Oklahoma City bombing
Oklahoma City bombings (1995) | |
---|---|
Location | Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA |
Date | Wednesday 19 April 1995 9:02am (UTC-5) |
Attack type | Truck bomb |
Deaths | 168 |
Injured | 800+ |
Perpetrators | Timothy McVeigh, Terry Nichols, and Michael Fortier |
Motive | To avenge the Waco Siege and Ruby Ridge |
The Oklahoma City bombing was a terrorist attack on April 19 1995 aimed at the U.S. government in which the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building was bombed in an office complex in downtown Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The attack claimed 168 lives and left over 800 injured. Until the September 11, 2001 attacks, it was the deadliest act of terrorism on U.S. soil.[1]
Shortly after the explosion, an Oklahoma Highway Patrol officer stopped 26-year-old Timothy McVeigh for driving without a license plate and unlawfully carrying a weapon.[2] Within days after the bombing, Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols were both arrested for their roles in the bombing. Investigators determined that McVeigh and Nichols were sympathizers of an anti-government militia movement and that their motive was to avenge the government's handling of the Waco and Ruby Ridge incidents (the bombing occurred on the anniversary of the Waco incident). McVeigh was executed by lethal injection on June 11, 2001. Nichols was sentenced to life in prison. A third conspirator, Michael Fortier, who testified against McVeigh and Nichols, was sentenced to twelve years in prison for failing to warn the U.S. government. As with other large scale terrorist attacks, conspiracy theories dispute the official claims and point to additional perpetrators involved.
The attacks led to widespread rescue efforts from local, state, and federal agencies, along with considerable donations from across the country. As a result of the destruction of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, the U.S. government passed legislation designed to increase protection around federal buildings and to thwart future terrorist attacks. Under these measures, law enforcement has since foiled over fifty domestic terrorism plots.[3] On April 19, 2000, the Oklahoma City National Memorial was dedicated on the site of the Murrah Federal Building to commemorate the victims of the bombing and annual remembrance services are held at the time of the explosion.
Terror
Prelude
On April 15, 1995 Timothy McVeigh rented a Ryder truck in Junction City, Kansas under the alias Robert D. Kling.[4][5] On April 16, he drove to Oklahoma City with fellow conspirator Terry Nichols where he parked a getaway vehicle several blocks away from the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. After removing the license plate from the car, the two men returned to Kansas. On April 17 and April 18, the men loaded 108 fifty-pound (22 kg) bags of ammonium nitrate fertilizer, three fifty-five gallon (208 l) drums of liquid nitromethane, several crates of explosive Tovex sausage, seventeen bags of ANFO, and spools of shock tube and cannon fuse into the truck. The two then drove to Geary County State Lake where they mixed the chemicals together using plastic buckets and a bathroom scale. McVeigh then added a dual-fuse ignition system that he could access through the truck's front cab. McVeigh also included more explosives on the driver's side of the cargo bay, which he could ignite with his Glock pistol if the primary fuses failed. After finishing the construction of the truck-bomb, the two men separated. Nichols returned to Herington, Kansas; McVeigh drove the truck to Oklahoma City.
