On
this date, June 11, 2001, Timothy McVeigh A.K.A as the Oklahoma City Bomber was
executed by lethal injection at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre
Haute, Indiana. He was the terrorist who detonated a truck bomb in front of the
Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995. Commonly
referred to as the Oklahoma City Bombing, the attack killed 168 people and
injured over 600. It was the deadliest act of terrorism within the United
States prior to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, and remains the
deadliest act of domestic terrorism in United States history. I will post
information about him from Wikipedia and some other links before giving my
comments.
Timothy McVeigh |
(SOURCE: http://igossip.com/barry-levinson-will-direct-timothy-mcveigh-bombing-movie-okc) |
Timothy James
"Tim" McVeigh (April 23, 1968 – June 11, 2001) was
an American terrorist who detonated a truck bomb in front of the Alfred
P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995. Commonly
referred to as the Oklahoma City Bombing, the attack killed 168 people and
injured over 600. It was the deadliest act of terrorism within the United
States prior to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, and remains the
deadliest act of domestic terrorism in United States history.
McVeigh,
a militia movement sympathizer and Gulf War veteran, sought revenge against the
federal government for their handling of the Waco Siege, which ended in the
deaths of 76 people exactly two years prior to the bombing, as well as for the
Ruby Ridge incident in 1992. McVeigh hoped to inspire a revolt against what he
considered to be a tyrannical federal government. He was convicted of eleven
federal offenses and sentenced to death. His execution took place on June 11,
2001 at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Indiana. Terry Nichols
and Michael Fortier were also convicted as conspirators in the plot.
FBI mugshot of Timothy McVeigh. |
Background
information
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|
Birth name
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Timothy James McVeigh
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Also known as
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Tim Tuttle
Darel Bridges Robert Kling |
Occupation
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U.S. Army soldier, security guard
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Born
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April 23, 1968
Lockport, New York, U.S. |
Died
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June 11, 2001 (aged 33)
USP Terre Haute Terre Haute, Indiana, U.S. |
Cause of death
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Execution by lethal injection
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Conviction
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Use of a weapon of mass destruction
Conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction Destruction with the use of explosives 8 counts of first-degree murder |
Penalty
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Death by lethal injection
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Parents
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William McVeigh
Mildred Noreen Hill |
Nationality
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American
|
Religion
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Roman Catholic
None (agnostic, 2001) |
Killings
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Date
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April 19, 1995
9:02 am CDT |
Location(s)
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Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S.
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Target(s)
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Federal government
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Killed
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168
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Injured
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600+
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Weapon(s)
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Fertilizer truck bomb
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Motive
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Retaliation for the Waco Siege, Ruby Ridge, other
government raids and general U.S. foreign policy
|
Childhood
McVeigh
was born in Lockport, New York, the only son and the second of three children
of William and Mildred "Mickey" McVeigh. His parents divorced when he
was ten years old and he was raised by his father in Pendleton, New York.
McVeigh
claimed to have been a target of bullying at school, and he took refuge in a
fantasy world where he imagined retaliating against the bullies. At the end of
his life, he stated his belief that the United States government is the
ultimate bully. Most who knew McVeigh remember him as being withdrawn, with a
few describing him as an outgoing and playful child who withdrew as an
adolescent. McVeigh is said to have had one girlfriend during his childhood,
later stating to journalists he did not know how to impress girls. According to
his authorized biography, "his only sustaining relief from his unsatisfied
sex drive was his even stronger desire to die."
While
in high school, McVeigh became interested in computers and hacked into
government computer systems on his Commodore 64, under the handle "The
Wanderer", borrowed from the song by Dion DiMucci. In his senior year,
McVeigh was named Starpoint Central High School's "most promising computer
programmer," but he maintained relatively poor grades until his 1986
graduation.
McVeigh
was introduced to firearms by his grandfather. He told people he wanted to be a
gun shop owner and sometimes took firearms to school to impress his classmates.
