This April 19 marks the 30th anniversary of the violent end of the siege of the religious sect, the Branch Davidians lead by David Koresh. Eighty people died in the fire set in their compound outside of Waco by members of the cult after law enforcement had attempted to flush them out by introducing tear gas. The standoff had begun 51 days earlier when Koresh and members of this sect ambushed Atf agents who had arrived at the complex to executed federal warrants on charges of illegal manufacture and possession of machine guns and destructive devices. Four Atf agents were killed along with six members of the sect.
Showtime is looking back at the with a new limited series “Waco: The Aftermath.” The five-part sequel to the 2018 miniseries “Waco,”examines the trials of the surviving members of the Branch Davidians and concludes two years later with the Oklahoma City bombing. Several members...
Showtime is looking back at the with a new limited series “Waco: The Aftermath.” The five-part sequel to the 2018 miniseries “Waco,”examines the trials of the surviving members of the Branch Davidians and concludes two years later with the Oklahoma City bombing. Several members...
- 4/18/2023
- by Susan King
- Gold Derby
Showtime released a miniseries called “Waco” in 2018 that shows, in rather gruesome detail, the exact events that occurred on the plains of Waco, Texas, in February 1993, when the FBI clashed with a religious group that identified itself as Branch Davidians. At the head of the group was the self-proclaimed prophet David Koresh (Taylor Kitsch), who was a charismatic leader capable of making his congregation follow him into war. However, he was also a very horrible person, not above crimes like child abuse and statutory rape, even though the women of the compound were glad to be Koresh’s partners. When the Atf learned that the Davidians were illegally stockpiling guns and that polygamy was being practiced inside their compound at Mt. Carmel, they began a siege of the area that ended on the 51st day with an all-out war, nay, the slaughter of the Davidians. Ahead of the “Waco: Aftermath” release,...
- 4/16/2023
- by Indrayudh Talukdar
- Film Fugitives
Tl;Dr:
Alice Cooper songs and one of Nancy Sinatra’s songs got played at the Waco siege. One of David Koresh’s followers said the Branch Davidians’ beliefs were not respected. He didn’t specify which Cooper songs were played during the siege. The Branch Davidian compound during the Waco siege | Gregory Smith / Contributor
Some classic rock songs were played during the Waco siege. Alice Cooper songs and Nancy Sinatra’s “These Boots Are Made for Walkin'” were some of the songs the Branch Davidians were forced to hear. Subsequently, one of David Koresh’s followers explained why music became part of the siege.
Alice Cooper songs, Nancy Sinatra songs, and Christmas tunes got played at the Waco siege
David Thibodeau was a follower of David Koresh who survived the Waco siege. In his 1999 book Waco: A Survivor’s Story, Thibodeau discussed how the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol,...
Alice Cooper songs and one of Nancy Sinatra’s songs got played at the Waco siege. One of David Koresh’s followers said the Branch Davidians’ beliefs were not respected. He didn’t specify which Cooper songs were played during the siege. The Branch Davidian compound during the Waco siege | Gregory Smith / Contributor
Some classic rock songs were played during the Waco siege. Alice Cooper songs and Nancy Sinatra’s “These Boots Are Made for Walkin'” were some of the songs the Branch Davidians were forced to hear. Subsequently, one of David Koresh’s followers explained why music became part of the siege.
Alice Cooper songs, Nancy Sinatra songs, and Christmas tunes got played at the Waco siege
David Thibodeau was a follower of David Koresh who survived the Waco siege. In his 1999 book Waco: A Survivor’s Story, Thibodeau discussed how the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol,...
- 4/4/2023
- by Matthew Trzcinski
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Though it has been 30 years since the siege of Mount Carmel in Waco, Texas, there’s still an interest surrounding David Koresh’s Branch Davidian cult. With the release of Netflix‘s Waco: American Apocalypse, many people want to learn as much as they can about the 51-day siege where 86 people died. Here are 22 shows and podcasts covering the siege at Waco to stream after you’ve watched the three-part documentary Waco: American Apocalypse.
David Koresh | Netflix Podcasts covering the siege at Waco
For those interested in learning more about David Koresh, Mount Carmel, and the siege at Waco, the BBC created an entire podcast around the subject. End of Days unpacks the multi-faceted Branch Davidian group in an eight-episode podcast.