At dawn on April 19, as he drove toward the Murrah Federal building, McVeigh carried with him an envelope whose contents included pages from The Turner Diaries, a fictional account of modern-day revolutionary activists who rise up against the government and create a full scale race war. He wore a printed T-shirt with the slogan Sic semper tyrannis ("Thus ever to tyrants", the phrase shouted by John Wilkes Booth immediately after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln) and "The tree of liberty must be refreshed time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants" (from Thomas Jefferson). As the truck approached the building, at 8:57 a.m. CST, McVeigh lit the five-minute fuse. Three minutes later, still a block away, he lit the two-minute fuse. He parked the Ryder truck in a drop-off zone situated under the building's day care center, locked the vehicle, and headed to his getaway vehicle.[6]
Bombing
At 9:02 a.m. CST, the Ryder truck, containing about 5,000 pounds (2,300 kg) of ammonium nitrate fertilizer, nitromethane, and diesel fuel mixture, detonated in front of the north side of the nine-story Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.[7][8] The blast destroyed a third of the building[9] and created a thirty-foot (9 m) wide, eight-foot (2.4 m) deep crater on NW 5th Street next to the building.[10] The blast destroyed or damaged 324 buildings in a sixteen-block radius,[11] destroyed or burned 86 cars around the site, and shattered glass in 258 nearby buildings[12] (the broken glass alone accounted for 5% of the death total and 69% of the injuries outside the Murrah Federal building).[13] The destruction of the buildings left several hundred people homeless and shut down multiple offices in downtown Oklahoma City.[14]
The shaped charge effects of the blast were equivalent to over 4,000 lbs (1,814 kg) of TNT,[15] and could be heard and felt up to fifty-five miles (89 km) away.[14] Seismometers at the Omniplex Museum in Oklahoma City (4.3 miles/7 kilometers away) and in Norman, Oklahoma (16.1 miles/26 kilometers away) recorded the blast as measuring approximately 3.0 on the Richter scale.[16]
Arrests
Within 90 minutes of the explosion, McVeigh was arrested.[17] He was traveling north out of Oklahoma City on Interstate 35 near Perry in Noble County, when an Oklahoma State Trooper stopped him for driving his yellow 1977 Mercury Marquis without a license plate. The arrest was for having a concealed weapon.[18] Later that day, McVeigh was linked to the bombing via the VIN number of an axle from the destroyed Ryder truck that had been rented under his alias name, Robert Kling.[19] After a court hearing on the gun charges, but before McVeigh was released, federal agents took him into custody as they continued their investigation into the bombing.
Federal agents then searched for Nichols, a friend of McVeigh. Two days after the bombing, Nichols learned that FBI investigators were looking for him, and he turned himself in. After a nine-hour interrogation, he was formally held in federal custody until his trial for involvement in the bombing.[20]
Ibrahim Ahmad, a Jordanian-American traveling from his home in Oklahoma City to visit family in Jordan was also arrested in what was described as an "initial dragnet". Due to his background, the media initially was concerned that Middle Eastern terrorists were behind the attack. Further investigation; however, cleared Ahmad in the bombing.[21]
Casualties
At the end of the day of the bombing, twenty people were confirmed dead, including six children, with over a hundred injured.[22] The toll eventually reached 168 confirmed dead, not including an unmatched leg that might be from a possible, unidentified 169th victim.[23] Of these, 160 were killed in the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, four people in the Athenian Building, one woman in a parking lot across the street, a man and woman in the Oklahoma Water Resources building, and a rescue worker struck in the head by debris.[14] The victims ranged in age from three months to seventy-three, not including unborn children of three pregnant women.[4][24] Nineteen of the victims were children, including fifteen who were in the America's Kids Day Care Center.[25] The bodies of all 168 victims were identified at a temporary morgue set up at the scene.[26] Twenty-four people, including sixteen specialists, used full-body X-rays, dental examinations, fingerprinting, blood tests, and DNA testing to identify the bodies.[4][26] The bomb injured 853 people with the majority of the injuries ranging from abrasions to severe burns and bone fractures.[27]
Response and relief
Rescue efforts
At 9:03:25 a.m. CST, the first of over 1,800 9-1-1 calls related to the bombing was received by Emergency Medical Services Authority (EMSA).[28] Already by that time, however, EMSA ambulances and members of the police and firefighters, having heard the blast, were heading to the scene.[29] Nearby citizens, who had also witnessed or heard the blast, arrived to assist the victims and emergency workers.[9] Within 23 minutes of the bombing, the State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) was set up and included representatives of the state departments of public safety, human services, military, health, and education. Assisting the SEOC were agencies such as the National Weather Service, the Air Force, the Civil Air Patrol, and the American Red Cross.[30] Immediate assistance also came from 465 members of the Oklahoma National Guard, who arrived within the hour to provide security, and from members of the Department of Civil Emergency Management.[29] Within the first hour, fifty people were rescued from the Murrah Federal building.[31] Victims were sent to every hospital in the area. By the end of the day, 153 victims had been treated at St. Anthony Hospital, eight blocks from the blast, over 70 at Presbyterian, 41 at University, and 18 at Children's.[26]
