Richard Jewell

Richard JewellRichard Jewell smiling during a press conference on October 28, 1996, after being cleared as a suspect in the Centennial Olympic Park bombing that occurred earlier that year, Atlanta, Georgia.

Richard Jewell (born December 17, 1962, Danville, Virginia, U.S.—died August 28, 2007, Woodbury, Georgia) was an American security guard and former suspect in the Atlanta Olympic Games bombing of 1996. Jewell, who had been hired to work security at Centennial Olympic Park on July 27, spotted a suspicious-looking green knapsack and reported it to police. The bag held a pipe bomb and would later explode, killing one person and injuring 112. Jewell, initially hailed as a hero for his work to clear the area, became a leading suspect in the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) ensuing investigation and subsequently the subject of a media frenzy. He was later exonerated.

Jewell was born Richard Allensworth White to parents Bobi and Robert Earl White. The Whites’ marriage broke up when their son was four years old, and Bobi White later married John Jewell, who legally adopted Richard. The Jewells moved to Atlanta when Richard was six years old. After high school he worked repairing cars. He worked several jobs in his 20s and 30s including as a house detective for a Marriott hotel, a frozen yogurt shop manager, a clerk for the Small Business Administration, and eventually, in 1990, a jailer for the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office in Georgia. Jewell was described as an often overzealous employee; he was charged with impersonating a police officer after he arrested a couple at a building where he was working part-time as a security officer. Nevertheless, in 1991, he was promoted to deputy. After wrecking his patrol car in 1995, Jewell resigned from the force and accepted a job as a campus police officer at Piedmont College in nearby Demorest. He resigned from that job not long after, as a number of students complained of his tendency to mete out unnecessarily harsh punishments. He returned to Atlanta to live with his mother, hoping to get a job at the upcoming Summer Olympic Games.

Jewell was hired as a security guard in the AT&T Global Village at Centennial Olympic Park, a gathering place near the main sites of competition. On July 27, 1996, he was stationed at a light and sound control tower in Centennial Olympic Park when he spotted an abandoned knapsack underneath a bench. Jewell told a Georgia Bureau of Investigation officer about the bag and, when no one near the bag claimed it, began helping to clear the immediate area. The bomb, which had in actuality been planted by Eric Rudolph, an anti-abortion activist exploded, killing one woman and injuring 112.. A photojournalist also died, after suffering a heart attack while running to cover the event.

In the immediate aftermath of the attack, Jewell was praised for his quick thinking. However, on July 30 The Atlanta Journal published an article with the headline: “F.B.I. Suspects ‘Hero’ Guard May Have Planted Bomb.” Unbeknownst to Jewell the FBI had named him as a prime suspect in the case, feeling that he fit one of the potential personality profiles of the bomber. Evidence to incriminate Jewell was scant; the investigators had received a call from Jewell’s former employers at Piedmont College the day of the bombing saying that he was “overly zealous” and had heard from Jewell’s acquaintances that he may have owned a similar knapsack.

Though Jewell was never formally charged, he became the subject of a media firestorm. Some outlets portrayed Jewell as a wannabe police officer who had planted the bomb in order to seem like a hero when he found it. For weeks after the publication of The Atlanta Journal’s article, Jewell’s apartment was staked out by law enforcement and several media outlets. Four major news outlets—ABC, CBS, CNN and NBC—reportedly paid a tenant $1,000 a day to use her apartment as an impromptu base of operations. False theories about and personal attacks on Jewell circulated in the media for weeks. He could not leave his house without being swarmed by cameras and reporters. The frenzy would continue until late October 1996, when U.S. Attorney Kent Alexander stated in writing that Jewell was no longer a suspect. In 1997 U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno formally apologized to Jewell.

In 1997 Jewell sued several media outlets for libel, including the New York Post, NBC, and CNN. He also sued Piedmont College. He settled for undisclosed amounts in most of the lawsuits, using the money to buy his mother and himself homes. Jewell worked in law enforcement for the remainder of his life, his last position as a sheriff’s deputy in Meriwether County, Georgia. On August 28, 2007, Jewell was found dead by his wife, Dana. The medical examiner reported that the 44-year-old Jewell, who had suffered from heart disease, kidney problems, and diabetes, died of heart disease.

Jewell’s experience in the 1996 bombing and the subsequent investigation and libel trials were portrayed in the 2019 Clint Eastwood-directed film Richard Jewell. The Suspect: An Olympic Bombing, the FBI, the Media, and Richard Jewell, the Man Caught in the Middle(2019), a book that detailed the bombing and examined the aftermath, was written by former U.S. Attorney Alexander and Kevin Salwen.

Roland Martin The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica