On
April 19, 1995, at 9:02 am, a
truck bomb exploded in front of the
Alfred P. Murrah Federal
Building in downtown
Oklahoma City, ultimately killing 168 people (19 of which were children
attending a
daycare) and injuring over 400. We didn’t know who did it. At first, we didn’t even
know there was a
who; we all hoped and prayed it was just a gas line that exploded. Nobody
wants to think that people can do these sorts of things on purpose. When it became clear that
somebody did, in fact, set off a bomb, there was a lot of
finger-pointing at
Muslim-Americans and
immigrants. Ultimately, it turned out that a group of white men from such exotic locales as
Arizona,
Kansas, and
New York were resonsible.
Timothy McVeigh and
Terry Nichols had been planning the bombing
for quite some time. The
indictment against them charges that they started taking action on this
plan in September of 1994. They stole and sold
firearms in order to purchase the bomb-making
materials. They rented multiple storage units for the purpose of concealing stolen goods and said
bombing materials. They stole
explosives that they couldn’t afford. They discussed and planned
and fine-tuned, and on April 18, they constructed the bomb in the back of a 20-foot
Ryder truck
in
Kansas. McVeigh drove the truck to Oklahoma City alone and set off the bomb
himself.
They had help from a man named
Michael Fortier, a former army buddy of McVeigh’s who helped
to transport, conceal, and sell the stolen firearms. The indictment against him also charges that he
knew full well what McVeigh and Nichols were planning and did nothing to warn anyone about it.
On the day of the bombing, McVeigh was arrested by police on I-35 in Perry, Oklahoma for driving
a car without tags. It wasn’t until a couple of days later that police figured out exactly who they had
in custody. Nichols eventually turned himself in to authorities in Kansas. On August 10, 1995,
McVeigh and Nichols were charged with:
Conspiracy to Use a
Weapon of Mass Destruction; Use
of a Weapon of Mass Destruction; Destruction by Explosive; and eight counts of
First Degree
Murder for the deaths of eight
law enforcement officials.
McVeigh was tried in the U.S. District Court in
Denver. On June 2, 1997, he was convicted and
later sentenced to
death. After the
Supreme Court refused to hear his appeal, he asked the District
Judge to halt the appeals process. His
execution date was originally set for May 16, 2001, but was
pushed back to June 11 of the same year because the
FBI had failed to disclose some materials to
McVeigh’s
attorney. On June 11, 2001, Timothy McVeigh was given the
death penalty by
lethal
injection in federal prison in Indiana.
Nichols was tried separately and convicted on December 23, 1997. He received a
prison sentence,
escaping the death penalty because the
jury deadlocked.
Fortier made a handwritten confession and was given prison sentence for not reporting McVeigh’s
plans to authorities.
On May 23, 1995, at 7:01 am, a
demolition company
imploded the remains of the Federal
Building. The last three bodies were pulled from the rubble six days later. After the debris was
cleared away, a fence was erected around the site, and it sat empty for a while. People flocked from
all over to visit the site, leaving signs and cards and teddy bears and flowers in memory of those who
died. It was eventually decided to erect a memorial on the site where the building once stood.
Today, the
Oklahoma City National Memorial is a hauntingly beautiful place. You enter through
a door labeled "9:01 am" and leave through one labeled "9:03 am". In between these doors, the
memory of what took place there is preserved. One-hundred and sixty-eight empty chairs, each with
the name of a victim, stand silently in rows. There is a
museum nearby, with the photographs and
stories of destruction, death, gallantry, heroism, and heartbreak. The
Institute for the Prevention of
Terrorism is also supposed to be a part of the memorial, but I haven’t heard much about it.
Links:
www.kwtv.com/news/bombing/fortier.htm - Indictment Against Michael J. Fortier
www.kwtv.com/news/bombing/mcveigh.htm - Indictment Against McVeigh & Nichols
www.oklahomacitynationalmemorial.org