McVeigh became intensely interested in gun rights after he graduated from high
school, as well as the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution, and read
magazines such as Soldier of Fortune. He briefly attended Bryant &
Stratton College before dropping out.
Military life
In
May 1988, at age 20 McVeigh graduated from U.S. Army Infantry School at Fort
Benning Georgia. While in the military, McVeigh used much of his spare time to
read about firearms, sniper tactics, and explosives. McVeigh was reprimanded by
the military for purchasing a "White Power" T-shirt at a Ku Klux Klan
protest against black servicemen who wore what he viewed as "Black
Power" T-shirts around the army base.
McVeigh
was awarded a Bronze Star for his service in the first Gulf War. He was a
top-scoring gunner with the 25mm cannon of the 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 later said that the
Army taught him how to switch off his emotions. He had special lifesaving
training and he may have saved the life of a comrade who had life-threatening
shrapnel wounds.
Speaking
of his experience in Iraq in an interview before his execution, documented in 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.
McVeigh
aspired to join the United States Army Special Forces (SF). After returning
from the Gulf War, he entered the selection program to become an SF soldier,
but quit after his psychological profile categorized him as very unsuitable for
SF. Shortly thereafter, McVeigh decided to leave the Army. He was discharged on
December 31, 1991.
Post-military life
After
leaving the army in 1992, McVeigh grew increasingly transient. At first he
worked briefly near his hometown of Pendleton as a security guard, where he
sounded off daily to his co-worker Carl Lebron, Jr. about his loathing for government.
Deciding the Buffalo area was too liberal, he left his job and began driving
around America, seeking out his old friends from the Army.
McVeigh
wrote letters to local newspapers complaining about taxes:
Taxes are a joke. Regardless of what a political candidate "promises," they will increase. More taxes are always the answer to government mismanagement. They mess up. We suffer. Taxes are reaching cataclysmic levels, with no slowdown in sight. [...] Is a Civil War Imminent? Do we have to shed blood to reform the current system? I hope it doesn't come to that. But it might.
McVeigh
also wrote to Representative John J. LaFalce ((D) New York), complaining about
the arrest of a woman for carrying mace:
It is a lie if we tell ourselves that the police can protect us everywhere at all times. Firearms restrictions are bad enough, but now a woman can't even carry Mace in her purse?
It
is claimed that while visiting friends in Decker, Michigan, McVeigh complained
that the Army had implanted a microchip into his buttocks so that the
government could keep track of him.
The
long hours in a dead-end job, the feeling that he did not have a home and his
failure to establish a relationship with a woman brought McVeigh to the
breaking point. He sought romance, but he was rejected by a coworker and he
still felt nervous around women. He believed that he brought too much pain to
his loved ones. He grew angry and frustrated at his difficulties in finding a
girlfriend and he took up obsessive gambling. Unable to pay back gambling
debts, he took a cash advance and then defaulted on his repayments. He then
began looking for a state without heavy government regulation or high taxes. He
became enraged when the government informed him that he had been overpaid $1,058
while in the Army and he had to pay back the money. He wrote an angry letter to
the government inviting them to:
Go ahead, take everything I own; take my dignity. Feel good as you grow fat and rich at my expense; sucking my tax dollars and property.
McVeigh
introduced his sister to anti-government literature, but his father had little
interest in these views. He moved out of his father's house and into an
apartment that had no telephone, which had the advantage of making it
impossible for his employer to contact him for overtime assignments. He also
quit the NRA, viewing its stance on gun rights as too weak.
1993 Waco siege and gun shows
In
1993, he drove to Waco, Texas during the Waco Siege to show his support. At the
scene, he distributed pro-gun rights literature and bumper stickers, such as
"When guns are outlawed, I will become an outlaw." He told a student
reporter:
The government is afraid of the guns people have because they have to have control of the people at all times. Once you take away the guns, you can do anything to the people. You give them an inch and they take a mile. I believe we are slowly turning into a socialist government. The government is continually growing bigger and more powerful and the people need to prepare to defend themselves against government control.
