USA TODAY International Edition

‘ Jewell’ reveals facets of truth

Eastwood’s new drama caught in controvers­y

- Bryan Alexander

A wronged man is finally getting his public exoneratio­n onscreen in “Richard Jewell.”

The drama directed by Clint Eastwood ( now in theaters) stars Paul Walter Hauser as Richard Jewell, the security guard who initially was hailed as a hero after he found three pipe bombs at Atlanta’s Centennial Olympic Park during a concert for the 1996 Summer Olympics.

His fast actions saved lives in the explosion, which killed one and injured 111. But when Jewell’s name leaked out as the prime suspect in the deadly blast, the 24- hour news cycle made his face and name famous for all the wrong reasons.

Though police never arrested Jewell and ultimately dropped the investigat­ion, and the actual bomber eventually was found, his lawyer and friend Watson Bryant says many people still think Jewell “had something nefarious to do with the bombing. It’s just ignorance. He absolutely did not.”

“The years pass. All you remember is the news avalanche and this idea that this guy had something to do with it,” says Bryant, who served as a consultant on the film and is played by Sam Rockwell.

The movie, which traces Jewell’s journey from hero to suspect to vindicatio­n, is billed as “based on a true story.”

Here’s what’s fact or fiction in “Richard Jewell.”

Why did Jewell’s past spark suspicion?

Jewell is depicted as an eager- to-please mailroom clerk in Bryant’s law office who reads dry penal codes in his free time.

The movie shows real warts from Jewell’s failed attempts at a career in law enforcemen­t. For example, he was let go from a security officer job at Georgia’s Piedmont College for his overzealou­s tactics, which included raiding dorm rooms for student drinking violations.

“If you think that if a cop is overzealou­s, that’s evidence of him being a bomber, well, I sure as hell don’t,” Bryant says.

Gun- loving Jewell, 33, is shown living with his mother Bobi ( Kathy Bates), who is recovering from surgery at the time of the bombing.

He seemingly fit the profile of a lone wolf seeking to grab 15 minutes of fame, “but he was the antithesis of a bomber. And anyone who knew Richard knew that,” says Bryant.

How did the hero become the suspect?

Jewell spotted the abandoned olivegreen backpack containing pipe bombs under a park bench. When it became clear it was a legitimate threat, he helped move 75 to 100 bystanders away. ( Scenes were shot in Centennial Park on the 23rd anniversar­y of the bombing).

Immediatel­y hailed a national hero, Jewell initially reached out to Bryant to help him with the paperwork on a proposed book deal. But that scenario flipped dramatical­ly as law enforcemen­t eyed Jewell as the primary suspect, leaked their investigat­ion to the media, and the news frenzy began. Bryant stepped in as his lawyer, convinced of his friend’s innocence.

“It was so incredulou­s when I saw the Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on famous headline, ‘ FBI suspects hero guard may have planted bomb,’ ” says Bryant. “I couldn’t believe it.”

Why has the portrayal of Kathy Scruggs been fiercely criticized?

Olivia Wilde portrays real- life Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on reporter Kathy Scruggs, who wrote the story ( with Ron Martz), citing Jewell as a suspect. Scruggs is depicted meeting an FBI agent ( a composite character played by Jon Hamm) at a bar and is shown running her hand up his leg. He reveals the identity of the fed’s suspect and the two leave the bar together.

The portrayal has roiled critics, including the Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on, which says Scruggs is inaccurate­ly portrayed as exchanging sex for informatio­n. Lawyer Marty Singer sent a letter to Warner Bros. and Eastwood on the news outlet’s behalf that says the respected reporter is “reduced to a sextrading object in the film.” The letter demanded the filmmakers issue a “statement publicly acknowledg­ing that some events were imagined for dramatic purposes and artistic license” and add a disclaimer to the movie.

Warner Bros. issued a statement in response, calling it the “ultimate irony that the Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on, having been a part of the rush to judgment of Richard Jewell, is now trying to malign our filmmakers and cast.”

An existing disclaimer at the end of “Richard Jewell” states, “The film is based on actual historical events. Dialogue and certain events and characters contained in the film were created for the purposes of dramatizat­ion.”

Wilde tweeted a lengthy response to the controvers­y on Thursday, saying, “Contrary to a swath of recent headlines, I do not believe that Kathy ‘ traded sex for tips,’ Nothing in my research suggested she did so, and it was never my intention to suggest she had.”

The actress says her understand­ing of the “fictional dramatizat­ion of the story” was “that Kathy, and the FBI agent who leaked false informatio­n to her, were in a pre- existing romantic relationsh­ip, not a transactio­nal exchange of sex for informatio­n.”

Scruggs, who died in 2001, “unfortunat­ely became a piece of the massive puzzle that was responsibl­e for the brutal and unjust vilification of an innocent man, Richard Jewell, and that tragedy is what this film attempts to shed light on,” Wilde wrote.

How was Jewell vindicated?

As in real life, Bobi Jewell makes a sobbing appeal to then- President Bill Clinton to clear her son’s name if the FBI doesn’t intend to charge him. In October, the investigat­ing U. S. attorney wrote a letter stating that “Richard Jewell is not considered a target” in the investigat­ion.

In 2005, anti- abortionis­t Eric Rudolph pled guilty to a series of bombings, including the Olympic bombing.

Bryant stands by the depiction in “Richard Jewell,” acknowledg­ing that some details are changed. “It’s a Hollywood movie. I think they honor the spirit of the event, the tragedy,” he says.

Jewell, who died in 2007 at age 44 from complicati­ons of diabetes, was forever affected by the bombing, says Bryant. “Richard Jewell” takes a step in restoring his reputation.

“This movie will create a wave of informatio­n that will set the record straight,” says Bryant. “Richard Jewell saved many lives doing his job and was one of many heroes who stood in the line of fire to move people. He was a hero.”

 ?? CLAIRE FOLGER/ WARNER BROS. ?? Bryant ( Sam Rockwell) comforts Jewell ( Paul Walter Hauser).
CLAIRE FOLGER/ WARNER BROS. Bryant ( Sam Rockwell) comforts Jewell ( Paul Walter Hauser).

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