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From hostage to celeb in a blink (Ashley Smith)
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ^ | 03/15/05 | MICHELLE HISKEY, DON PLUMMER

Posted on 03/15/2005 4:34:02 AM PST by Sandy

Two days after being held hostage in a killing spree that stunned metro Atlanta and much of the nation, Ashley Smith spent Monday discovering the perks--and the price--of sudden celebrity.

National media outlets, film studios and book publishers--even a hostage training company--sought out the 26-year-old widowed mother to tell again the dramatic story of the seven hours she spent Saturday in her Duluth apartment with Brian G. Nichols.

But with the national clamor to know the woman who said Nichols called her "an angel sent from God" comes a dark side. Smith is an angel with a troubled past--a record of mostly petty crimes in the Augusta area.

Smith was trying to put that history behind her when she moved to metro Atlanta, began waitressing and started school. She said she was trying to get on her feet financially so her 5-year-old daughter could live with her instead of with a relative.

Nichols took Smith hostage at the end of a spree that began Friday morning when he broke free at the Fulton County Courthouse, where he was on trial for rape charges. He shot to death a judge, a court reporter, a deputy and, later, a federal agent.

With Smith's instant celebrity comes unbidden scrutiny of her personal life.

"We talked it over, and we said to Ashley, 'You know all your laundry is going to be aired,'" said her aunt, Kim Rogers of Martinez. "She was going to get a lot of publicity and people are going to find out about her four petty crimes, and there is going to be no stopping it. It is what she is running from and what she is trying to leave behind. It's not good, but it's not horrible.

"We are telling her it's what you are today--and who you are now--that is important. Ashley is like other people who have a sordid past and found the Lord. It's not what you've done but what you do from now on."

That record starts with a 1996 shoplifting conviction in Richmond County, when Ashley was 16. At 18, she was found guilty of two counts of possessing alcohol as a minor. At 23 she was arrested twice for speeding, once while DUI and the other with a suspended license.

Because she didn't complete earlier requirements of her misdemeanor convictions, at 24 she faced a probation violation. Later, she completed those obligations and got her driver's license back, her aunt said.

At 25, Smith was arrested and charged with assaulting her mother's ex-husband, Larry Croft. The charges were dropped, her aunt said. And Croft appeared on television Monday to vouch for his stepdaughter's character.

When Smith was 23, her husband Daniel "Mac" McFarland Smith Jr., 27, was stabbed to death outside an Augusta apartment complex on Aug. 18, 2001. Ashley Smith's family said he was killed by old friends in retaliation for his friendship with a neighbor who was an undercover drug agent.

Columbia County sheriff's Capt. Steve Morris said the death resulted from a melee of 12 to 15 people who began fighting each other with fists, bats, sticks, glass, knives and pipes. Many witnesses were gone by the time police got there.

"We have so far been unable to develop enough evidence for a prosecution," Morris said Monday. "We have one suspect that we have enough on to arrest, but not enough to prosecute."

Smith held her husband as he died. From that crisis, she said, grew a faith that her life had a purpose--a belief that she shared with Nichols. It isn't clear if she also told him about her minor run-ins with the law. That detail might have added another dramatic element to a story that the national media has found irresistible.

"It's been a whirlwind," Rogers said Monday, when four book deals had already been offered.

Hollywood came calling, too.

"Ashley's personal drama during the past few years intersecting the Nichols crime spree is almost too sensational to believe," said George Stelzner of West Egg Studios in Los Angeles, who contacted Smith's attorney Monday about a film project. "Truth is always stranger than fiction."

A center that trains people in how to survive a hostage situation is also interested in Smith's story--as part of their training. "Ashley Smith did several things that greatly enhanced her survivability in her hostage situation," said Randy Spivey, director of the National Hostage Survival Training Center in Spokane, Wash.

He noted that with Nichols, Smith humanized herself by speaking of her child. She listened to him and did not argue. She maintained her composure and developed a rapport by speaking of her faith and by offering food. Spivey compared her poise to that of missionaries and military and political detainees who have made it through captivity.

The evangelical Christian press jumped into the spotlight, too. Smith said she read the Bible-based best seller "The Purpose-Driven Life" to Nichols during her ordeal. "We were touched by the way Ashley handled Brian Nichols," said Aaron Atwood, an assistant editor who sought an interview with Smith for Focus on the Family, a Colorado-based media organization founded by evangelical leader James Dobson.

Smith was inclined to talk to such conservative Christian outlets, her aunt said. "This will be an avenue to share Christ," Rogers said.

After a series of TV interviews in Atlanta, Smith drove to Augusta to see her daughter, Paige, whom Rogers takes care of.

"Thank God we live in a gated community," Rogers said of her West Lake subdivision, "because no big trucks can come in here."

But late Monday night, the satellite TV trucks arrived. Smith held a brief news conference and in a prepared statement sought to move the spotlight away from her story.

"I have experienced just about every emotion one could imagine in the span of just a few days," she said. "Throughout my time with Mr. Nichols I continued to rely on my faith in God. God has helped me through tough times before, and he will help me now. I hope that you will respect my need to rest and to focus my immediate attention on helping the legal authorities proceed with their various investigations.

"It's natural to focus on the conclusion of any story, but my role was really very small in the grand scheme of things. The real heroes are the judicial and law enforcement officials who gave their lives and those who risked their lives to bring this to an end."

Smith has hired a public relations company, Jackson Spalding of Atlanta. Some of those in her circle of confidants expressed concern that overexposure of her story might lead to "the Amber Frey effect." Frey, the former lover who was a key witness against Scott Peterson, the California man convicted of killing his wife, Laci, recently made the rounds of national media promoting a book that recounts the affair.

Smith's attorney has contacted the governor's office to see about her receiving the $60,000 reward offered for help solving the courthouse slayings. As of Monday, no decision had been made.

Staff writers Jim Tharpe, Mike Morris and Bill Rankin contributed to this article.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Georgia
KEYWORDS: ashleysmith; briannichols; nichols; turass
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1 posted on 03/15/2005 4:34:03 AM PST by Sandy
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To: Sandy

How long will it take the media to devour her because she professed her faith? It must leave a bad taste in their mouths that she got him to surrender by reading the bible to him and talking of God.


2 posted on 03/15/2005 4:38:29 AM PST by EmilyGeiger
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To: Sandy

There will be more to this story, as there already is. A past dealing with drug agents and a dead drug agent at Lenox, where Nichols killed him and headed for Duluth. I know, it's "unChristian" to want more details of a quadruple murder.


3 posted on 03/15/2005 4:40:15 AM PST by over3Owithabrain
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To: Sandy

Call me cynical but her story doesn't make sense. Something's just not right here, this guy killed to many INNOCENT people and brutally raped a girl and suddenly he becomes a docile nice guy?? I dont think so, they need to investigate her and her story.

Sounds like the $60K plus movie and book rights, wonder whats in it for him except the death penalty.


4 posted on 03/15/2005 4:40:58 AM PST by stopem (Support the troops yellow ribbon purse-key-holders.)
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To: stopem
wonder whats in it for him except the death penalty

He got to kill the people he wanted to, then negotiated a peaceful surrender. He has been building his case for life in prison through her and the race card.

The more we hear, the less random all of this seems.
5 posted on 03/15/2005 4:43:30 AM PST by over3Owithabrain
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To: Sandy
Smith's attorney has contacted the governor's office to see about her receiving the $60,000 reward offered for help solving the courthouse slayings. As of Monday, no decision had been made.

I would think it's a slam dunk.

6 posted on 03/15/2005 4:44:13 AM PST by sockmonkey
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To: Sandy
Thank God we live in a gated community

Maybe it's hysteria, so you'll forgive me when, in the context of this story, this quote from her aunt appears, and I found it terribly funny.

7 posted on 03/15/2005 4:44:26 AM PST by Prospero (Ad Astra!)
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To: stopem

Has Nichols or Smith explained yet exactly how he wound up at her Duluth apartment from Lenox, other than God sent him there?


8 posted on 03/15/2005 4:44:52 AM PST by over3Owithabrain
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To: Sandy

And over ONE MILLION PEOPLE stood up for freedom in Beruit and the media ignored the story.


