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WASHINGTON - Accused bomber Eric Robert Rudolph was an elusive target for law enforcement, and the loner's arrest by a rookie police officer leaves a string of unanswered questions.
Eric Robert Rudolph, who been living in thick forests of western North Carolina since being named suspect in bombing at 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, is captured in Murphy; one woman was killed in ...
Federal agents have found several campsites that fugitive Eric Robert Rudolph may have used in his run from the law in the western North Carolina mountains, an FBI special agent said Wednesday.
A North Carolina police officer arrests fugitive Eric Robert Rudolph, the man suspected in a series of bombings that included the fatal 1996 explosion at Atlanta's Olympic Park. The FBI and other ...
1981 – After his father dies, Rudolph moves from Florida with his mother and siblings to Nantahala, North Carolina. 1984 – Spends time at Church of Israel, a Christian Identity retreat in ...
A three-judge of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled that Eric Robert Rudolph remains bound to the terms of his 2005 plea agreement in which he accepted multiple life sentences to ...
A federal appeals court upheld the life sentences of Atlanta Olympics bomber Eric Robert Rudolph on Monday. Rudolph pleaded guilty and accepted multiple life sentences to escape the death penalty ...
Rudolph is charged in federal indictments in the 1996 Olympic bombing in Atlanta that killed one person and injured more than a hundred; bombings the next year in Atlanta at an abortion clinic and ...
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