Thirty years ago today, Oklahoma City, and the United States, were changed forever. A bomb was detonated outside the Alfred P. Murrah Building in downtown Oklahoma City, leaving more than 160 people ...
Editor's note: This story was originally published on April 16, 2015, roughly 20 years after the Oklahoma City bombing. "May I call you Kevin? Or do you prefer Mr. Johnson?'' In any other setting, at ...
Twenty-four years ago on April 19, 1995, 168 people died and at least 500 were injured with a truck bombing outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Okla. Buffalo News reporters ...
OKLAHOMA CITY, Oklahoma (WABC) -- Exactly two years later after the Waco Siege on April 19, 1995, anti-government militant Timothy McVeigh and his co-conspirator Terry Nichols detonated a truck full ...
In the years since the Oklahoma City bombing on April 19, 1995, many survivors and victims' families say they've worked hard to keep their focus on healing—not on the man responsible for the attack.
March 26 -- Timothy McVeigh, scheduled to be executed on May 16 for the worst mass murder in American history, shows no remorse for the Oklahoma City bombing in a series of prison letters to be ...
"May I call you Kevin? Or do you prefer Mr. Johnson?'' In any other setting, at any other time, the questions would have meant nothing. Certainly not worth a mention in notes of a first meeting with ...