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Did the FBI conceal wider right-wing involvement in the Oklahoma
City bombing?
By Joanne Laurier
8 March 2004
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The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has been forced to
reopen its investigation into the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing amid
claims that the federal police agency suppressed information pointing
to wider right-wing terrorist involvement. The Associated Press
(AP) revealed last week that FBI agents destroyed evidence pointing
to the possibility that bomber Timothy McVeigh, eventually executed
for the crime, may have been assisted by a group of white supremacist
bank robbers.
The revelation raises further questions about the federal governments
ongoing efforts to conceal the activities of right-wing extremists
from the American public.
The AP revealed that the Justice Department withheld evidence
at McVeighs 1997 trial, including documents showing that
the Aryan Republican Army [ARA] bank robbers possessed explosive
blasting caps similar to those stolen by McVeigh, as well as a
drivers license bearing the name of a man robbed to help
fund the Oklahoma bombing plot. The evidence was never shared
with Oklahoma City investigators or McVeighs defense attorneys.
The governments official version of the bombing asserted
that only two individuals were involved, McVeigh and a former
army buddy, Terry Nichols.
Why did FBI agents investigating the ARA fail to alert the
Oklahoma City investigators of a possible link between McVeigh
and the white supremacists?
Danny Coulson, the FBI agent in charge of the Oklahoma City
bomb site, said: There are some unanswered questions here.
A lot of things happened that were inappropriate. I think it needs
to be reopened, but I dont think it should be reopened by
the FBI. It needs to be a special investigator, a lawyer, totally
independent. He needs to have subpoena power and the ability to
use a grand jury.
The April 19, 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah federal
building killed 168 people. McVeigh was executed
for the crime in 2001. Ironically, the Oklahoma trial of McVeighs
co-defendant, Terry Nicholson state charges that could carry
the death penaltywas set to begin just as the revelations
of FBI evidence tampering surfaced.
McVeighs ex-lawyer stated that the documentation obtained
by AP is the strongest to date to support his long-standing contention
that the bombing may have involved more people than McVeigh and
Nichols. Attorney Stephen Jones said: I think these pieces
close the circle, and they clearly show the bombing conspiracy
consisted probably of 10 conspirators. They [government officials]
simply turned their backs on a group of people for which there
is credible evidence suggesting they were involved in the murder
of 160 people.
Peter Langan, a member of the Aryan Republican Army, told the
AP that he planned to testify at Nichols trial. He disclosed
that federal prosecutors several years ago had offered, and then
withdrew, a plea bargain for information about the bombing. Langan,
who is serving life sentences for a 1990s robbery spree, stated
that the gang had some liability problems as it related
to Oklahoma City.
When another gang member, Mark Thomas, was indicted in January
1997, he told reporters that at least one gang member was involved
in the bombing. FBI agents dropped the inquiry into a link between
McVeigh and the ARA after Thomas and other members were captured
in 1996 and 1997, claiming that the white supremacists had denied
involvement in the bombing and had provided alibis. However, FBI
documents show that the ARA suspects were still in the Oklahoma
area after they claimed to have left it.
Dan Defenbaugh, the now-retired chief of the FBI McVeigh investigation,
said his investigators were never told about the blasting caps,
the license or the alibi discrepancies.
Death row inmate David Paul Hammer has written a book due out
this month detailing his conversations with McVeigh inside prison.
He alleges that he was told by McVeigh that the white supremacists
had assisted in the bombing.
The execution of McVeigh was delayed in May 2001 following
the revelation that the FBI had withheld thousands of pages of
documents from his defense team. The execution proceeded after
Attorney General John Ashcroft, President George W. Bush, and
FBI Director Louis Freeh insisted that there was nothing in the
documents that could affect McVeighs legal position.
A WSWS article posted on May 26, 2001, entitled, Why the governments
rush to execute Timothy McVeigh? stated: The withheld
evidence might also contain information damaging to the FBI or
other government agencies. There is good reason to suspect that
FBI informants knew more about the bombing and the events leading
up to it than has been revealed. It is well known that the FBI
has many informants in the militia movement, among gun lobbyists,
the Christian right, the Ku Klux Klan and other racist and extreme-right
groups. There is a long history of FBI collusion in right-wing
violence.
The FBIs destruction and suppression of evidence surrounding
the Oklahoma bombing highlights the glaring contradiction between
the Bush administrations pursuit of the so-called war
on terror and its indifference to the activities of right-wing,
home-grown terrorists. A pattern of covering up crimes that cannot
be blamed on Islamic or foreign groups has been established by
the Bush administration and its media apologists since the 2001
anthrax attacks on Congress, and continues with the recent ricin
assault on Senate offices and the White House.
The insistence by the highest levels of government that McVeigh
acted alone in the Oklahoma bombing is motivated, in part, by
the need to conceal the close ties between numerous political
figures at the federal, state and local level with the Christian
right, militia groups and racist and anti-Semitic organizations.
In particular, Republican Party senators, congressmen and local
politicians have actively solicited support and funds from some
of these fascistic outfits.
One can establish as a general rule that the degree to which
the government and media downplay a given terrorist act reveals
the extent to which they either know or suspect the crime has
been committed by right-wing, domestic terrorists.
Jannie Coverdale, who lost two grandchildren in the Oklahoma
bombing, spoke with the WSWS about the recent accusations of FBI
wrongdoing.
I lost my grandsons, Erin, 2, and Elijah, 5, in the bombing
of the federal building. I worked in the county assessors
office, and the federal building, which had an excellent day care,
was only a block-and-a-half away. The boys loved it.
I dont believe Timothy McVeigh acted by himself.
Over 50 witnesses came forward at the time to talk to FBI agents
and the news media who had seen McVeigh in the Ryder truck in
various places around the city before the bombing and he was never
alone. Nobody believes the lone bomber theory.
The FBI will not do a credible job in this investigation
any more than they did during the original investigation. Since
the beginning, I have asked a lot of questions. I went the US
Attorneys office asking a lot of questions and was told
that if I attended the trials of McVeigh and Nichols my questions
would be answered. I gave up everything and went to Denver. I
learned nothing, but had more questions when the Nichols trial
was over.
No matter what the FBI says, there is no way I will ever
believe that McVeigh acted alone. Ive always wondered about
his connection to the bank robbers of that supremacist group from
Elohim City [Oklahoma]. After the Nichols trial I was given the
phone number of a policeman who told me that the FBI had an informer
who bungled the job of deactivating the bomb. The sting operation
to prevent the bombing was screwed up and the FBI is covering
up their mistake. They played with lives and lost.
I dont trust the government anymore. I dont
trust the FBI or the ATF [Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms]. The FBI is supposed to reopen the files and reinvestigate.
I wonder whos going to investigate the investigators?
The families of the survivors of the bombing are having
a hard time both financially and emotionally. We never received
any compensation. We were told that the families of September
11 were the victims of international terrorism so they were compensated.
But we were the victims of American terrorists, so we would receive
nothing.
I believe the government is involved because in these
terrorist attacks, people are getting away with too much. Just
like when the Klan would get away with crimes over and over again.
They were protected. And then you look at who is in office and
begin to realize that the Iraq war was not necessary. But Iraq
is backfiring on the government. Maybe some things will backfire
here too.
See Also:
Oklahoma City bomber
Timothy McVeigh: the making of a mass murderer
[19 April 2001]
McVeigh interview sheds
light on the social roots of the Oklahoma City bombing
[30 March 2000]
The Oklahoma City
bombing
A somber warning to the working class
[Republished from the May 8, 1995 issue of the International
Workers Bulletin]
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