For
the five months following the Waco Siege, McVeigh worked at gun shows and
handed out free cards printed up with Lon Horiuchi's name and address, "in
the hope that somebody in the Patriot movement would assassinate the
sharpshooter." (Horiuchi is an FBI sniper and some of his official actions
have drawn controversy, specifically his shooting and killing of Randy Weaver's
wife while she held an infant child.) He wrote hate mail to the sniper,
suggesting that "what goes around, comes around," and he later
considered putting aside his plan to target the Murrah Building to target
Horiuchi, or a member of his family instead.
McVeigh
spent more time on the gun show circuit, traveling to 40 states and visiting
about 80 gun shows. McVeigh found that the further west he went, the more
anti-government sentiment he encountered, at least until he got to what he
called "The People's Socialist Republic of California." McVeigh sold
survival items and copies of The Turner Diaries. 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.
Arizona with Fortier
McVeigh
had a road atlas with hand-drawn designations of the most likely places for
nuclear attacks and considered buying property in Seligman, Arizona, which he
determined to be in a "nuclear-free zone." McVeigh lived with Michael
Fortier in Kingman, Arizona, for a spell and grew so close to him that he
served as best man at Fortier's wedding. McVeigh experimented with cannabis and
methamphetamine, after first researching their effects in an encyclopedia; but
he was not as interested in drugs as Fortier. One of the reasons they parted
ways was McVeigh's boredom with Fortier's drug habits.
With Nichols, Waco siege,
radicalization and first explosives devices
In
April 1993, McVeigh headed for a farm where co-conspirator Terry Nichols lived.
In between watching coverage of the Waco siege on TV, Nichols and his brother
began teaching McVeigh how to make explosives out of readily available
materials; specifically, they combined household chemicals in plastic jugs. The
destruction of the Waco compound enraged McVeigh and convinced him that it was
time to take action. The government's use of CS gas on women and children
angered McVeigh; he had been exposed to the gas as part of his military
training and thus was familiar with its effects. The disappearance of certain
evidence, such as the bullet-riddled steel-reinforced front door to the
complex, led him to suspect a cover-up.
McVeigh's
anti-government rhetoric became more radical. He began to sell ATF hats riddled
with bullet holes and a flare gun, which, he said, could shoot down an
"ATF helicopter." He produced videos detailing the government's
actions at Waco and handed out pamphlets with titles like "U.S. Government
Initiates Open Warfare Against American People" and "Waco Shootout
Evokes Memory of Warsaw '43." He began changing his answering machine
greeting every couple of weeks to various quotes by Patrick Henry such as
"Give me liberty or give me death." He began experimenting with pipe
bombs and other small explosive devices for the first time. The government also
imposed new firearms restrictions in 1994 that McVeigh believed threatened his
livelihood.
McVeigh
dissociated himself from his boyhood friend, Steve Hodge, by sending a 23-page
farewell letter to him. He proclaimed his devotion to the United States
Declaration of Independence, explaining in detail what each sentence meant to
him. McVeigh declared that:
Those who betray or subvert the Constitution are guilty of sedition and/or treason, are domestic enemies and should and will be punished accordingly.It also stands to reason that anyone who sympathizes with the enemy or gives aid or comfort to said enemy is likewise guilty. I have sworn to uphold and defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic and I will. And I will because not only did I swear to, but I believe in what it stands for in every bit of my heart, soul and being.I know in my heart that I am right in my struggle, Steve. I have come to peace with myself, my God and my cause. Blood will flow in the streets, Steve. Good vs. Evil. Free Men vs. Socialist Wannabe Slaves. Pray it is not your blood, my friend.
McVeigh
felt the need to personally reconnoiter sites of rumored conspiracies. He
visited Area 51 in order to defy government restrictions on photography and
went to Gulfport, Mississippi to determine the veracity of rumors about United
Nations operations. These turned out to be false; the Russian vehicles on the
site were being configured for use in U.N.-sponsored humanitarian aid efforts.
