Everything about Oklahoma City Bomber totally explained
Timothy James McVeigh (
April 23,
1968 –
June 11,
2001), was a former decorated United States Army soldier and security guard who was
convicted of eleven United States federal offenses, and ultimately
executed for his role in the
April 19th,
1995 Oklahoma City bombing. The bombing, which claimed 168 lives, was the deadliest act of
terrorism within United States borders until the
September 11, 2001 attacks and remains the deadliest
incident of
domestic terrorism in the
United States.
Biography
McVeigh was born in
Lockport, New York, and raised in nearby
Pendleton, New York. He was the middle child of three, and the only male child. He earned his high school diploma from
Starpoint Central High School. His parents, Mildred Noreen ("Mickey") Hill and William McVeigh, divorced when he was 10. His parents were of Irish and German origin. McVeigh was known throughout his life as a loner; his only known affiliations were voter registration with the
Republican Party when he lived in New York, and a membership in the
National Rifle Association while in the military.
Religious beliefs
After his parents' divorce, McVeigh lived with his father; his sisters moved to
Florida with their mother. He and his father were devout
Roman Catholics who often attended daily
Mass. In a recorded interview with
Time Magazine he professed his belief in "a God," although he said he'd "sort of lost touch with," Catholicism and "never really picked it [back] up."
The Guardian reported that McVeigh wrote a letter claiming to be an
agnostic, though his
execution included a Catholic ceremony.
Military career
In May
1988, he enlisted in the
U.S. Army. He was a decorated veteran of the United States Army, having served in the
Gulf War, where he was awarded a
Bronze Star. He had been a top scoring gunner with the 25mm cannon of the light-armored
Bradley Fighting Vehicles used by the
U.S. 1st Infantry Division to which he was assigned. He served at
Fort Riley, Kansas, before
Operation Desert Storm. At Fort Riley, McVeigh completed the
Primary Leadership Development Course (PLDC).
McVeigh wanted to join the
Green Berets, the Army's elite special forces. After returning from The Gulf War, he entered the program for
training to become a Green Beret, but dropped out after the second day of an early phase due to blisters from new boots sustained during a 5-mile march. Afterwards, McVeigh decided to leave the Army entirely, and was discharged on
December 31,
1991.
McVeigh was given his final honorable discharge from the Army reserve in May, 1992.
Post-military activities and lifestyle
After leaving the Army in 1992, McVeigh's lifestyle grew increasingly transient. At first he worked briefly near his hometown Pendleton, as a security guard. Then in 1993, he drove to
Waco, Texas during the
Waco Siege to sell bumper stickers. McVeigh spent time on the
gun show circuit, moving from show to show. He sold copies of
The Turner Diaries, and a flare gun that he said could shoot down an, "
ATF helicopter." One author said, "In the gun show culture, McVeigh found a home. Though he remained skeptical of some of the most extreme ideas being bandied around, he liked talking to people there about the
United Nations, the federal government, and possible threats to American liberty."
McVeigh also used
methamphetamines.
Bombing
Working at a lakeside campground near his old Army post, McVeigh constructed an
ANNM explosive device mounted in the back of a rented
Ford F-250. The bomb consisted of about 5,000 pounds (2,300 kg) of
ammonium nitrate (an agricultural fertilizer) and
nitromethane, an explosive motor-racing fuel.
On
April 19,
1995 McVeigh drove the truck to the front of the
Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building just as its offices and day care center opened for the day. Prosecutors said McVeigh ran away from the truck after he ignited a timed fuse in the front of the truck. At 9:02 a.m., a massive explosion collapsed the north half of the building. The explosion killed 165 people, and 450 were injured. 19 of the victims were small children in the day care center, which was on the ground floor of the building. (Later, McVeigh didn't express remorse for what he referred to as "
collateral damage" deaths, but said he might have chosen a different target if he'd known the day care center was open.)
According to the Oklahoma City Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism (MIPT), more than 300 buildings were damaged, and more than 12,000 volunteers and rescue workers were involved in the subsequent rescue, recovery, and support operations.
Arrest, trial, conviction, and sentencing
By tracing its
Vehicle Identification Number (VIN), the
FBI identified the rear axle found in the wreckage as coming from a
Ryder Rental Junction City agency truck. Workers at the agency assisted an FBI artist in creating a sketch of the renter, who had used the alias "Robert Kling." The sketch was shown in the area, and on the same day, was identified by manager Lea McGown of the Dreamland Hotel as Timothy McVeigh.
