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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

What About Kaczynski’s Cabin? After 1,100-Mile Road Journey To Sacramento, Its Future Unclear After Guilty Plea

Mark Gladstone Los Angeles Times

Just a month ago, Theodore Kaczynski’s grimy, wooden, one-room cabin was destined to be a critical piece of evidence in the high-profile Unabomber trial.

Now, Kaczynski has pleaded guilty to murder-by-bombing and other charges, and he will be spending the rest of his life in a federal prison, never returning to the quiet woods of Montana where he built his shack.

So, what to do with his tiny home, whose 1,100-mile journey from the Rockies was chronicled by TV and radio news crews as it journeyed aboard a flatbed truck to a warehouse at the former Mather Air Force Base in Sacramento?

Might the cabin - where Kaczynski allegedly built his bombs - be sold to defray court costs, or provide funds to bombing victims or their survivors? Could it be sold and used as a tourist attraction?

“We still don’t know. It’s still up in the air,” said Quin Denvir, Kaczynski’s lead defense attorney. “It may not be decided until after the (formal) sentencing,” now scheduled for May 15.

Denvir said there might be potential buyers for the cabin. But, he explained, even though his client owns the shack, “in the end, it will probably be up to the court. … It can’t be disposed of without an order of the court.”

Gary Sowards, another defense lawyer, said he couldn’t reveal what, if any, plans Kaczynski had discussed for the cabin, citing attorney-client confidentiality.

Until Kaczynski’s plea bargain last month, his lawyers had planned to use the cabin as evidence of the former University of California, Berkeley, mathematician’s troubled mind. What sort of fellow would live for two decades in quarters not much bigger than a closet and without electricity or running water?

“In our view, the cabin symbolizes what had happened to this Ph.D., Berkeley professor and how he had come to live,” Denvir said in December after the cabin arrived in Sacramento. “When people think about this case, they think about the cabin.”

But a jury will never hear those points.

On Jan. 22, after weeks of tortuous legal wrangling, Kaczynski, 55, accepted a plea bargain, and prosecutors agreed to drop plans to execute the Chicago native who admitted to being the anti-technology Unabomber.

Kaczynski pleaded guilty to charges related to bombings in which three men were killed and two others seriously injured. And he took responsibility for 11 more bombings that injured 29 others in his 18-year campaign of terrorism.

Prosecutors said Kaczynski spent hours inside his cabin writing the manifesto, as well as crafting intricate bombs that he then mailed to his victims. When Kaczynski was arrested in April 1996 at his shack, the FBI found a completed bomb inside ready for shipment.

Pending an evaluation by federal probation officials, Kaczynski remains in the Sacramento County Jail.

Leesa Brown, a spokeswoman for prosecutors, said the government has no say over Kaczynski’s cabin. However, she noted that victims or their families might have a claim on any profits from a sale.