Around this time, McVeigh and Nichols also began making bulk purchases of
ammonium nitrate, an agricultural fertilizer, for resale to survivalists, since
rumors were circulating that the government was preparing to ban it.
Plan against federal building or
individuals
McVeigh
told Fortier of his plans to blow up a federal building, but Fortier declined
to participate. Fortier also told his wife about the plans. McVeigh composed
two letters to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the first titled
"Constitutional Defenders" and the second "ATF Read." He
denounced government officials as "fascist tyrants" and "storm
troopers" and warned:
ATF, all you tyrannical people will swing in the wind one day for your treasonous actions against the Constitution of the United States. Remember the Nuremberg War Trials.
McVeigh
also wrote a letter of recruitment to a customer named Steve Colbern:
A man with nothing left to lose is a very dangerous man and his energy/anger can be focused toward a common/righteous goal. What I'm asking you to do, then, is sit back and be honest with yourself. Do you have kids/wife? Would you back out at the last minute to care for the family? Are you interested in keeping your firearms for their current/future monetary value, or would you drag that '06 through rock, swamp and cactus...to get off the needed shot? In short, I'm not looking for talkers, I'm looking for fighters...And if you are a fed, think twice. Think twice about the Constitution you are supposedly enforcing (isn't "enforcing freedom" an oxymoron?) and think twice about catching us with our guard down – you will lose just like Degan did – and your family will lose.
McVeigh
began announcing that he had progressed from the "propaganda" phase
to the "action" phase. He wrote to his Michigan friend Gwenda
Strider, "I have certain other 'militant' talents that are in short supply
and greatly demanded."
McVeigh
later said he considered "a campaign of individual assassination,"
with "eligible" targets including Attorney-General Janet Reno, Judge
Walter S. Smith Jr. of Federal District Court, who handled the Branch Davidian
trial, and Lon Horiuchi, a member of the FBI hostage-rescue team who shot and
killed Vicki Weaver in a standoff at a remote cabin at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, in
1992. He said he wanted Reno to accept "full responsibility in deed, not
just words." However, such an assassination seemed too difficult, and he
decided that since federal agents had become soldiers, it was necessary to
strike against them at their command centers. Moreover, according to American
Terrorist, ultimately he decided that he would make the loudest statement
by bombing a federal building. After the bombing, he was ambivalent about his
act, as expressed in letters to his hometown newspaper that he sometimes wished
he had carried out a series of assassinations against police and government
officials instead.
Oklahoma City bombing
Main
article: Oklahoma City
bombing
Working
at a lakeside campground near McVeigh's old Army post, he and Nichols
constructed an ANNM explosive device mounted in the back of a rented Ryder
truck. This site was regarded as suitable because a moving truck would not seem
out of place, given the transient population of the area. The bomb consisted of
about 5,000 pounds (2,300 kg) of ammonium nitrate and nitromethane, and
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 opened for the day. Before arriving, he
stopped to light a two minute fuse. At 09:02, a large explosion destroyed the
north half of the building. The explosion killed 168 people, including 19
children in the day care center on the second floor, and injured 450 others.
McVeigh
noted that he had no knowledge that the federal offices also ran a day care
center on the second floor of the building, and that he might have chosen a
different target if he had known about it. In his own words:
It might have given me pause to switch targets. That's a large amount of collateral damage.
Michel
and Herbeck quote McVeigh, with whom they spoke for some 75 hours, on his
attitude to the victims:
To these people in Oklahoma who have lost a loved one, I'm sorry but it happens every day. You're not the first mother to lose a kid, or the first grandparent to lose a grandson or a granddaughter. It happens every day, somewhere in the world. I'm not going to go into that courtroom, curl into a fetal ball and cry just because the victims want me to do that.