At 10:28 a.m. CST, rescuers found what they believed to be a second bomb. Some rescue workers initially refused to leave until police ordered a mandatory evacuation of a four-block area around the site.[28][26] However about 45 minutes later the device was determined to be a simulator used in training federal agents and bomb-sniffing dogs, and relief efforts were continued.[12][26] The last survivor, a fifteen-year-old girl found under the base of the collapsed building, was discovered at about 7:00 p.m. CST.[26]
In the days following the blast, over 12,000 people participated in relief and rescue operations. FEMA activated 11 of its Urban Search and Rescue Task Forces, comprising a team of 665 rescue workers who assisted in rescue and recovery operations.[30][32] In an effort to recover additional bodies, 100 to 350 tons of rubble were removed from the site each day until April 29.[26] Twenty-four K-9 units and out-of-state dogs were brought in to search for survivors and locate bodies amongst the building refuse.[12][33][26]
Rescue and recovery efforts were concluded at 11:50 p.m. on May 4, with the bodies of all but three victims recovered.[26] For safety reasons, the building was to be demolished shortly afterward. However, McVeigh's attorney, Stephen Jones, called for a motion to delay the demolition until the defense team could examine the site in preparation for the trial.[34] More than a month after the bombing, at 7:01 a.m. on May 23, the Murrah Federal building was demolished.[26] The final three bodies, those of two credit union employees and a customer, were recovered.[35] For several days after the building's demolition, trucks hauled 800 tons of debris a day away from the site. Some of the debris was used as evidence in the conspirators' trials, incorporated into parts of memorials, donated to local schools, and sold to raise funds for relief efforts.[36]
Humanitarian aid
The national humanitarian response was immediate and, in some cases, even overwhelming. Rescue workers received large amounts of donated goods such as wheelbarrows, bottled water, rain gear, and even football helmets.[37] The sheer number of donated goods caused logistical and inventory control problems until drop-off centers were set up to accept and sort the goods.[9] The Oklahoma Restaurant Association, which was holding a trade show in the city, assisted rescue workers by providing 15,000 to 20,000 meals over a ten-day period.[38] Requests for blood donations were met by local residents[22] and also from those around the nation.[39] Of the 9,000 units of blood donated to the victims, only 131 units were used, the rest saved in blood banks.[40]
Federal and state government aid
At 9:45 a.m. CST, Governor Frank Keating declared a state of emergency and ordered all non-essential workers located in the Oklahoma City area to be released from their duties for their safety.[9] President Bill Clinton learned about the bombing around 10:00 a.m. while he was meeting with Turkish Prime Minister Tansu Çiller at the White House.[22] At 4:00 p.m. CST, President Clinton declared a federal emergency in Oklahoma City[29] and spoke to the nation:
The bombing in Oklahoma City was an attack on innocent children and defenseless citizens. It was an act of cowardice and it was evil. The United States will not tolerate it, and I will not allow the people of this country to be intimidated by evil cowards.[22]
Four days later, on April 23, Clinton spoke from Oklahoma City.
There was no major federal financial assistance provided to the survivors of the Oklahoma City bombing, However, the Murrah Fund was established and collected over $300,000 from federal grants. Additionally, individuals around the country donated $15 million to aid the disaster relief and to compensate the victims.[30] Later, a committee chaired by Daniel J Kurtenbach of Goodwill Industries provided financial assistance to the survivors.[41]
Children terrorized
In the wake of the bombing, the national media seized upon the fact that 19 of the victims had been children. Schools across the country were dismissed early and ordered closed. A photograph of firefighter Chris Fields emerging from the rubble with infant Baylee Almon, who later died in a nearby hospital, was reprinted worldwide and became a symbol of the attack.[43] The images and thoughts of children dying terrorized many children who, as demonstrated by later research, showed symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder.[44]
President Clinton and his wife, Hillary, showed concern about how children were reacting to the bombing. They requested that aides talk to child care specialists about how to talk to the children regarding the bombing. President Clinton spoke to the nation three days after the bombing, saying: "I don't want our children to believe something terrible about life and the future and grownups in general because of this awful thing...most adults are good people who want to protect our children in their childhood and we are going to get through this".[45] On the Saturday after the bombing, April 22, the Clintons gathered children of employees of federal agencies that had offices in the Murrah Building, and in a live nationwide television and radio broadcast, addressed their concerns.
