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Massive manhunt ends with suspect's surrender

Saturday, March 12, 2005


A woman's call led to the capture of Brian Nichols.
DULUTH, Ga. (AP) -- Like everyone else watching the massive, televised effort to capture him, Brian Nichols could see he had nowhere to go.
For a day he had eluded authorities who accuse him of the courthouse slayings of a judge and two other people, but on Saturday police were swarming around the apartment building where he had holed up. The woman he had approached to get inside the building had gotten out and called 911.
Police allege Nichols also killed an immigration agent while on the lam, pistol-whipped a reporter to get his car and attempted other carjackings.
But instead of a bloody last stand Saturday, he surrendered.
"He literally waved a white flag or a T-shirt and came out to our folks," said Gwinnett County Police Chief Charles Walters.
Four deaths
A crowd of people across the street from the apartment complex cheered as Nichols was driven away, in custody after a rampage that had set metropolitan Atlanta on edge as the suspect remained on the loose.
Nichols, 33, is accused of overpowering a court deputy Friday, taking her gun and fatally shooting three people including the judge in his rape case.
His arrest Saturday came hours after the body of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agent David Wilhelm was discovered shot to death about 15 miles away inside a house that the agent was having built. His blue pickup truck, pistol and badge were missing.
FBI spokesman Steve Lazarus said Nichols is a suspect in that shooting, and police said the truck was found at a location other than the complex where Nichols was arrested, but did not elaborate.
Nichols approached a woman as she was entering her apartment during the night and introduced himself as a wanted man, authorities said.
"It's my understanding that he had told her, 'If you do what I say, I won't kill you,'" Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Vernon Keenan said.
She either escaped or was allowed to leave and called 911, and Nichols gave himself up after a SWAT team surrounded the building and he watched the manhunt develop on television, Walters said.
No handcuffs
The killings came less than two weeks after a Chicago federal judge's husband and mother were slain in their home, setting off a fresh round of worries about the safety of judges and others involved in the criminal justice system.
The day before the shootings, the judge and prosecutors in Nichols' case requested extra security after investigators found a shank -- or homemade knife -- fashioned from a doorknob in each of Nichols' shoes, prosecutor Gayle Abramson said.
Officials did not say what measures were taken to beef up security, but said deputy Cynthia Hall was alone when she escorted Nichols to his retrial on rape and other charges Friday. Law requires that defendants not be handcuffed as they enter the courtroom to make sure the sight of cuffs doesn't unfairly influence the jury.
Nichols allegedly overpowered Hall, took her gun and shot her in the head. She remained in critical condition Saturday, but hospital officials said she was expected to survive.
Nichols then went to the courtroom where his case was being heard and allegedly killed the judge presiding over the case and a court reporter. As he escaped the courthouse, he fatally shot a deputy who confronted him, officials said.
Hijackings
Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter Don O'Briant was getting out of his car when Nichols allegedly pulled a gun, demanded his keys and told him to get in the trunk.
O'Briant refused and started to run.
"I figured it was better to be shot at while I was running than to just stand there and be executed," O'Briant wrote in Saturday's Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
The man pistol whipped him as he tried to escape. O'Briant fell, but got up and ran again.
"I scrambled into the street, waiting for the shots to come, but they didn't come," he wrote. "I guess it just wasn't my day to die."
Throughout Friday, police said they were looking for the reporter's green Honda Accord, and highway message boards across the state issued descriptions of the vehicle. But the car was found later that night in the same parking garage where Nichols stole it.
Police said Nichols attempted more hijackings, and it was suspected that Nichols had stolen another vehicle from the same parking garage. Authorities would not comment on whether Wilhelm may have been carjacked at the garage.
Ned Cronan, 73, who lives across the street from where authorities found Wilhelm's body, said he's heard gunshots in the area before, but none Friday night or Saturday morning.
"I don't think they killed him there," he said.
Accused of rape
Nichols faced a life sentence if convicted in his retrial. His earlier trial was declared a mistrial on Monday when jurors voted 8-4 for acquittal.
He was accused of bursting into his ex-girlfriend's home with a loaded gun, binding her with duct tape and sexually assaulting her over three days. Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard said Nichols brought a cooler of food in case he was hungry. Nichols claimed the pair had consensual sex.
"My guts tell me he faced a greater chance of conviction in the second trial," his attorney, Barry Hazen, told a local television station.
At the state Capitol, just down the street from the courthouse, Speaker of the House Glenn Richardson announced Nichols' arrest Saturday on the House floor as flags flew at half-staff during a rare weekend session.
"It ended the best way this could end," said Walters, the police chief. "The public can be relieved that he is off the street."