasting cap. The Cokeville Elementary School hostage crisis occurred on Friday, May 16, 1986 in Cokeville, Wyoming, United States, when former town marshal David Young, 43, and his wife Doris Young, 47,[1] took 136 children and 18 adults hostage at Cokeville Elementary School.
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