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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
Explore documents and pictures from the formation and history of the Bible Presbyterian Church in Collingswood.


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

Search for O’Hairs Comes Up Empty; Suspect Faces Charges
by Hugh Aynesworth
 The Washington Times, 5-16-99

UVALDE, Texas ~ A second FBI search of a ranch northwest of here recently failed to turn up evidence
about the disappearance and almost-certain murder of atheist Madalyn Murray O’Hair and two of her children.
In Austin, meanwhile, a grand jury reportedly has been hearing testimony that ties suspect David Roland Waters even closer to the case. Mr. Waters, 52, a former office manager at Mrs. O’Hair’s atheist f organization in Austin, currently is , being held in a local jail, awaiting I trial next month on federal firearms charges.
 
Once criminally charged with skimming $54,000 from the O’Hair group’s coffers, Mr. Waters, a former  convicted murderer from Illinois, continues to deny any involvement. In an unpublished manuscript called ”Good Gawd, Madalyn,’ he claims Mrs. O’Hair, her daughter, Robin, and son, Jon, absconded with more than
$500,000 and sought refuge in a foreign country, probably New Zealand.

 
The three disappeared from their Austin home in the summer of 1995, reappeared briefly in San Antonio, where they collected cash and $500,000 in gold coins over the next month, then were never heard from afterward.

 
”Don’t expect indictments in the immediate future:’ an Austin law enforcement source told The Washington Times yesterday. ”If I were a betting man, I’d say the odds were 999 to one the three are dead and 100 to one they are buried out there in big boxes or drums?’
 
Other sources have opined that without recovery of the remains, authorities may have trouble making a successful prosecution.
A circumstantial case, however, seems to be pulling the net tighter around Mr. Waters and at least one other individual.
In searching through Mr. Waters’ Austin apartment March 24, officers found 119 rounds of ammunition and also discovered Mr. Waters’ connection to another former convict, Gary Karr, SO, of Novi, Mich.
 
Mr. Karr and Mr. Waters had served together in the same Illinois prison in the 1980s. Within four days, agents had raided Mr. Karr’s Michigan residence, confiscating several weapons and charging him with weapons violations.
 
Federal authorities would not say where they got the tip that the O’Hairs’ remains might be on the Hill Country ranch, but reportedly it emanated from extensive questioning of Mr. Karr, who readily
admitted he had been ”involved” in four Texas murders and had even accompanied Jon Murray,
Mrs. O’Hair’s son, on a flight to New Jersey to obtain a large sum of cash.
 
The same week federal officials: were grilling Mr. Karr, other agents moved to the Cooksy Ranch
in Real County, about 120 miles west of San Antonio. Using a backhoe, search dogs and a helicopter,
operatives from several agencies dug and cleared for hours, but they found nothing. A second search 
lasted about five hours on May 6 with the same result. Several townspeople in nearby Camp Wood quoted sheriff’s deputies as telling them, ”We’re looking for three bodies?’ Mr. Karr’s lawyer said his client had been cooperative and mentioned also that one of the Texas murders had involved a decapitated victim.
 
In the death of Danny Fry, a small-time Florida con man who had joined Mr. Waters in Austin months before the O’Hair disappearances, his headless, handless body was found along a Dallas County creek two days after the O’Hairs were last heard from.
 
The Karr lawyer, Richard Helfrick, says there is little doubt about the direction the case was going. ”Given they are talking about a triple homicide and this other body that was decapitated, I think it’s obvious they are talking about O’Hair and Fry,” he recently told the Dallas Morning News. 
 
Mr. Waters has admitted he was with Mr. Karr and Mr .. Fry in Austin that summer, but insisted that proved nothing.