As one of the saddest day in the History of America approaches, search of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh intensifies. It was the horrifying day of 19th April some 15 years ago, when Timothy McVeigh a U.S Army veteran did what came out to be the most catastrophic event in the History of America before 09/11 killing over 168, while some 450 people received injuries in this bombing.

Born in 1968 Timothy McVeigh joined the U.S Army in 1988, when he was just 20 years old and after fighting in Gulf war received a Bronze star. After discharging from the arm in 1992, with honor, he went on to join a security agency in the same year for a short time, but left job and start his travelling around America for his old army buddies.

During his time on the road Timothy McVeigh wrote a letter to a local news paper in which he complained about the taxes in American community and said that, while Politicians make mistake the people of American have to suffer due to increasing taxes.

He also wrote a letter to Congressman John LaFalce, in which he complained about an arrest of a woman make by the authorities, while she was carrying mace.

Timothy McVeigh alongside Nicolas started to construct, what is said to be a ANNM explosive device on a lakeside campground. He very cleverly mounted the device on the back of a truck, which he rented so that people and other authorities do not find it suspicious.

After the construction is complete, what is said to be a 2,300 kg bomb, made out of a fertilizer and motor racing fuel, he took the truck in front of Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building ignited both fuse that device had and ran away.

Timothy McVeigh was later caught and convicted of 11 federal offenses and was sentenced to death. He was executed in 2001.

Timothy

Timothy

One Response to “Timothy Mcveigh Convict Of Oklahoma City Bombing”

  1. stephanie April 15, 2010

    What this man did was wrong and the people he harmed and family’s that lost there loved ones and suffered from the things he did. In my opinion they all deserved some kind of justice but i do not think he should have been executed for the things he did. Life in prison maybe but not that he served for my country. This is just my opinion

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