Media coverage
Hundreds of news trucks and members of the press arrived at the site to cover the story. The press immediately noticed that the bombing took place on the second anniversary of the Waco incident.[22] Many initial news stories, however, hypothesized the attack had been undertaken by Islamic terrorists, such as those who had masterminded the World Trade Center bombing two years before.[46] Some responded to these reports by attacking Muslims and people of Arab descent.[47][48]
As the rescue effort wound down, the media interest shifted to the investigation, arrests, and trials of Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, and on the search for an additional suspect named "John Doe 2". Several witnesses had claimed to see the second suspect with McVeigh who did not resemble Nichols.[49]
Trials and sentencing of the conspirators
The FBI led the official investigation, known as OKBOMB,[50] with Weldon L. Kennedy acting as Special Agent in charge.[51] It was the nation's largest criminal case in history, with FBI agents conducting 28,000 interviews, amassing 3.5 tons of evidence, and collecting nearly one billion pieces of information.[19][52] The investigation led to the separate trials and convictions of McVeigh, Nichols, and Fortier.
Timothy McVeigh
The United States was represented by a team of prosecutors, led by Joseph Hartzler. In his opening statement, Hartzler outlined McVeigh's motivations and the evidence against him. McVeigh's motivation, he said, was hatred of the government, which began during his tenure in the Army as he read The Turner Diaries, and grew through the increase in taxes and the passage of the Brady Bill, and grew further with the Waco and Ruby Ridge incidents. The prosecution called 137 witnesses, including Michael Fortier, Michael's wife Lori Fortier, and McVeigh's sister, Jennifer McVeigh, all of whom testified on McVeigh's hatred of the government and demonstrated desire to take militant action against it. Both Fortiers testified that McVeigh had told them of his plans to bomb the Alfred P. Murrah Federal building. Michael revealed how McVeigh had chosen the date and Lori testified that she created the false identification card that McVeigh used to rent the Ryder truck.[53][54]
In his trial, whose venue had been moved from Oklahoma City to Denver, Colorado, McVeigh was represented by a defense counsel team of six principal attorneys led by Stephen Jones.[55] According to Linder, McVeigh wanted Jones to present a "necessity defense"––which would argue that he was in "imminent danger" from the government (that his bombing was intended to prevent future crimes by the government, such as the Waco and Ruby Ridge incidents).[53] Contrary to his client's wishes, however:
Jones opted for a strategy of trying to poke what holes he could in the prosecution's case, thus raising a question of reasonable doubt. In addition, Jones believed that McVeigh was taking far more responsibility for the bombing than was justified and that McVeigh, although clearly guilty, was only a player in a large conspiracy.... In his book about the McVeigh case, Others Unknown: Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City Bombing Conspiracy, Jones wrote: "It strains belief to suppose that this appalling crime was the work of two men--any two men...Could [this conspiracy] have been designed to protect and shelter everyone involved? Everyone, that is, except my client...[.]" Jones considered presenting McVeigh as "the designated patsy" in a cleverly designed plot, but his own client opposed the strategy and Judge Matsch, after a hearing, ruled the evidence concerning a larger conspiracy to be too insubstantial to be admissible.[53]
In addition to arguing that the bombing could not have been accomplished by two men alone but must have been perpetrated by a conspiracy of more people whom McVeigh was protecting, Jones also attempted to raise reasonable doubt by arguing that no one had seen McVeigh near the scene of the crime and that the investigation into the bombing had lasted merely two weeks.[53] During the trial, Linder observed further:
The defense presented 25 witnesses over just a one-week period. The most effective witness for the defense might have been Dr. Frederic Whitehurst, who provided a damning critique of the FBI's sloppy investigation of the bombing site and its handling of other key evidence. Unfortunately for McVeigh, while Whitehurst could show that FBI techniques made contamination of evidence possible, he could not point to any evidence (such as trace evidence of explosives on the shirt McVeigh wore on April 19) that he knew to be contaminated.[53]
