http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050822/ap_on_re_us/eric_rudolphATLANTA - The widower of the woman killed by the blast at the 1996 Olympics confronted bomber Eric Rudolph on Monday, calling him a "small man" and saying that his wife can rest knowing that "justice is finally being served."

Rudolph's sentencing came on the day that John and Alice Hawthorne would have celebrated their 18th wedding anniversary.
"Every anniversary has been filled with anger, weeping and sorrow, but this anniversary brings to an end a very painful and emotional chapter in this family," Hawthorne told Rudolph in a packed courtroom. "This is the day Alice can rest, for justice is finally being served."
Alice Hawthorne's 22-year-old daughter, Fallon Stubbs, who was seriously wounded by the Olympic bomb, offered forgiveness to Rudolph.
"In all honesty, Mr. Rudolph, I would not be who I am today without you," said Stubbs, who was 14 at the time of the bombing. "I have learned to be a tolerant person because of you, to accept people who are different than I am, and embrace their differences."
"You are a very small man, and like other men (of small stature), you have a Napoleonic complex and a need to compensate for what you lack," Hawthorne said Monday. "Small man, big bomb."