According
to the Oklahoma City Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism (MIPT),
more than 300 buildings were damaged. More than 12,000 volunteers and rescue
workers took part in the rescue, recovery and support operations following the
bombing. In reference to theories that he had assistance from others, McVeigh
responded:
You can't handle the truth! Because the truth is, I blew up the Murrah Building and isn't it kind of scary that one man could wreak this kind of hell?
Timothy McVeigh about to be led out of a Perry, Oklahoma, courthouse two days after the Oklahoma City bombing. |
Arrest, trial, conviction and
sentencing
By
tracing the Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) of a rear axle found in the
wreckage, the FBI identified the vehicle as a Ryder Rental box truck rented
from Junction City, Kansas. 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. Lea McGown, manager of the local
Dreamland Motel, identified the sketch as Timothy McVeigh.
Shortly
after the bombing, while driving on I-35 in Noble County, near Perry, Oklahoma,
McVeigh was stopped by Oklahoma State Trooper Charles J. Hanger from Pawnee,
Oklahoma. Hanger had passed McVeigh's yellow 1977 Mercury Marquis and noticed
that it had no license plate. McVeigh admitted to the police officer (who
noticed a bulge under his jacket) that he had a gun and McVeigh was
subsequently arrested for having driven without plates and illegal firearm
possession; McVeigh's concealed weapon permit was not legal in Oklahoma.
McVeigh was wearing a T-shirt at that time with a picture of Abraham Lincoln
and the motto: sic semper tyrannis ('Thus always to tyrants'), the state
motto of Virginia and also the words shouted by John Wilkes Booth after he shot
Lincoln. On the back, it had a tree with a picture of three blood droplets and
the Thomas Jefferson quote, "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from
time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." Three days later,
while still in jail, McVeigh was identified as the subject of the nationwide
manhunt.
On
August 10, 1995, McVeigh was indicted on 11 federal 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
February 20, 1996, the Court granted a change of venue and ordered that the
case be transferred from Oklahoma City to the U.S. District Court in Denver,
Colorado, to be presided over by U.S. District Judge Richard Paul Matsch.
McVeigh
instructed his lawyers to use a necessity defense, but they ended up not doing
so, because they would have had to prove that McVeigh was in "imminent
danger" from the government. (McVeigh himself argued that
"imminent" did not necessarily mean "immediate.") They
would have 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. The 51-day siege of the Branch Davidian complex resulted in the
deaths of 76 Branch Davidians. As part of the defense, McVeigh's lawyers showed
the jury the controversial video Waco: The Big Lie.
On
June 2, 1997, McVeigh was found guilty on all 11 counts of the federal
indictment.
McVeigh
tried to calm his mother by saying, "Think of it this way. When I was in
the Army, you didn't see me for years. Think of me that way now, like I'm away
in the Army again, on an assignment for the military."
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 eight federal officers leading to a possible death penalty for
McVeigh; they could not bring charges against McVeigh for the remaining 160
murders in federal court because those deaths fell under the jurisdiction of
the State of Oklahoma. Because McVeigh was convicted and sentenced to death,
the State of Oklahoma did not file murder charges against McVeigh for the other
160 deaths. Before the sentence was formally pronounced by Judge Matsch,
McVeigh addressed the court for the first time and said:
If the Court please, I wish to use the words of Justice Brandeis dissenting in Olmstead to speak for me. He wrote, 'Our Government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example.' That's all I have.
Incarceration and execution
While
incarcerated, Timothy McVeigh had the Federal Bureau of Prisons register #
12076-064. 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. McVeigh's request for a nationally televised
execution was also denied. An Internet company also unsuccessfully sued for the
right to broadcast it. At ADX Florence, McVeigh and Nichols were housed in
"Bomber's Row", the same cell block as Ted Kaczynski, Luis Felipe and
Ramzi Yousef. Ramzi made frequent, unsuccessful attempts to convert McVeigh to
Islam.
McVeigh
said:
I am sorry these people had to lose their lives. But that's the nature of the beast. It's understood going in what the human toll will be.