The jury deliberated for twenty-three hours. On June 2, 1997, McVeigh was found guilty on eleven counts of murder and conspiracy.[56][57] Although the defense argued for a reduced sentence of life imprisonment, McVeigh was sentenced to death.[58] He was executed by lethal injection at a U.S. penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana, on June 11, 2001.[59] The execution was televised on closed-circuit television so that the relatives of the victims could witness his death.[60]
Terry Nichols
Terry Nichols stood trial twice. He was first tried by the federal government in 1997 and found guilty of conspiring to build a weapon of mass destruction and of eight counts of involuntary manslaughter of federal officers.[61] After he received the sentence on June 4, 1998 of life-without-parole, the State of Oklahoma in 2000 sought a death-penalty conviction on 161 counts of first-degree murder. On May 26, 2004 the jury found him guilty on all charges, but deadlocked on the issue of sentencing him to death. Presiding Judge Steven W. Taylor then determined the sentence of 161 consecutive life terms without the possibility of parole.[62] He is currently held in the ADX Florence Federal Prison.[63]
Michael Fortier
Though Michael Fortier was considered an accomplice and co-conspirator, he agreed to testify against McVeigh in exchange for a modest sentence and immunity for his wife.[64][54] He was sentenced on May 27, 1998 to twelve years in prison and fined $200,000 for failing to warn authorities about the attack.[62] As discussed by Jeralyn Merritt, who served on Timothy McVeigh's criminal defense team, on January 20, 2006, after serving eighty-five percent of his sentence, Fortier was released for good behavior into the Witness Protection Program and given a new identity.[65]
Others
No "John Doe #2" was ever identified, nothing conclusive was ever reported regarding the owner of the missing leg, and the government never openly investigated anyone else in conjunction with the bombing. Though the defense teams in both McVeigh's and Nichols trials tried to suggest that others were involved, Judge Steven W. Taylor, who presided over the Nichols trial, found no credible, relevant, or legally admissible evidence of anyone other than McVeigh and Nichols as having directly participated in the bombing.[53]
Aftermath
Until the September 11, 2001 attacks, the Oklahoma City bombing was the deadliest act of terror against the U.S. on American soil.[1] In response, the U.S. Government enacted several pieces of legislation, notably the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996.[66] In response to the trials of the conspirators being moved out-of-state, the Victim Allocution Clarification Act of 1997 was signed on March 20, 1997 by President Clinton to allow the victims of the bombing (and the victims of any other future acts of violence) the right to observe trials and to offer impact testimony in trials. In response to passing the legislation, Clinton stated that "when someone is a victim, he or she should be at the center of the criminal justice process, not on the outside looking in."[67]
In the weeks following the bombing, the federal government ordered that all federal buildings in all major cities be surrounded with prefabricated Jersey barriers to ward off similar attacks.[68] Most of these temporary barriers have since been replaced with permanent security barriers which look more attractive and are driven deep into the ground for sturdiness.[69][70] Furthermore, all new federal buildings must now be constructed with truck-resistant barriers and with deep setbacks from surrounding streets to minimize their vulnerability to truck bombs.[71][72][73] The total cost of improving security in federal buildings across the country in response to the bombing reached over $600 million.[74]
According to Mark Potok, director of Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center, law enforcement officials have foiled over fifty domestic terror plots since the Oklahoma City bombing.[3] The attacks were prevented due to measures established by the local and federal government to increase security of high-priority targets and following-up on hate groups within the United States.
The attack led to improvements in engineering for the purpose of constructing buildings that would be better able to withstand tremendous forces. Oklahoma City's new federal building was constructed using those improvements. The National Geographic Channel documentary series Seconds From Disaster suggested that the Murrah Building would probably have survived the blast had it been built according to California earthquake design codes.
Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum
For two years after the bombing, the only memorial for the victims were stuffed animals, crucifixes, letters, and other personal items left by thousands of people at a security fence surrounding the site of the building.[75]
Although multiple ideas for memorials were sent to Oklahoma City within the first day after the bombing, an official memorial planning committee did not form until early 1996.[76] The Murrah Federal Building Memorial Task Force, comprised of 350 members, was established to formulate plans in choosing a memorial to commemorate the victims of the bombing.[45] On July 1, 1997, the winning design was chosen unanimously by a 15-member panel from 624 submissions.[77][78] The memorial, which has become part of the National Park Service, was designed by Oklahoma City architects Hans and Torrey Butzer and Sven Berg. It was dedicated by President Clinton on April 19, 2000, exactly five years after the bombing.[78][79]
The museum includes a reflecting pool flanked by two large "gates", one inscribed with the time 9:01, the opposite with 9:03, the pool between representing the moment of the blast. On the south end of the memorial is a field full of symbolic bronze and stone chairs—one for each person lost, arranged based on what floor they were on. The chairs represent the empty chairs at the dinner tables of the victim's family. The seats of the children killed are smaller than those of the adults lost. On the opposite side is the "survivor tree", part of the building's original landscaping that somehow survived the blast and fires that followed it. The memorial left part of the foundation of the building intact, so that visitors can see the scale of the destruction. Around the western edge of the memorial is a portion of the chain link fence which had amassed over 800,000 personal items which were later collected by the Oklahoma City Memorial Foundation.[80]
On a corner adjacent to the memorial is a sculpture titled "And Jesus Wept", erected by St. Joseph's Catholic Church. St. Joseph's, one of the first brick and mortar churches in the city, was almost completely destroyed by the blast. The statue is not part of the memorial itself but is popular with visitors nonetheless. North of the memorial is the Journal Record Building which now houses the Oklahoma City National Memorial Museum, an affiliate of the National Park Service. Also in the building is the National Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism, a non-partisan think tank.
Remembrance
From April 17 to April 24, 2005, to mark the tenth anniversary of the bombing in Oklahoma City, the Oklahoma City National Memorial held a week-long series of events known as the "National Week of Hope."[81]
On April 19, as in previous years, the tenth anniversary of the bombing observances began with a service at 09:02 CST, marking the moment the bomb went off, with the traditional 168 seconds of silence - one second for each person who was killed as a result of the blast. The service also included the traditional reading of the names, read by children to symbolize the future of Oklahoma City.[82]
Vice President Dick Cheney, former president Clinton, Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry, former Oklahoma governor Frank Keating, and other political dignitaries attended the service and gave speeches in which they emphasized that "goodness overcame evil".[83] The relatives of the victims and the survivors of the blast also made note of it during the service at First United Methodist Church in Oklahoma City.[84]
President George W. Bush made note of the anniversary in a written statement, part of which echoes his remarks on the execution of Timothy McVeigh in 2001: "For the survivors of the crime and for the families of the dead the pain goes on."[85] Bush was invited but did not attend the service because he was en route to Springfield, Illinois to dedicate the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. Vice President Cheney presided over the service in his place.[83]
Conspiracy theories involving more perpetrators
Some people believe that a conspiracy is covering up the existence of additional explosives planted within the Murrah building.[86] Multiple websites show alleged cover-ups and other possible perpetrators who helped in planning the bombing.[87][88][89]
Conspiracy theorists say that there are several discrepancies, such as an inconsistency between the observed destruction and the bomb used by McVeigh. One vocal proponent of this view is Brigadier General Benton K. Partin.[90] Many critics of the official explanation point to a blast effects study published in 1997, utilizing test results from the Eglin Air Force Base, which concluded that "it is impossible to ascribe the damage that occurred on April, 1995 to a single truck bomb containing 4,800 lbs. of ANFO" so that the damage to the Murrah building was "not the result of the truck bomb itself, but rather due to other factors such as locally placed charges within the building itself".[91]
Several witnesses reported a second person seen around the time of the bombing; investigators would later call him "John Doe 2". There are several theories that the second person was also affiliated with the bombing and was even a possible foreign connection to McVeigh and Nichols.[92][93] Although the U.S. government did arrest an Army private who resembled an artist's rendering of John Doe 2 based on eyewitness accounts, they later released him after their investigation reported he was not involved with the bombing.[94]
Some people have argued that seismic recordings of the event indicated multiple bombs. This contention was refuted by U.S. Geological Survey and Oklahoma Geological Survey scientists, who recorded and analyzed seismic signals from the demolition of the Murrah building. These demolition seismograms showed that the two pulses of energy recorded in Norman, OK from the bombing were due to the seismic response of the Earth rather than to multiple blast sources.[95]
In 2006, congressman Dana Rohrabacher said that the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations of the U.S. House Committee on International Relations, which he chaired, would investigate whether the Oklahoma City bombers had assistance from foreign sources.[96] On December 28, 2006, when asked about fueling conspiracy theories with his questions and criticism, Rohrabacher told CNN: "There's nothing wrong with adding to a conspiracy theory when there might be a conspiracy, in fact."[97]
See also
Notes
- ^ a b Prior to 9-11, the deadliest act of terror against the United States was the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, which killed 189 Americans.
