25 years later, questions remain about Oklahoma City.

the other mike

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In an interview a few years ago, Hillary Clinton referred to the Murrah Building bombing as one of many 'conspiracies theories' circulating around regarding cover-ups by the government. If that wasn't some kind of Freudian slip, I don't know what is.

Anyone who saw the televised coverage of the bombed-out Murrah
Building didn't need to be a rocket scientist to realize that the tremendous destruction done didn't come from a single bomb in a vehicle `outside' the building. But, rather, it should have been obvious to any fourteen-year-old boy of average intelligence that the Murrah Building was literally "dropped" by blowing several of the reinforced concrete supporting columns and part of the massive reinforced concrete header supporting the building out from under it. This occurred as Gen. Partin said, "at critical structural points at the third floor level." Did the bombers plant explosives in other parts of the building as well?


OKLAHOMA CITY (KOKH) - She was at work, on the ninth floor of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. It was a minute after 9:00 a.m. on April 19, 1995 when Jane Graham would find herself knocked over from the explosion that tore through the building.




 
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LoL!! I LOVE conspiracy theories.
Did you know that Hillary adopted an alien baby, and Bill had a three breasted intern? :cool-45:

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Have you ever seen a murderer or terrorist executed as fast as McVeigh was?....


It did take 6 years for Mr. McVeigh to take a seat in Old Smoky.

Not exactly overnight.

That's twice as long as it took to execute the Rosenbergs.
They wanted to break him in solitary first.
(Indiana supermax)
 
The man and his wife who owned the company that rented the truck used in the bombing stated many times that 3 men together rented the truck.
Later they changed their story after the FBI convinced the couple their minds suffered from confused memory, and there had only been 2 renters. McVeigh and Nichols. ... :cool:
 
The Murrah build was the regional office for the FBI, yet not a single FBI agent was in the building at the time of the blast.
Coincidence?? ... :dunno:

Scoured the internet no FBI office listed in that building at that time.


The building was designed by architects Stephen H. Horton and Wendell Locke of Locke, Wright and Associates and constructed by J.W. Bateson using reinforced concrete in 1977[2] at a cost of $14.5 million. The building, named for federal judge Alfred P. Murrah, an Oklahoma native, opened on March 2, 1977.[3]

By the 1990s, the building contained regional offices for the Social Security Administration, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, the United States Secret Service, the Department of Veterans Affairs vocational rehabilitation counseling center, the Drug Enforcement Administration (D.E.A.), and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF). It also contained recruiting offices for the US Military. It housed approximately 550 employees.[4] It also housed America's Kids, a children's day care center.
 
The man and his wife who owned the company that rented the truck used in the bombing stated many times that 3 men together rented the truck.
Later they changed their story after the FBI convinced the couple their minds suffered from confused memory, and there had only been 2 renters. McVeigh and Nichols. ... :cool:
The biggest questions will never be answered, like who planted the bombs inside the building, some which failed to detonate, and then they covered up the fact that FBI bomb squads had to remove them. One was apparently planted directly under the daycare center ( for maximaun psyop effect)
 
Scoured the internet no FBI office listed in that building at that time.

The building was designed by architects Stephen H. Horton and Wendell Locke of Locke, Wright and Associates and constructed by J.W. Bateson using reinforced concrete in 1977[2] at a cost of $14.5 million. The building, named for federal judge Alfred P. Murrah, an Oklahoma native, opened on March 2, 1977.[3]

By the 1990s, the building contained regional offices for the Social Security Administration, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, the United States Secret Service, the Department of Veterans Affairs vocational rehabilitation counseling center, the Drug Enforcement Administration (D.E.A.), and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF). It also contained recruiting offices for the US Military. It housed approximately 550 employees.[4] It also housed America's Kids, a children's day care center.
The black ops guy in the op video says that in his book he has the documented evidence that all the Clinton Whitewater files were stored there and also the Gulf War Syndrome medical files on the Iraq veterans. ( getting the Pentagon off the hook for hundreds of billions in claims )
 
Have you ever seen a murderer or terrorist executed as fast as McVeigh was?....


It did take 6 years for Mr. McVeigh to take a seat in Old Smoky.

Not exactly overnight.

That's twice as long as it took to execute the Rosenbergs.
He was convicted and sentenced to death in 1997. Less than 6 years.

6 years from the date of the crime. 4 years from the date of the conviction. Still not very quick.
 
Scoured the internet no FBI office listed in that building at that time.
Sorry, my mistake for saying FBI.
It was the ATF (Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms) which had their regional office in the Murrah building.
McVeigh had a vendetta against the ATF because they were the federal agency that was responsible for the assault and subsequent deaths of the cult group in Waco. The bombing took place on the anniversary of the Waco fiasco.
Again, strangely no ATF agent were in the building at the time of the bombing. ... :cool:
 
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Have you ever seen a murderer or terrorist executed as fast as McVeigh was?....


It did take 6 years for Mr. McVeigh to take a seat in Old Smoky.

Not exactly overnight.

That's twice as long as it took to execute the Rosenbergs.
He was convicted and sentenced to death in 1997. Less than 6 years.

6 years from the date of the crime. 4 years from the date of the conviction. Still not very quick.
Quicker than the usual 20 years, don't you think?
 

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