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Tim McVeigh

Death Cert of Tim McVeigh

Terry Nichols

BORN: 4/1/1955 On June 4, 1998, sentenced to life in prison. Serving sentence in federal prison in Florence, Colo. Biography Terry Nichols grew up, as one of four children of Robert and Joyce Nichols, on a family farm in Lapeer, Michigan. A shy boy and an uninspired student, Nichols graduated in 1973 from Lapeer High School with a 2.6 grade point average.After one year at Central Michigan University, Nichols returned to Lapeer to help his recently divorced father with the family farm. Nichols married Lana Walsh in 1981 and the couple had a son the following year. Nichols paid the bills with a variety of jobs, ranging from managing a grain elevator, to doing carpentry work and selling life insurance.In May 1988, at age 33, Nichols joined the Army. He met Timothy McVeigh in basic training at Fort Benning, and their friendship continued to grow as the two served in Fort Riley, Kansas. Nichols and McVeigh shared a common hostility to gun control and a common belief in the importance of sur...

Timothy J. McVeigh

BORN: 4/23/1968 On June 13, 1997, jury sentenced to death. Executed on June 11, 2001. Biography McVeigh was the second of three children born to William and Mildred McVeigh in Lockport, New York. His parents' troubled marriage ended when McVeigh was 10, and from that point on he lived mostly with his father. By the time his mother left the family, McVeigh had already developed a facination with guns. Four years later, McVeigh began stockpiling food and camping equipment in preparation for a nuclear attack or communist overthrow of the government.McVeigh performed well on standardized tests in high school and did not miss a single day of school. Still, he struck classmates as somewhat introverted and disengaged, and his only extracurricular activity was track. Under the entry "future plans" in his high school yearbook, McVeigh wrote: "Take it as it comes, buy a Lamborghini, California girls." Despite his reference to "California girls," McVeigh seemed u...

Michael Fortier

BORN: 1968 Sentenced to 12 years in prison on May 27, 1998. Released on January 26, 2006 after serving 10+years. Biography Michael Joseph Fortier was born in Maine in 1968, then moved with his family to Kingman, Arizona at age seven. After graduating from Kingman High, Fortier entered the army, where he met Timothy McVeigh at Fort Benning, Georgia in 1988. The company, which also included Terry Nichols, moved on to Fort Riley, Kansas, where Fortier served until his honorable discharge in May 1991.Fortier shared a common interests with his friends McVeigh and Nichols. All considered themselves marksmen and all had contempt for the federal government. At McVeigh's urging, Fortier read The Turner Diaries, a book seen as inciting violent action against an overreaching federal government.After his stint in the service, Fortier returned to Kingman where he enrolled in Mohave Community College and worked part-time in a printing shop and a hardware store. He was known locally for his parti...

Top ten reasons to question the official story.

By: Holland O. Van den Nieuwenhof 1. John Doe #2 And Other Accomplices Timothy McVeigh is supposed to be the only one who drove the Ryder truck full of explosives up to the Murrah building and detonated it. But the government only produced one witness during McVeigh’s trial to place him in Oklahoma City. That witness, Daina Bradley , lost her children, her mother and her leg in the bombing. Under cross-examination, she admitted that she saw McVeigh with another man, the fabled John Doe #2, in the Ryder truck. Numerous ( 1 2 ) other witnesses state that they saw McVeigh with other perpetrators the day of the bombing. There are also numerous other witness accounts of McVeigh accompanied by other men during his preparation for the bombing and even when he rented the Ryder truck. In some cases, these suspects have been identified by witnesses and yet the government claims that McVeigh was the sole actor in the tragedy of April 19, 1995. 2. Why Was The ATF AWOL Paramedic Tiffany Bible, wh...

Injuries By Floor

Time Line Oklahoma City Bombing

Timeline of the Oklahoma City bombing case Chronology of the Oklahoma City bombing case: April 19, 1995 - Bomb rips through Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building at 9:02 a.m. Timothy McVeigh arrested 90 minutes later on firearms charge after traffic stop near Billings, Okla. April 20 - Authorities release sketches of suspects John Doe No. 1 and John Doe No. 2. April 21 - Federal authorities arrest McVeigh, who resembles John Doe No. 1, in connection with bombing hours before he was expected to make bail on firearms charge. Terry Nichols surrenders in Herington, Kan., after learning police are looking for him. Nichols and his brother James are held on material witness warrants. May 10 - Terry Nichols charged in bombing. May 23 - James Nichols released; charges against him are later dropped. June 14 - Authorities admit sketches of John Doe No. 2 resemble innocent Army private at Fort Riley, Kan. Aug. 7 - McVeigh attorney Stephen Jones suggests unidentified leg found in rubble could belong to...

A Noble Lie.

The eagerly awaited film/documentary A Noble Lie is about to make it's introduction into mainstream America. http://freemindfilms.com/welcome-to-free-mind-films/ http://www.anoblelie.com/

Terry Nichols writes

Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Terry Nichols writes he 'grieves daily' Inmate Terry Nichols writes letters from Colorado prison to Jannie Coverdale, an Oklahoma City woman who lost two grandsons in 1995 attack. In letters to a victim, Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Terry Nichols wrote he believed bomber Tim McVeigh planned to blow up “some type of monument, bridge or similar structure” at night, not an occupied building. Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Terry Nichols writes he 'grieves daily' Nichols, 56, also wrote his heart breaks and he grieves “daily knowing that I had a part in such a devastating tragedy.” Nichols denied for years he was involved in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. However, in 2005, he admitted his role in making the bomb — at first to the FBI and to his relatives. He told the FBI, also, that he thought McVeigh's target was going to be a monument. McVeigh detonated the truck bomb outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building at 9:02 ...
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