- ^ Ottley, Ted (2005). "License Tag Snag". Retrieved 2007-06-22.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (help) - ^ a b Talley, Tim (2006). "Experts fear Oklahoma City bombing lessons forgotten". Retrieved 2006-04-18.
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ignored (help) - ^ a b c Lou Michel and Dan Herbeck, American Terrorist: Timothy McVeigh & The Oklahoma City Bombing (New York: ReganBooks, 2001): 209-231; ISBN 0-06-039407-2. Cite error: The named reference "MichelHerbeck" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Except where noted, all statements in this section are sourced from the book American Terrorist.
- ^ McVeigh later stated: "If I had known [the day-care center] was there, I probably would have shifted the target" (Michel & Herbeck 245-46).
- ^ "Chicago Sun-Times". Conspiracy buffs see Padilla, Oklahoma City link.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Thomas, Jo (1997-04-30). "For First Time, Woman Says McVeigh Told of Bomb Plan". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-02-27.
- ^ a b c d The Oklahoma Department of Civil Emergency Management After Action Report (PDF). Department of Central Services Central Printing Division, 1996. Retrieved 2007-02-02.
- ^ City Of Oklahoma City Document Management (1996). Final Report: Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building Bombing April 19, 1995. Stillwater, OK: Fire Protection Publication. pp. 10–12. ISBN 0879391308.
- ^ "Forensic Engineering" (PDF). Blast Loading and Response of Murrah Building.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|accessmonthday=
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b c "Terrorism Info" (PDF). Oklahoma City Police Department Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building Bombing After Action Report.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Safety Solutions". case study 30.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b c "U.S. Department of Justice". Responding to Terrorism Victims: Oklahoma City and Beyond.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - ^ Mlakar, Sr., Paul F., W. Gene Corley, Mete A. Sozen, Charles H. Thornton (August 1998). "The Oklahoma City Bombing: Analysis of Blast Damage to the Murrah Building". Journal of Performance of Constructed Facilities. 12(3): pp. 113-119.
{{cite journal}}
:|pages=
has extra text (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ T. L. Holzer, et al., "Seismograms Offer Insight into Oklahoma City Bombing", EOS Transactions (Transactions of the American Geophysical Union) 77.41 (1996): 393-99. See also AGU.org cross-reference.
- ^ "The Oklahoma City Bombing": "Timothy McVeigh was executed June 11, 2001 for his role in the April 19, 1995 bombing in Oklahoma City which killed 168 people", archived in Library FactFiles: Background summaries of people & events by The Star's library, The Indianapolis Star, updated August 9, 2004, accessed March 24, 2007.
- ^ "LAWeekly.com". Secrets of Timothy McVeigh.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b Richard Serano, One of Ours: Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City Bombing (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1998): 139-41; ISBN 0-393-02743-0.
- ^ "CourtTV News". The Oklahoma City Bombing Case: The Second Trial.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|accessmonthday=
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suggested) (help) - ^ "American Journalism Review".