Several other podcasts have touched on the topic of Waco, too. Listen to those episodes below:
Not Another True Crime Podcast: “The Waco Siege And The Branch Davidians” Jimmy Akin...
David Koresh | Netflix Podcasts covering the siege at Waco
For those interested in learning more about David Koresh, Mount Carmel, and the siege at Waco, the BBC created an entire podcast around the subject. End of Days unpacks the multi-faceted Branch Davidian group in an eight-episode podcast.
Several other podcasts have touched on the topic of Waco, too. Listen to those episodes below:
Not Another True Crime Podcast: “The Waco Siege And The Branch Davidians” Jimmy Akin...
- 3/24/2023
- by Lauren Anderson
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Before David Koresh, there was Lois Roden, the wife of Benjamin Roden, president and founder of the Branch Davidian Seventh-day Adventist Church. Lois comes up briefly in the Netflix documentary series Waco: American Apocalypse. Here’s everything you need to know about the former leader of the Branch Davidians before Koresh took over the apocalyptic Christian group.
David Koresh | Netflix Branch Davidian beliefs began in 1929 with Benjamin and Lois Roden
According to the Texas State Historical Association, Victor T. Houteff established the Davidians, a small Adventist reform movement. A Bulgarian immigrant, Houteff left the Bulgarian Orthodox Church and accepted Seventh-day Adventist teaching in 1918, starting the Davidians in 1929. In 1955, Benjamin organized the Branch Davidians, a group focused on preparing for the second coming of Christ.
When Benjamin died in 1978, his wife, Lois, assumed leadership. She shifted her teachings to focus on the female character of the Holy Spirit and ordination for women.
David Koresh | Netflix Branch Davidian beliefs began in 1929 with Benjamin and Lois Roden
According to the Texas State Historical Association, Victor T. Houteff established the Davidians, a small Adventist reform movement. A Bulgarian immigrant, Houteff left the Bulgarian Orthodox Church and accepted Seventh-day Adventist teaching in 1918, starting the Davidians in 1929. In 1955, Benjamin organized the Branch Davidians, a group focused on preparing for the second coming of Christ.
When Benjamin died in 1978, his wife, Lois, assumed leadership. She shifted her teachings to focus on the female character of the Holy Spirit and ordination for women.
- 3/23/2023
- by Lauren Anderson
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Waco: American Apocalypse premieres on Netflix on March 22. From director Tiller Russell (Night Stalker: The Hunt for a Serial Killer), the three-part documentary series explores the definitive account of what happened in Waco, Texas in 1993 when cult leader David Koresh faced off against the federal government in a bloody 51-day siege. Kathy Schroeder, one of Koresh’s many wives, is featured prominently in the Netflix docuseries. Below are three quotes from Russell’s latest Netflix show that give some insight into what it was like living as a Branch Davidian.
[Spoiler Alert: Spoilers ahead regarding Waco: American Apocalypse.]
Kathy Schroeder | Netflix Hear from the people inside of and surrounding Mount Carmel in ‘Waco: American Apocalypse’
Each 50-minute episode of Waco: American Apocalypse is driven by intimate and revealing interviews with people from all sides of the conflict. These interviews include one of David Koresh’s spiritual wives, Schroeder. The docuseries also contains interviews with the...
[Spoiler Alert: Spoilers ahead regarding Waco: American Apocalypse.]
Kathy Schroeder | Netflix Hear from the people inside of and surrounding Mount Carmel in ‘Waco: American Apocalypse’
Each 50-minute episode of Waco: American Apocalypse is driven by intimate and revealing interviews with people from all sides of the conflict. These interviews include one of David Koresh’s spiritual wives, Schroeder. The docuseries also contains interviews with the...
- 3/22/2023
- by Lauren Anderson
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Nobody came out of the 1993 Waco tragedy looking good. Not David Koresh, the messianic religious/cult leader who stockpiled illegal weapons and married underage girls in order to spread his seed for a coming apocalypse. Not the Atf, which went ahead with its raid on Koresh’s Branch Davidian compound despite knowing that they were expected, eliminating any element of surprise. And not the FBI, whose hostage rescue and negotiation teams were constantly at odds over both means and ends. In the end, 86 people – 82 Davidians and four Atf agents – were killed.
