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RADIO FREE AMERICA
View documents and written acounts of Dr. McIntire’s historic battle with the FCC over the first-ever use of the “Fairness Doctrine” against his radio broadcasts.


CHURCH INFORMATION
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COMMEMORATIVE ITEMS
We have collected a number of items looking back at Dr. McIntire ́s ministry in pictures and words.


SERMON TRANSCRIPTS
Select from a large variety of Dr. Mcintire ́s transcribed sermons to read online (or download and print).


SPEECHES
Dr. McIntire was a prolific speaker who made his voice heard on a variety of issues pertinent to the Church in society. A selection of his speeches are included here in transcript form.


BOOKLETS & PAMPHLETS
Peruse the many booklets and pamphlets we have collected from the pen of Dr. McIntire.


NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
The media corps in America has always had something to say about Dr. McIntire. Read a sampling of articles.


OBITUARIES
Read obituaries for Dr. McIntire and his wife Fairy.


OTHER ITEMS
Here is a collection of other pieces which did not fit in any of the other categories above.


MURDER OF ATHEIST O’HAIR

O’Hair’s Ex-Managed Caught With Arms
by Hugh Aynesworth
 The Washington Times, 3-27-99

Suspect in atheist’s disappearance.
 
DALLAS – A former office manager for missing atheist leaderMadalyn Murray O’Hair – long a suspect in Mrs. O’Hair’s 1995 disappearance – is in a hot spot after federal authorities found a cache of ammunition in his apartment this week.
 
David R. Waters, 52, also a suspect in the 1995 killing of a Louisiana con man found dead in Dallas days after the disappearance of Mrs. O’Hair, her son and granddaughter, was ordered held Thursday on weapons charges.
 
Waters’ lawyer, Patrick Ganne, said he was told that his client is the prime suspect in the family’s disappearance.
 
Mr. Ganne said that an assistant U.S. attorney, Gerald Caruth, had told him, ”People are rolling over on your client and he’d better get right with God.” A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in San Antonio refused comment.
 
On Wednesday, agents from the FBI, Internal Revenue Service, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the Austin police department and the Dallas County Sheriff’s Office searched Waters’ Austin apartment, discovering 119 rounds of ammunition. A convicted felon cannot legally have weaponry or ammunition in his
Possession.
 
Waters had served several prison terms in Illinois – including one for murder – before joining the O’Hair atheism organization. Within months, more than $50,000 was reported missing from the group’s accounts and Waters was charged.
 
He pleaded guilty in 1994, was sentenced to probation and had been paying restitution to American Atheist General Headquarters, though court records indicate his payments were spotty. Recently a judge threatened Waters with more jail time if he remained in arrears.
 
That prompted Mr. Ganne to comment: ”There’s a way to deal with [suspicions he was involved in the family’s disappearance]. They’ve got to put tip and shut up.”
 
”I think the government just put up,” said one Dallas County sheriff’s deputy yesterday. ”I can’t talk about it, but don’t assume that all we found was the ammo.”
 
Investigators have forged links between Waters and four people who disappeared within a day of each other in the fall of 1995.
 
The O’Hairs left their Austin home in August that year and quickly emerged in San Antonio, where Mrs. O’Hair’s son, Jon Murray, withdrew cash and gold totaling more than $600,000 before they were last heard of on Sept. 29.
 
The body of Danny Ray Fry, who had been lured from Louisiana to Austin by Waters with the promise of a good job that summer, was found minus its hands and head – near a small creek about 25 miles southeast of Dallas on Oct. 2. His family last heard from him, from Waters’ apartment, on Sept. 30.
 
Dallas authorities could not identify the body until this year, when a San Antonio Express-Newsreporter suggested they obtain DNA from Mr. Fry’s relatives and compare it to the homicide victim.
 
Mr. Ganne said the ammunition seized Wednesday was owned by a former girlfriend of Waters who had moved out of the apartment weeks before. Waters has· denied any involvement in either the family’s disappearance or Mr. Fry’s death. He said he is certain the O’Hairs voluntarily left the country, something Waters claims ”they had been planning for all along.”
 
Theories have run the gamut, from those who believe the O’Hairs slipped off to New Zealand, where the organization had contacts, to those who think the three were killed by extortionists, who stole the gold and cash.