He
said that if there turned out to be an afterlife, he would "improvise,
adapt and overcome", noting that:
If there is a hell, then I'll be in good company with a lot of fighter pilots who also had to bomb innocents to win the war.
He
also said:
I knew I wanted this before it happened. I knew my objective was state-assisted suicide and when it happens, it's in your face. You just did something you're trying to say should be illegal for medical personnel.
The
BOP moved McVeigh from ADX Florence to the federal death row at United States
Penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana in 1999.
McVeigh
dropped his remaining appeals, saying that he would rather die than spend the
rest of his life in prison. On January 16, 2001 the Federal Bureau of Prisons
set May 16, 2001 as McVeigh's execution date. McVeigh stated that his only
regret was not completely leveling the federal building. Six days prior to his
scheduled execution, the FBI turned over thousands of documents of evidence it
had previously withheld to McVeigh's attorneys. As a result, U.S. Attorney
General John Ashcroft announced McVeigh's execution would be stayed for one
month.
The
execution date was re-set for June 11, 2001. McVeigh invited California
conductor/composer David Woodard to perform pre-requiem Mass music on the eve
of his execution. He requested a Catholic chaplain. He requested two pints of
mint chocolate chip ice cream for his last meal.
McVeigh
chose William Ernest Henley's poem "Invictus" as his final statement.
However, just before the execution, when he was asked if he had a final statement,
he declined. Jay Sawyer, relative of one of the victims, noted, "Without
saying a word, he got the final word." Larry Whicher, whose brother died
in the attack, described McVeigh as having "a totally expressionless,
blank stare. He had a look of defiance and that if he could, he'd do it all
over again."
McVeigh
was executed by lethal injection at 7:14 a.m. on June 11, 2001, at the U.S.
Federal Penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana, the first federal prisoner to be
executed by the United States federal government since Victor Feguer was
executed in Iowa on March 15, 1963.
On
November 21, 1997, President Bill Clinton had signed S. 923, special
legislation introduced by Senator Arlen Specter to bar McVeigh and other
veterans convicted of capital crimes from being buried in any military
cemetery. His body was cremated at Mattox Ryan Funeral Home in Terre Haute,
Indiana. The cremated remains were given to his lawyer, who scattered them at
an undisclosed location. McVeigh had earlier written that he considered having
his ashes dropped at the site of the memorial where the Murrah building once
stood, but decided that would be "too vengeful, too raw, too cold."
He had expressed willingness to donate organs, but was prohibited from doing so
by prison regulations.
"Psychiatrist
John Smith concluded that [McVeigh] was a decent person who had allowed rage to
build up inside him to the point that he had lashed out in one terrible,
violent act." McVeigh's IQ was assessed at 126.
Florence ADMAX USP,
where McVeigh was incarcerated
|
United States Penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana, the site of the
federal death row for men and the federal execution chamber
|
Political views and religious beliefs
McVeigh
was a registered Republican when he lived in Buffalo, New York, in the 1980s,
and had a membership in the National Rifle Association while in the military,
but voted for Libertarian Party candidate, Harry Browne, in the 1996
presidential elections. McVeigh was raised Roman Catholic. During his
childhood, he and his father attended Mass regularly. McVeigh was confirmed at
the Good Shepherd Church in Pendleton, New York, in 1985. In a 1996 interview,
McVeigh professed belief in "a God", although he said he had
"sort of lost touch with" Catholicism and "I never really picked
it up, however I do maintain core beliefs." In the 2001 book American
Terrorist, McVeigh stated that he did not believe in Hell and that science
is his religion. In June 2001, a day before the execution, McVeigh wrote a
letter to the Buffalo News identifying as agnostic. Before his
execution, McVeigh took the Catholic sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick.
Motivations for the bombing
"Why? McVeigh told us at eloquent length, but our rulers and their media preferred to depict him as a sadistic, crazed monster ... who had done it for the kicks". — Gore Vidal, 2002
McVeigh
claimed that the bombing was revenge for "what the U.S. government did at
Waco and Ruby Ridge." McVeigh visited Waco during the standoff. While
there, he was interviewed by student reporter Michelle Rauch, a senior
journalism major at SMU who was writing for the school paper. McVeigh expressed
his objections over what was happening there.