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|accessmonthday=
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b c d e "World News Tonight With Peter Jennings". ABC. April 19, 1995.
- ^ CNN, "Leg Found in Oklahoma Rubble Belonged to Known Bombing Victim", CNN News, February 23, 1996, accessed March 3, 2007.
- ^ In Terry Nichols state trial, he was charged with 162 counts of murder; this number includes one of the unborn.
- ^ "Prosecutors Seek Death For Nichols", The Washington Post December 20, 2006, accessed January 31, 2007.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Clive Irving, ed., In Their Name (New York: Random House, 1995); ISBN 0-679-44825-X.
- ^ "Oklahoma State Department of Health". Summary of Reportable Injuries in Oklahoma.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b "Denver Post Online". April 19, 1995.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b c "The Army Lawyer" (PDF). The Oklahoma City Bombing: Immediate Response Authority and Other Military Assistance to Civil Authority (MACA).
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- ^ "FEMA Urban Search And Rescue (USAR) Summaries" (PDF).
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- ^ ""U.S. v. McVeigh"". Oklahoma State Courts Network.
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- ^ "Fas.org". Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996: A Summary.
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- ^ As qtd. in David Edwards and Ron Brynaert, "CNN: Is GOP Rep. 'fueling' Oklahoma City Bombing Conspiracy Theories?", online posting, The Raw Story, December 28, 2006, accessed March 24, 2007:
American Morning's Miles O'Brien told outgoing Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, (R-CA) that he had "raised a lot of questions that are just kind of 'out there' in the conspiracy theorist world." O'Brien mentioned different theories relating to Middle East terrorists, Iraqi officials, neo-Nazi bankrobbers, and the alleged John Doe #2.
"Doesn't this just add more fuel to those conspiracy theories?" O'Brien wondered.
"Well there's nothing wrong to adding to a conspiracy theory when there might be a conspiracy, in fact," Rohrabacher responded.
The California congressman spoke further about John Doe #2, citing numerous reported sightings by "credible witnesses" interviewed by the House International Relations Investigative Subcommittee, and slammed the FBI for calling a "premature end" to their investigation.
"We did our best with limited resources, and I think we moved the understanding of this issue forward a couple of notches even though important questions remain unanswered," Rohrabacher told the Associated Press after the two-year report's release.
References
- City of Oklahoma City Document Management. Final Report: Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building Bombing April 19, 1995. Stillwater: Department of Central Services Central Printing Division, 1996. ISBN 0-8793-9130-8.
- Giordano, Geraldine. The Oklahoma City Bombing. New York: The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc., 2003. ISBN 0-8239-3655-4.
- Irving, Clive, ed. In Their Name. New York: Random House, 1995. ISBN 0-679-44825-X
- Linenthal, Edward. The Unfinished Bombing: Oklahoma City in American Memory. New York: Oxford UP, 2001. ISBN 0-19-513672-1.
- Michel, Lou, and Dan Herbeck. American Terrorist: Timothy McVeigh & The Oklahoma City Bombing. New York: ReganBooks, 2001. ISBN 0-06-039407-2.
- Serano, Richard A. One of Ours: Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City Bombing. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1998. ISBN 0-393-02743-0.
Further reading
- Wright, Stuart A. Patriots, Politics, and the Oklahoma City Bombing. Cambridge Studies in Contentious Politics. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge UP, 2007. ISBN 978-0521872645 (hardcover). ISBN 978-0521694193 (paperback). (Catalogue description includes summary, table of contents, and excerpts from reviews.)
External links
- Blast Loading and Response of the Murrah Building An objective independent engineering analysis of the Murrah building failure mode showing that without a doubt the truck bomb alone did the damage.
- Oklahoma City Bombing Trial News archives and special reports at the Denver Post (with updated links)
- Oklahoma City National Memorial Official website
- Special Interactive Report: "The Oklahoma City Bombing": 9:02 April 19th at NewsOK.com
- Oklahoma City Tragedy CNN Interactive
- Memoirs of the Oklahoma City Bombing From MemoryArchive
- Unofficial Oklahoma City Bombing Time Line (1986-2005)