9 posted on 03/15/2005 4:49:52 AM PST by Dog (Inventor of FR's first invisible tagline.)
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To: stopem

It was her faith in God that turned that situation around. It makes perfect sense to most Christians.


10 posted on 03/15/2005 4:50:55 AM PST by rabidralph (Gosh!)
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To: Sandy

While I'm pleased she came out of this alive, and was even able to read scripture to this killer, I'm still very confused as to why a young single woman would be out buying cigarettes at 2:00 am.


11 posted on 03/15/2005 4:52:02 AM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: Sandy
Smith has hired a public relations company

This young woman doesn't need a PR firm. She needs seclusion, freindship, and a halfway normal life.

12 posted on 03/15/2005 4:53:48 AM PST by Tom Bombadil
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To: over3Owithabrain
There will be more to this story, as there already is. A past dealing with drug agents and a dead drug agent at Lenox, where Nichols killed him and headed for Duluth. I know, it's "unChristian" to want more details of a quadruple murder.

Just curious if her murdered husband was black. Anyone know of this possibility?

MoodyBlu

13 posted on 03/15/2005 4:55:46 AM PST by MoodyBlu
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To: Dog

"over ONE MILLION PEOPLE stood up for freedom in Beruit and the media ignored the story."

Instead they find it important to tell us of Smith's shoplifting, age 18 alcohol posession, speeding and DUI arrests. All things that are unrelated to the story.

IMO, The whole point of mentioning those events was to smear her and discount her faith and belief in God to an uneducated public readership.


14 posted on 03/15/2005 4:56:23 AM PST by Rebelbase (Who is General Chat?)
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To: anniegetyourgun

Do you smoke?


15 posted on 03/15/2005 4:56:35 AM PST by Fierce Allegiance (“Every time a system is made foolproof - a new class of fool emerges.”)
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To: anniegetyourgun
I'm still very confused as to why a young single woman would be out buying cigarettes at 2:00 am.

A troubled young single woman.

I know one of those and she's in the process of becoming a responsible adult after really having problems in her teen years.

16 posted on 03/15/2005 4:56:45 AM PST by Tom Bombadil
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To: rabidralph

I was born and raised a Christian, I believe in Jesus and miracles, BUT this is one story that does not hold true.

This man is an evil, brutal multi-killer and rapist one day and a born again Christian the next that treated this HOSTAGE with respect?

This guy deserves the death penalty not a PR mr nice guy image that she is making him out to be. The whole thing sounds very sick.


17 posted on 03/15/2005 4:57:25 AM PST by stopem (Support the troops yellow ribbon purse-key-holders.)
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To: anniegetyourgun

Nicotine fit.


18 posted on 03/15/2005 4:57:38 AM PST by Rebelbase (Who is General Chat?)
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To: Sandy

What Ashley Smith did was nothing short of a miracle of reasoning and gracious expectation of the better side that exists in everyone.

This is in no way meant to excuse the history of Brian Nichols, or his deeds, or create the speculation that he is a changed person who repents fully of his acts. What Nichols did was heinous on any scale, and for these crimes he should be held fully accountable.

But the greater crime was the pernicious notion that a grandmother could be able to carry out the same functions that a muscular man of about 250 pounds and 6'2" in height, in transferring an unshackled prisoner alone down an otherwise deserted hallway. Or that the prisoner, having shown the tendencies already demonstrated, was even allowed to proceed without shackles, with less than a squad of four armed men to accompany him.

Prisoners may have rights, but that right does not extend to being allowed the opportunity to break from custody, and it certainly does not allow the assault on five people and murder of four of them in the process. But all these "rights" were substantially what had been conferred to the prisoner, because of "politically correct" rulings that prisoners may go unfettered to the courtroom, and that grandmothers had the opportunity to perform as custodians of large and burly men, a position description which greatly exceeded the capabilities of most grandmothers.


19 posted on 03/15/2005 5:01:11 AM PST by alloysteel ("Master of the painfully obvious.....")
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To: over3Owithabrain

She is probably not a saint, just a hero.


20 posted on 03/15/2005 5:01:54 AM PST by HChampagne (I am not an AARP member and never will be.)
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