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April 19, 1995: At 9:02 a.m., a 4,000-pound truck bomb destroys the nine-story Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in downtown Oklahoma City, killing 168 people, including 19 children, and injuring 850.
Three survivors and victims’ families of the Oklahoma City bombing reflect on their enduring grief and the difficult but ...
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth criticized his former Fox News colleague, Jennifer Griffin, as “about the worst, the one who ...
Former President Bill Clinton urged Americans to "do better" in his remarks at an event marking the 30th anniversary of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. He said it’s "what we owe 30 years later ...
Thirty years ago, 168 people – included 19 children – were killed in the Oklahoma City bombing. A devastated mother who lost her children, a bank teller who was trapped upside down in her ...
Oklahoma City bombing defendants Terry Nichols (L), shown on May 10, 1995, and Timothy McVeigh (R), shown on April 10, 1995. Nichols, one of the main conspirators, lived in Decker, Michigan, a ...
At 9:02 a.m. local time on the morning of the bombing, McVeigh parked a rented Ryder truck in front of the federal building in downtown Oklahoma City.
The Oklahoma City bombing 30 years ago hit home for me, though I was years and miles from my home state. As we remember the federal workers and children killed that day, let's stop casting aside ...
It’s been 30 years since the Oklahoma City bombing claimed the lives of 168 people in the deadliest act of domestic terrorism in United States history. On April 19, 1995, a truck filled with ...
At 9:02 a.m. local time on the morning of the bombing, McVeigh parked a rented Ryder truck in front of the federal building in downtown Oklahoma City.
OKLAHOMA CITY — Thirty years to the day after a truck bomb leveled a federal building, killing 168 people and shattering the nation’s innocence about the threat of homegrown terrorism, former ...
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