- 3/22/2023
- by Chris Vognar
- Rollingstone.com
Paramount Network's Waco miniseries (which is now streaming on Netflix) likely left you with a lot of questions. For instance, did David Thibodeau really survive the deadly 51-day standoff between the Branch Davidians and the FBI in 1993? (He sure did.) Did David Koresh's musical retaliation during the siege actually happen? (Indeed.) But perhaps the most pressing question of them all: how did Koresh feed, clothe, and arm his many devotees without any obvious source of income? As well as claiming to be the final prophet of the Branch Davidians and taking over as the sect's leader in the 1980s, Koresh (born Vernon Howell) was reportedly a millionaire. The reason: his followers were required to turn over all of their assets.
According to a 1993 article printed in the Waco Tribune-Herald, former cult members claimed that Koresh demanded control of his followers' property and paychecks. Everyone who joined Koresh was...
According to a 1993 article printed in the Waco Tribune-Herald, former cult members claimed that Koresh demanded control of his followers' property and paychecks. Everyone who joined Koresh was...
- 5/8/2020
- by Corinne Sullivan
- Popsugar.com
The first episode of Paramount Network's Waco, now streaming on Netflix, primarily takes place in Ruby Ridge, ID, where in 1992, an 11-day standoff between the FBI and the Weaver family took place. The Weavers lived in seclusion in the hills of Idaho, and the siege, which is largely considered a botched situation resulting in unnecessary deaths, set the tone for what was to come in Waco the following year. Here are the details on what went down in Idaho.
Before the Ruby Ridge Siege
The Weaver family, who were at the center of the FBI standoff in 1992, moved into the home in Ruby Ridge, ID, in the 1980s and largely kept to themselves. Former Us Army engineer Randy, his wife, Vicki, and their children moved from Iowa to Idaho to the remote cabin but spent some time at a nearby compound of Aryan nationalists. Though, according to ABC News,...
Before the Ruby Ridge Siege
The Weaver family, who were at the center of the FBI standoff in 1992, moved into the home in Ruby Ridge, ID, in the 1980s and largely kept to themselves. Former Us Army engineer Randy, his wife, Vicki, and their children moved from Iowa to Idaho to the remote cabin but spent some time at a nearby compound of Aryan nationalists. Though, according to ABC News,...
- 5/6/2020
- by Hedy Phillips
- Popsugar.com
In 1993, the FBI and a religious group known as the Branch Davidians went through a 51-day siege in Waco, TX. The infamous standoff, which is now portrayed in a six-part miniseries, resulted in a mass shootout and a deadly fire that killed nearly 80 people.
The religious group, which was led by David Koresh, believed the apocalypse was coming, but it was Koresh's suspected firearms stash that led to the Atf coming to raid the compound where they lived. What came next was a messy and deadly exchange of fire between authorities and Koresh's people, quickly killing many. From there, the authorities waited outside the house, demanding Koresh surrender.
Over the course of the next several weeks, Koresh allowed some people, primarily children, to leave the house to get to safety. According to ABC News, 35 people, including 21 children, were released early in the standoff. Psychiatrist Bruce Perry was one of the...
The religious group, which was led by David Koresh, believed the apocalypse was coming, but it was Koresh's suspected firearms stash that led to the Atf coming to raid the compound where they lived. What came next was a messy and deadly exchange of fire between authorities and Koresh's people, quickly killing many. From there, the authorities waited outside the house, demanding Koresh surrender.
Over the course of the next several weeks, Koresh allowed some people, primarily children, to leave the house to get to safety. According to ABC News, 35 people, including 21 children, were released early in the standoff. Psychiatrist Bruce Perry was one of the...
- 5/5/2020
- by Hedy Phillips
- Popsugar.com
When the FBI laid siege to David Koresh's compound in Waco, TX, in 1993, what resulted was a 51-day standoff between the authorities and Koresh's religious cult. The confrontation included a lot of negotiation - and music. In the 2018 show Waco, which is based on the tragedy in Waco, the FBI and the Atf resort to blasting music and other annoying sounds at the compound to try to get Koresh - pictured above with Waco survivor Clive Doyle - and his followers to surrender. After the authorities cut the power to the compound, Koresh starts a generator, plugs in speakers of his own, and plays music with his band, aimed right back at the FBI. The question is, how much of that is real?
The real Koresh was indeed a musician. And he did meet David Thibodeau through music, but it was at a Guitar Center, not a bar during a gig.
The real Koresh was indeed a musician. And he did meet David Thibodeau through music, but it was at a Guitar Center, not a bar during a gig.
- 5/5/2020
- by Hedy Phillips
- Popsugar.com
The tragic 1993 siege in Waco, TX, portrayed in Paramount Network limited series Waco, now on Netflix, is a real and heartbreaking story that lasted for 51 days. When the FBI and Atf descended on David Koresh's compound in rural Waco, they pressured the religious sect to surrender for almost two months before the entire event ended in tragedy.
Koresh was leading a religious group known as the Branch Davidians, and they all lived in the compound that would later be destroyed. When the Atf got wind of a large collection of firearms on the property, they came to execute a search warrant, resulting in a standoff. Vox pointed out that it's still unclear to this day who fired first at the start of this siege - the Branch Davidians claimed the Atf came in guns blazing and the Atf said the Branch Davidians opened fire.
In their quest to seize...
Koresh was leading a religious group known as the Branch Davidians, and they all lived in the compound that would later be destroyed. When the Atf got wind of a large collection of firearms on the property, they came to execute a search warrant, resulting in a standoff. Vox pointed out that it's still unclear to this day who fired first at the start of this siege - the Branch Davidians claimed the Atf came in guns blazing and the Atf said the Branch Davidians opened fire.
In their quest to seize...
- 5/5/2020
- by Hedy Phillips
- Popsugar.com
David Koresh and many members of his religious group, the Branch Davidians, which are at the center of Paramount Network's Waco, now streaming on Netflix, famously met a tragic end in a standoff with the FBI in 1993. Though the group's compound - called Mount Carmel - was initially raided for firearms, the religious beliefs of the Branch Davidians became a hot-button story in the years following the event.
The Branch Davidians as a group started long before Koresh got involved. They started as just the Davidians back in the 1930s, according to Vox. They were a spinoff of the Seventh-Day Adventists, a religious group with beliefs based in Christianity. The Davidians were created by Bulgarian immigrant Victor Houteff, "who dissented from aspects of standard Seventh-Day Adventist theology," according to Vox. "Houteff believed that the Messiah prophesied in the biblical book of Isaiah was not Jesus, but was yet to come.
The Branch Davidians as a group started long before Koresh got involved. They started as just the Davidians back in the 1930s, according to Vox. They were a spinoff of the Seventh-Day Adventists, a religious group with beliefs based in Christianity. The Davidians were created by Bulgarian immigrant Victor Houteff, "who dissented from aspects of standard Seventh-Day Adventist theology," according to Vox. "Houteff believed that the Messiah prophesied in the biblical book of Isaiah was not Jesus, but was yet to come.
- 5/5/2020
- by Hedy Phillips
- Popsugar.com
While the Dowdle brothers' Waco took creative liberties in their onscreen adaptation of the deadly 1993 standoff, they do focus on the actual people involved. In fact, David Thibodeau, portrayed by Rory Culkin, wrote A Place Called Waco: A Survivor's Story, the 1999 memoir serving as the show's basis. While it's been nearly three decades since the siege, Thibodeau remains vocal about his time with the Branch Davidians and even consulted on the series, which has become part of the culture once more since dropping on Netflix.
Thibodeau, while in his early 20s, first met David Koresh (Taylor Kitsch) in Los Angeles, where they bonded over music. After befriending Koresh, he moved onto the Mount Carmel commune in Waco, TX, for 18 months. There, Koresh led the Branch Davidians, an offshoot of the Seventh-Day Adventists that predicted the second coming of Christ and the Armageddon. Before the 1993 siege that ended with a deadly fire,...
Thibodeau, while in his early 20s, first met David Koresh (Taylor Kitsch) in Los Angeles, where they bonded over music. After befriending Koresh, he moved onto the Mount Carmel commune in Waco, TX, for 18 months. There, Koresh led the Branch Davidians, an offshoot of the Seventh-Day Adventists that predicted the second coming of Christ and the Armageddon. Before the 1993 siege that ended with a deadly fire,...
- 5/1/2020
- by Stacey Nguyen
- Popsugar.com
Exclusive: Oscar winner Mira Sorvino and Rory Culkin are set for supporting roles opposite lead AnnaSophia Robb, and Hannah Murray and Michael Gaston (The Man in the High Castle) will recur in Emma, a scripted horror series for Quibi.
Produced by Dark Castle Entertainment and Propagate, Emma follows the dark journey of a young woman (Robb) down on her luck and pregnant under mysterious circumstances. She must deal with the increasingly disturbing effects of her pregnancy and the potential conspiracy surrounding it.
Character details are being kept under wraps. The series is currently in production.
Mary Harron (Alias Grace) directs and co-executive produces. Emma is written by Ben Ketai, who also executive produces alongside Alex Mace and Hal Sadoff with Dark Castle Entertainment and Ben Silverman, Howard Owens, Greg Lipstone and Rodney Ferrell with Propagate.
Produced by Dark Castle Entertainment and Propagate, Emma follows the dark journey of a young woman (Robb) down on her luck and pregnant under mysterious circumstances. She must deal with the increasingly disturbing effects of her pregnancy and the potential conspiracy surrounding it.
Character details are being kept under wraps. The series is currently in production.
Mary Harron (Alias Grace) directs and co-executive produces. Emma is written by Ben Ketai, who also executive produces alongside Alex Mace and Hal Sadoff with Dark Castle Entertainment and Ben Silverman, Howard Owens, Greg Lipstone and Rodney Ferrell with Propagate.
- 11/19/2019
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
A version of this story about Taylor Kitsch first appeared in the Miniseries/Movies issue of TheWrap’s Emmy magazine.
The biggest compliment you can give Taylor Kitsch on his “Waco” performance is to learn more about the 51-day standoff in 1993 between the FBI and the Branch Davidians, led by sect leader David Koresh.
“The best reaction, and the most flattering, is just that [viewers] take it upon themselves to formulate their own opinion and do their own research,” Kitsch said.
“There’s just something so fascinating about these people and these leaders, and I think everyone is so fascinated by the unknown,” said the lead actor in the Paramount Network miniseries about the religious group that resisted a federal government siege for almost two months, until a fire inside the Branch Davidian compound outside Waco, Texas, killed 79 members of the sect.
Also Read: Taylor Kitsch Promises Salvation in First Trailer...
The biggest compliment you can give Taylor Kitsch on his “Waco” performance is to learn more about the 51-day standoff in 1993 between the FBI and the Branch Davidians, led by sect leader David Koresh.
“The best reaction, and the most flattering, is just that [viewers] take it upon themselves to formulate their own opinion and do their own research,” Kitsch said.
“There’s just something so fascinating about these people and these leaders, and I think everyone is so fascinated by the unknown,” said the lead actor in the Paramount Network miniseries about the religious group that resisted a federal government siege for almost two months, until a fire inside the Branch Davidian compound outside Waco, Texas, killed 79 members of the sect.
Also Read: Taylor Kitsch Promises Salvation in First Trailer...
- 6/18/2018
- by Ashley Boucher
- The Wrap
Waco, the dramatic miniseries based on the deadly 51-day standoff in 1993 between Branch Davidians and federal law enforcement, premiered earlier this year on the Paramount Network, formerly SpikeTV. It stars Michael Shannon as real-life FBI agent Gary Noesner and Taylor Kitsch as Branch Davidians leader David Koresh.
In effort to get to the humanness of infamous Koresh, Kitsch told the packed crowd at Deadline’s The Contenders Emmys event today that found it was important to strip the character bare and go back to the start, get down to the bare bones. He requested footage of Koresh’s early sermons, researched his childhood, and lost 30 pounds.
“Yes, this is a guy who does a lot of pretty reprehensible stuff, but we’ve got to ask ourselves why,” said on the network’s panel. “That is what is going to make [his character] fly.”
Koresch’s ultimate death at the hands of Atf agents...
In effort to get to the humanness of infamous Koresh, Kitsch told the packed crowd at Deadline’s The Contenders Emmys event today that found it was important to strip the character bare and go back to the start, get down to the bare bones. He requested footage of Koresh’s early sermons, researched his childhood, and lost 30 pounds.
“Yes, this is a guy who does a lot of pretty reprehensible stuff, but we’ve got to ask ourselves why,” said on the network’s panel. “That is what is going to make [his character] fly.”
Koresch’s ultimate death at the hands of Atf agents...
- 4/16/2018
- by Holly Aguirre
- Deadline Film + TV
Network: Paramount Network. Episodes: Six (hour). Seasons: One. TV show dates: January 24, 2018 — February 28, 2018. Series status: Ended/cancelled (mini-series). Performers include: Michael Shannon, Taylor Kitsch, Andrea Riseborough, John Leguizamo, Melissa Benoist, Paul Sparks, Shea Whigham, Rory Culkin, Julia Garner, Demore Barnes, Christopher Stanley, and Camryn Manheim. TV show description: A six-part event series, the Waco TV show is a dramatization of the federal siege on cult leader David Koresh’s Branch Davidian compound, outside Waco, Texas. Creators John Erick Dowdle and Drew Dowdle based it on two biographies, Waco: A Survivor’s Story, by Branch Davidian survivor David Thibodeau, and Stalling for Time: My Life as an FBI Hostage Negotiator, by the FBI’s Head of Crisis Negotiation Unit Gary Noesner.
- 3/2/2018
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Taylor Kitsch has transformed into David Koresh for the Waco miniseries, but he still has questions about the Texas cult leader‘s motivations.
The actor tells People Now that if he’d had the chance to meet Koresh — who died along with 74 other Branch Davidians in a 51-day standoff with the FBI and Atf on April 19, 1993 — he’d ask him, “Was it all worth it, in retrospect?”
“He’s quite literally the definition of a martyr,” says Kitsch, adding, “I think that would be the first question but there would be many.”
Kitsch also opens up about learning to play...
The actor tells People Now that if he’d had the chance to meet Koresh — who died along with 74 other Branch Davidians in a 51-day standoff with the FBI and Atf on April 19, 1993 — he’d ask him, “Was it all worth it, in retrospect?”
“He’s quite literally the definition of a martyr,” says Kitsch, adding, “I think that would be the first question but there would be many.”
Kitsch also opens up about learning to play...
- 1/31/2018
- by Lindsay Kimble
- PEOPLE.com
Paramount Network is going back to the ’90s true-crime well with Waco: a six-part scripted miniseries chronicling the infamous 1993 standoff between David Koresh’s Branch Davidian cult and U.S. law enforcement that ended in tragic fashion. Wednesday’s premiere was a scene-setter, but a compelling one, as we got to know the characters whose lives will soon collide… with the world watching.
We start with the opening moments of the standoff, with helicopters converging on Koresh’s religious compound and him telling his followers not to panic. He comes out with his hands up, pleading for peace, when a...
We start with the opening moments of the standoff, with helicopters converging on Koresh’s religious compound and him telling his followers not to panic. He comes out with his hands up, pleading for peace, when a...
- 1/25/2018
- TVLine.com
Paramount Network's six-part television event Waco begins airing Wednesday, January 24 at 10/9c.
Starring Taylor Kitsch as the man who has been described as both a madman and a messiah, David Koresh, the series attempts to give a comprehensive look at what went down in Waco, Texas, in 1993 between the Branch Davidians, led by Koresh, the Atf, and the FBI.
I was given the first three episodes of the series to review, and as it has always been, the story is not an easy one to digest.
The series is based on two biographies, Waco: A Survivor’s Story, by Branch Davidian David Thibodeau, one of the nine survivors of the final fire on April 19, 1993, and Stalling for Time: My Life as an FBI Hostage Negotiator, written by the FBI’s Head of Crisis Negotiation Unit Gary Noesner.
Most of the first three episodes of Waco are spent getting to know David Koresh,...
Starring Taylor Kitsch as the man who has been described as both a madman and a messiah, David Koresh, the series attempts to give a comprehensive look at what went down in Waco, Texas, in 1993 between the Branch Davidians, led by Koresh, the Atf, and the FBI.
I was given the first three episodes of the series to review, and as it has always been, the story is not an easy one to digest.
The series is based on two biographies, Waco: A Survivor’s Story, by Branch Davidian David Thibodeau, one of the nine survivors of the final fire on April 19, 1993, and Stalling for Time: My Life as an FBI Hostage Negotiator, written by the FBI’s Head of Crisis Negotiation Unit Gary Noesner.
Most of the first three episodes of Waco are spent getting to know David Koresh,...
- 1/23/2018
- by Carissa Pavlica
- TVfanatic
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.