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WACO: Massacre Part Two – EP 144

The Conspiracy Podcast
The Conspiracy Podcast
WACO: Massacre Part Two - EP 144
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http://www.patreon.com/theconspiracypodcast

Part Two begins at the edge of the end.

After nearly seven weeks of stalemate, tension at Mount Carmel was at a breaking point. Negotiations had stalled. David Koresh claimed he was waiting for a divine sign to finish a manuscript that would reveal God’s plan. Federal authorities, running out of patience, approved a tactical endgame.

In the early hours of April 19, 1993, the FBI launched its final operation.

Armored vehicles breached the compound walls. Tear gas was pumped inside in an effort to force residents out. Sporadic gunfire echoed across the Texas prairie. Then, just after noon, fires ignited in multiple locations within the building. Strong winds pushed the flames fast. Within hours, the Mount Carmel compound was gone.

Seventy-six Branch Davidians died, including 25 children. David Koresh was found dead inside.

From that moment on, the tragedy became a battleground of narratives.

Federal investigations concluded that members of the Branch Davidians set the fires themselves in a coordinated act, citing audio recordings, forensic analysis, and survivor testimony. But critics, survivors, and independent investigators challenged that conclusion. Questions surfaced about the use of tear gas, whether armored vehicles caused structural damage that worsened the blaze, and why firefighters were held back during the critical early minutes.

The episode dives deep into the most persistent Waco conspiracy theories: claims of government-started fires, alleged cover-ups, disputed ballistic evidence, and debates over whether the siege violated federal law. It also explores the broader cultural fallout — including how the events at Waco became a rallying cry for anti-government extremism and influenced Timothy McVeigh, who bombed Oklahoma City exactly two years later.

Part Two examines the final hours, the unanswered questions, and why Waco remains one of the most debated government operations in U.S. history.