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The Newseum’s Newest Exhibit

It’s just 10-feet by 12-feet but the Newseum’s newest exhibit is considered by many as larger than life.

The tiny structure that sits within the massive Washington museum once housed one of the nation’s most notorious criminals—-Unabomber Ted Kaczynski. The cabin is on public display for the first time in the new exhibit “G-Men and Journalists: Top News Stories of the FBI’s First Century,” which opens Friday at the Newseum, a museum about the news.

For more than a decade the cabin, which once stood in a wooded area in Montana, has been sitting in an FBI evidence facility collecting dust. FBI agents transported the structure back to Washington after they captured Kaczynski and put an end to his bombing spree that spanned from 1978 to 1995. Kaczynski is currently serving a life sentence with no possibility of parole.

When FBI agents found Kaczynski, they reportedly also found a live bomb in the cabin. It was in the cramped building that the Unabomber constructed his homemade bombs that killed three people and injured 23 others.

The exhibit also details the ethical dilemma editors at The Washington Post and The New York Times faced in deciding whether to publish Kaczynski’s anti-technology manifesto, which is also on display at the Newseum.

According to the Newseum’s vice president: “In the end they did publish it, and in the end that’s what led to his capture, because his brother saw phrases that looked familiar to him and tipped off the FBI.”

The new exhibit also features stories and artifacts from other memorable FBI investigations, including the Branch Davidian siege in Waco, Texas, the Oklahoma City bombing two years later and, more recently, the 2002 Washington-area sniper shootings.

The area of the exhibit that highlights the sniper shootings includes a replica of the car trunk used by John Allen Muhammad and his teen accomplice Lee Boyd Malvo during their shooting spree that left 10 people dead. The two criminals reportedly hid and shot from the trunk of a Chevy Caprice.

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This entry was posted in Destinations and tagged , , , by Michele Cheplic. Bookmark the permalink.

About Michele Cheplic

Michele Cheplic was born and raised in Hilo, Hawaii, but now lives in Wisconsin. Michele graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with a degree in Journalism. She spent the next ten years as a television anchor and reporter at various stations throughout the country (from the CBS affiliate in Honolulu to the NBC affiliate in Green Bay). She has won numerous honors including an Emmy Award and multiple Edward R. Murrow awards honoring outstanding achievements in broadcast journalism. In addition, she has received awards from the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association for her reports on air travel and the Wisconsin Education Association Council for her stories on education. Michele has since left television to concentrate on being a mom and freelance writer.