McVeigh
frequently quoted and alluded to the novel The Turner Diaries; while
rejecting the book's racism, he claimed to appreciate its interest in firearms.
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 1,200-word essay dated March 1998, from the federal maximum-security prison
at Florence, Colorado, McVeigh claimed that the terrorist bombing was “morally
equivalent” to U.S. military actions against Iraq and other foreign lands.
The administration has said that Iraq has no right to stockpile chemical or biological weapons (“weapons of mass destruction”) — mainly because they have used them in the past.Well, if that’s the standard by which these matters are decided, then the U.S. is the nation that set the precedent. The U.S. has stockpiled these same weapons (and more) for over 40 years. The U.S. claims this was done for deterrent purposes during its “Cold War” with the Soviet Union. Why, then, it is invalid for Iraq to claim the same reason (deterrence) with respect to Iraq’s (real) war with, and the continued threat of, its neighbor Iran?The administration claims that Iraq has used these weapons in the past. We’ve all seen the pictures that show a Kurdish woman and child frozen in death from the use of chemical weapons. But, have you ever seen those pictures juxtaposed next to pictures from Hiroshima or Nagasaki?I suggest that one study the histories of World War I, World War II and other “regional conflicts” that the U.S. has been involved in to familiarize themselves with the use of “weapons of mass destruction.”Remember Dresden? How about Hanoi? Tripoli? Baghdad? What about the big ones — Hiroshima and Nagasaki? (At these two locations, the U.S. killed at least 150,000 non-combatants — mostly women and children — in the blink of an eye. Thousands more took hours, days, weeks or months to die).If Saddam is such a demon, and people are calling for war crimes charges and trials against him and his nation, why do we not hear the same cry for blood directed at those responsible for even greater amounts of “mass destruction” — like those responsible and involved in dropping bombs on the cities mentioned above?The truth is, the U.S. has set the standard when it comes to the stockpiling and use of weapons of mass destruction.
The
handwritten essay, submitted to and published by the alternative national news
magazine Media Bypass, was distributed worldwide by The Associated Press on May
29, 1998.
The
essay, which marked the first time that McVeigh publicly discussed the Oklahoma
City bombing, continued:
Hypocrisy when it comes to the death of children? In Oklahoma City, it was family convenience that explained the presence of a day-care center placed between street level and the law enforcement agencies which occupied the upper floors of the building. Yet, when discussion shifts to Iraq, any day-care center in a government building instantly becomes “a shield.” Think about it.(Actually, there is a difference here. The administration has admitted to knowledge of the presence of children in or near Iraqi government buildings, yet they still proceed with their plans to bomb —saying that they cannot be held responsible if children die. There is no such proof, however, that knowledge of the presence of children existed in relation to the Oklahoma City bombing.)When considering morality and “mens rea” [criminal intent], in light of these facts, I ask: Who are the true barbarians? ...I find it ironic, to say the least, that one of the aircraft used to drop such a bomb on Iraq is dubbed “The Spirit of Oklahoma.” This leads me to a final, and unspoken, moral hypocrisy regarding the use of weapons of mass destruction.When a U.S. plane or cruise missile is used to bring destruction to a foreign people, this nation rewards the bombers with applause and praise. What a convenient way to absolve these killers of any responsibility for the destruction they leave in their wake.Unfortunately, the morality of killing is not so superficial. The truth is, the use of a truck, a plane or a missile for the delivery of a weapon of mass destruction does not alter the nature of the act itself.These are weapons of mass destruction — and the method of delivery matters little to those on the receiving end of such weapons.Whether you wish to admit it or not, when you approve, morally, of the bombing of foreign targets by the U.S. military, you are approving of acts morally equivalent to the bombing in Oklahoma City ...
McVeigh
included photocopies of a famous Vietnam War-era picture showing terrified
children fleeing napalm bombs, and of nuclear devastation in Japan. He said in
a preface that the essay was intended to “provoke thought — and was not written
with malevolent intent.”
On
April 26, 2001, he wrote a letter to Fox News, I Explain Herein Why I Bombed
the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, which explicitly laid out his
reasons for the attack. McVeigh read Unintended Consequences and noted
that if it had come out a few years earlier, he would have given serious
consideration to using sniper attacks in a war of attrition against the
government instead of bombing a federal building.
Accomplices
Terry
Nichols was 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 Terry
Nichols' federal trial that they had seen two trucks at Geary Lake State Park,
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 the 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. Terry Nichols is currently
incarcerated at the Federal Supermax Prison in Florence, Colorado.
An
ATF informant, Carolyn Howe, told reporters that shortly before the bombing she
had 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. Other than this speeding ticket, there is 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 Oklahoma City bomb. Agents expressed surprise that
bombing investigators had not been provided information from the Midwest Bank
Robbers investigation. McVeigh declined further delays and maintained until his
death that he had acted alone in the bombing.
Some
witnesses claimed to have seen a second suspect, and there was a search for a
"John Doe #2", but none was ever found.
INTERNET
SOURCE:
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Timothy_McVeigh
- Whether you wish to admit it or not, when you approve, morally, of the bombing of foreign targets by the U.S. military, you are approving of acts morally equivalent to the bombing in Oklahoma City.
- "Hypocrisy" (March 1998)
- I have great respect for human life. My decision to take human life at the Murrah Building – I did not do it for personal gain. I ease my mind in that...I did it for the larger good.
- Interview for American Terrorist (2001) by Lou Michel and Dan Herbeck
- I like the phrase "shot heard 'round the world," and I don't think there's any doubt the Oklahoma City blast was heard around the world.
- Interview for American Terrorist (2001) by Lou Michel and Dan Herbeck
- I understand what they felt in Oklahoma City. I have no sympathy for them.
- Dead Man Talking, The Observer (April 22, 2001)
- If there is a hell, then I'll be in good company with a lot of fighter pilots who also had to bomb innocents to win the war.
- Dead Man Talking, The Observer (April 22, 2001)
- You can't handle the truth. Because the truth is, I blew up the Murrah building and isn't it kind of scary that one man could reap this kind of hell?
- Dead Man Talking, The Observer (April 22, 2001)
- I am sorry these people had to lose their lives. But that's the nature of the beast. It's understood going in what the human toll will be.
- Letters published in the Buffalo News (10 June 2001)
- For those diehard conspiracy theorists who will refuse to believe this, I turn the tables and say: show me where I needed anyone else. Financing? Logistics? Specialised tech skills? Brainpower? Strategy? Show me where I needed a dark, mysterious 'Mr X'!
- Letters published in the Buffalo News (10 June 2001)
- If there would not have been a Waco, I would have put down roots somewhere and not been so unsettled with the fact that my government … was a threat to me. Everything that Waco implies was on the forefront of my thoughts. That sort of guided my path for the next couple of years.
- Letters published in the Buffalo News (10 June 2001)
COMMENTS
AND CONDOLENCES:
When
I was an opponent of the death penalty, I thought that execution was the easy
way out for a mass murderer like Timothy McVeigh (he needed a suicide assist).
However, since I became a supporter of the death penalty, I personally realize
that regardless of whether it is the easy way out or not, death is justice and
letting them live is not.
One
of my beloved philosophers, Immanuel Kant’s quote just sprang in my mind:
If
Timothy McVeigh was allowed to keep his life in prison, it would not only be
injustice for the 168 lives he took but also a danger to society. He might orchestrate
terrorist activities behind bars or he might murder an inmate or a prison staff. Bear in mind, he was a military personnel. Saint Thomas Aquinas would
agree to my point:
Timothy
McVeigh is now one of the Eight Executed Terrorists. More will come soon…
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