Shortly after the bombing, while driving on
I-35 in
Noble County, near
Perry, Oklahoma, McVeigh was stopped by Charles J. Hanger, an Oklahoma Highway Patrol trooper from
Pawnee, Oklahoma. Hanger had passed McVeigh's yellow
1977 Mercury Marquis and noticed it had no license plate. He arrested McVeigh for carrying a loaded firearm. He was wearing a
T-shirt at that time with the motto:
sic semper tyrannis, the state motto of Virginia, and also the words shouted by
John Wilkes Booth after he shot
Abraham Lincoln. The translation:
Thus always to tyrants. Three days later, while still in jail, McVeigh was identified as the subject of the nationwide manhunt.
On
August 10,
1995, McVeigh was federally indicted on 11 counts, including conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction, use of a weapon of mass destruction, destruction by explosives, and eight counts of first-degree
murder. On October 20, 1995, the government filed notice it would seek the death penalty.
On
February 20,
1996, the Court granted a
change of venue and ordered the case transferred from
Oklahoma City to the US District Court in
Denver,
Colorado, to be presided over by U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch.
McVeigh instructed his lawyers to use a
necessity defense. They argued that his bombing of the Murrah building was a justifiable response to what McVeigh believed were the crimes of the U.S. government at
Waco, Texas, during the 51-day siege of the
Branch Davidian complex that resulted in the death of 76 Branch Davidian members. As part of his defense, McVeigh's lawyers showed the controversial video
Waco: The Big Lie to the jury.
On
June 2,
1997, McVeigh was found guilty on all 11 counts of the federal indictment.
On
June 13,
1997, the jury recommended that McVeigh receive the death penalty. The U.S. Department of Justice brought federal charges against McVeigh for causing the deaths of the eight federal officers leading to a possible death penalty for McVeigh; it couldn't bring charges against McVeigh for the remaining 160 murders in federal court because those deaths fell under the jurisdiction of the state of Oklahoma. After McVeigh's conviction and sentencing (and after the
Terry Nichols trial), The State of Oklahoma didn't file murder charges against McVeigh for the other 160 deaths, as he'd already been sentenced to death in the federal trial.
Death
McVeigh's death sentence was delayed pending an appeal. One of his appeals for
certiorari, taken to the
Supreme Court of the United States, was denied on
March 8,
1999. He was executed by
lethal injection at 7:14 a.m. on
June 11,
2001, at the
U.S. Federal Penitentiary in
Terre Haute, Indiana. He had dropped all of his existing appeals, giving no reason for doing so. He was 33 years old.
McVeigh invited California conductor/composer David Woodard to perform a pre-requiem (a Mass for those who are about to die), on the eve of his execution. He had also requested a Catholic chaplain.
Ave Atque Vale was performed under Woodard's baton by a local brass choir at St. Margaret Mary Church, located near the Terre Haute penitentiary, at 7:00 p.m. on
June 10, to an audience that included the entirety of the next morning's witnesses. McVeigh chose
William Ernest Henley's poem "
Invictus" as his final statement. His
final meal consisted of two pints of mint chocolate chip ice cream. McVeigh was the first convicted criminal to be executed by the United States federal government since
Victor Feguer in Iowa on
March 15,
1963.
His body was
cremated in the retort at Mattox Ryan Funeral home, in
Terre Haute. The cremated remains were then given to his lawyer for disposition. McVeigh's remains were scattered in an undisclosed location.
Motivations for the bombing
McVeigh claimed that the bombing was revenge for "what the U.S. government did at
Waco and
Ruby Ridge." He visited Waco during the standoff, where he spoke to a news reporter about his anger over what was happening there.
McVeigh frequently quoted and alluded approvingly to the
white supremacist novel
The Turner Diaries, which describes acts of
terrorism similar to the crimes that he was convicted of perpetrating. Photocopies of pages sixty-one and sixty-two of
The Turner Diaries were found in an envelope inside McVeigh's car. These pages depicted a fictitious mortar attack upon the U.S. Capitol in Washington.
In a book based on interviews before his execution,
American Terrorist, McVeigh stated he decapitated an Iraqi soldier with cannon fire on his first day in the war, and celebrated. But he said he later was shocked to be ordered to execute surrendering prisoners, and to see
carnage on the road leaving
Kuwait City after U.S. troops routed the Iraqi army. In interviews following the Oklahoma City bombing, McVeigh said he began harboring anti-government feelings during the
Gulf War.
