An hour and a half after the blast, Timothy McVeigh was stopped by Oklahoma State Trooper Charlie Hanger for driving without a license plate, he was then arrested for possession of illegal weapons. Forensic quickly confirmed and connected McVeigh and Terry Nichols to the assault. Nichols was later arrested and ultimately both men were charged. Michael and Lori Fortier were later distinguished as accomplices. The men were tried and convicted in 1997. McVeigh was executed by deadly infusion on June 11, 2001, and Nichols was sentenced to life in 2004. Michael was sentenced to 12 years in jail for neglecting to caution the United States government about the bombers planes and Lori got immunity from indictment in return for her…
Her husband's administration tried — unfairly — to pin the Oklahoma City bombing on conservative critics, specifically radio hosts such as Rush Limbaugh. Less than a decade later, she revived the charge in her book "Living History," tying the bombing to "right-wing radio talk shows and websites [which] intensified the atmosphere of hostility with their rhetoric of intolerance, anger and anti-government…
On April 19th, 1995 a horrific terrorist attack on U.S. soil took place in the heartland of Oklahoma. The Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma was targeted and was completely blown to pieces by one gigantic homemade bomb. The unimaginable had happened at the starting of a typical day at work. This day would be forever commemorated for the rest of America's history, unlike any other day until 9/11, as a prominent attack on the government of the United States.…
Timothy McVeigh was the bomber behind the Oklahoma City Bombing on April 19, 1995. The state of Oklahoma raised money to build a memorial, which holds many artifacts. McVeigh impacted many lives -- the lives of the victims, injured, and survivors.…
Tragedies seem unreal for people who are directly affected by them. There something that can either unite or destroy people. Just like making life decisions can take away a life or give life. A similar decision was made to take away Timothy McVeigh’s life as a sentence due to his action to bomb 168 individuals in the Murrah Building on April 19, 1995. This horrific circumstance is remembered as the Oklahoma City Bombing. One man’s decision to inflict pain, due to his strong faith, caused another to return the favor on a more intense level.Who is America to decide that she will be the bearer of life or, in McVeigh’s case, a barrier of death? “While the horrific scale of McVeigh’s crime seem to demand the ultimate penalty, there’s something…
September 11, 2001, a day no American can forget. On this day 19 members of a terrorist group called al-Qaeda hijacked 4 U.S. airplanes and used them to strike various targets on the East Coast. Two of the hijacked planes hit twin towers in New York City and the third plane was flown into the Pentagon in Arlington, where the U.S. military is headquartered. The fourth plane was heading for the capitol in Washington, however crashed in Pennsylvania after the onboard passengers fought the hijackers. As a result of this catastrophe nearly 3,000 people were killed. Since the September 11 attacks, many things have changed in New York City and in the United States. The government has greatly increased security around the country, especially…
On September 11, 2001, Islamic terrorists executed attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. killing nearly 3,000 people. