Chattanooga Times Free Press

Atlanta Olympic Park honors security guard 1st suspected in bombing

- BY ALEXIS STEVENS

ATLANTA — Richard Jewell would have been excited but humbled at the ceremony honoring him and members of law enforcemen­t at Centennial Olympic Park, his widow said.

“I wish he was here to see this,” Dana Jewell said. “I know that he sees what’s going on and he’s proud of it. He’s with us today.”

She teared up Wednesday at the gathering to honor her late husband and other heroes who saved lives on July 27, 1996, when a bomb exploded during Atlanta’s Olympic Games. She had been to the park several times with Richard, who would bring a rose to the site on the anniversar­y of the horror every year before he died in 2007. He was 44.

“His one regret that night was not being able to get people away sooner,” she said.

Retired Atlanta attorney Nadeen Green pitched the idea of a plaque honoring Jewell and a monument to law enforcemen­t at the park’s Quilt of Remembranc­e, which includes 111 stones from around the world to honor the people injured in the bombing. It also honors Alice Hawthorne and Melih Uzunyol, who died as a result of the attack.

Richard Jewell was working as a security guard in the park when he spotted a backpack under a bench. He alerted Tom Davis, a GBI special agent in charge.

Davis, who spoke at Wednesday’s dedication, said he immediatel­y alerted bomb investigat­ors, who arrived at the park to assist. Davis and other officers began moving people away from the area. The bomb exploded moments later.

“At that point, everything became very chaotic,” Davis said. “I was disoriente­d. I was shoved to the ground by the force of the explosion.”

The park suddenly looked like a war zone, Davis recalled. Additional officers arrived within minutes and a line of ambulances arrived to take the injured to hospitals.

“Had Richard Jewell not been here that night, had he not taken his job seriously, had he not seen the backpack underneath the bench, and had law enforcemen­t not responded in the manner that they did, I’m absolutely convinced that the death toll at Centennial Park would have been significan­tly higher that night,” Davis said.

Kent Alexander, who was the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Georgia during the time of the bombing, co-authored “The Suspect,” about the bombing and the ordeal Jewell endured soon afterward.

“He was hailed as the hero until he wasn’t,” Alexander said Wednesday. Days after the bombing, Jewell became the focus of the FBI’s investigat­ion. He was cleared after 88 days and confessed serial bomber Eric Robert Rudolph is serving multiple life sentences.

“I believe Richard Jewell would have been cleared within days had it not been for a law enforcemen­t officer who inexcusabl­y leaked Richard’s name to the press,” Alexander said. “Suddenly there was this petri dish for a viral news story before there was such a term. And Richard Jewell became a viral news story. And there was a rush to judgment and a presumptio­n of guilt that she just can’t get over.”

Former Atlanta mayor and U.N. ambassador Andrew Young was among the dignitarie­s who spoke at the ceremony.

Young said he was at the hospital following the bombing, where the injured shared stories of how the chaos had been managed by law enforcemen­t. During his remarks Young asked those in attendance to bow their heads during a prayer for officers.

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