Accomplices
In addition to McVeigh,
Terry Nichols was also convicted and sentenced in federal court to life in prison for his role in the crime. At Nichols' trial, evidence was presented indicating that others may have been involved. Several residents of central Kansas, including real estate agent Georgia Rucker and a retired Army NCO testified at the Terry Nichols federal trial that they'd seen 2 trucks at Geary State Lake where prosecutors alleged the bomb was assembled. The retired NCO said he visited the lake on
April 18 1995, but left after a group of surly men looked at him aggressively. The operator of Dreamland Motel testified that two Ryder trucks had been parked outside her Grandview Plaza motel where McVeigh stayed in Room 26 the weekend before the bombing. Testimony suggested that McVeigh may have had several other accomplices, but no other individuals have been indicted for the bombing.
An ATF informant, Carolyn Howe, told reporters that shortly before the bombing she'd warned her handlers that guests of
Elohim City, Oklahoma were planning a major bombing attack. McVeigh was issued a speeding ticket there at the same time. However, other than this speeding ticket, there's no evidence of a connection between McVeigh and members of the
MidWest Bank Robbers at
Elohim City.
In February 2004, the FBI announced it would review its investigation after learning that agents in the investigation of the
Midwest Bank Robbers (an alleged
Aryan-oriented gang) had turned up explosive caps of the same type that were used to trigger the bomb. Agents expressed surprise that bombing investigators hadn't been provided information from the MidWest Bank Robbers investigation. McVeigh was given a one week delay prior to his execution while evidence relating to the Bank Robbers gang was presented to a court.
McVeigh eventually declined any further delays and maintained until his death that he'd acted alone in the bombing.
Islamist and Neo-Nazi conspiracy theories
In
Others Unknown: Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City Bombing Conspiracy,
Stephen Jones, McVeigh's first, court-appointed lead defense counsel (prior to the death-penalty phase of the case), and Jones's co-author Peter Israel discuss several other possible suspects and continued to implicate Terry Nichols' brother, James.
Jones and Israel suggest in Others Unknown that
Terry Nichols had crossed paths with suspected Islamic terrorists during his frequent visits to the Philippines before the attacks. Nichols' father-in-law at the time was a Philippine police officer who owned an apartment building often rented to Arabic-speaking students with alleged terrorist connections. Former
counter-terrorism adviser on the U.S. National Security Council
Richard A. Clarke suggests that the improvement in Nichols's bomb-making techniques, along with telephone calls to the region upon return to the U.S, points to a possible link to Philippines-based Islamist terrorists in
Cebú and the southern islands. These accounts are detailed in
Richard A. Clarke's
2004 work
Against All Enemies, an accounting of his public service which spanned across several administrations.
McVeigh's defense attorneys also submitted a theory to the court that Islamist terrorists and American Neo-Nazis conspired in the bombing. They pointed out that location and day of the attack indicated the possibility that those seeking revenge for the execution of
Richard Snell may have been involved.
In presiding over the trial, Judge Matsch rejected these arguments and didn't allow them to be presented as a defense.
Government persecution conspiracy
Various other analysts have suggested that the government was involved in a conspiracy behind the bombing, or that the government even planned the attack as a
false flag operation in order to justify persecuting right-wing organizations, in a manner similar to Nazi prosecution of legislators after the
Reichstag fire. In 1995, Brigadier General Benton K. Partin (Ret.) issued an analysis of the destruction to the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.
From General Partin's analysis:
» “It is impossible that the destruction to the building could have resulted from such a bomb [asMcVeigh's] alone.
» To cause the damage pattern that occurred to the Murrah building, there would have to have been demolition charges at several supporting column bases, at locations not accessible from the street, to supplement the truck bomb damage. Indeed, a careful examination of photographs showing the collapsed column bases reveals a failure mode produced by demolition charges and not by a blast from the truck bomb.”
Later he writes:
» “Although the truck bomb had insufficient power to destroy columns, the bomb was clearly responsible for ripping out some floors at the second and third floor levels.”
Jose Padilla
There are speculations that
José Padilla was an accomplice with McVeigh. Both of them at one time lived in the greater
Fort Lauderdale area (
Plantation, Florida.)
Following Jose Padilla's arrest, several media outlets pointed to a resemblance between Padilla and police sketches of an
Oklahoma City bombing suspect known as "John Doe No. 2".
Inside Job
Oklahoma City bombing conspirator
Terry Nichols claims that a high-ranking FBI official was directing Timothy McVeigh in the plot to blow up a government building and that the original target of the attack might have been changed, according to a new affidavit filed in
US District Court. Nichols also claims that the government is protecting the official and other conspirators "in a cover-up to escape its responsibility" for the attacks.
References and notes
Further Information
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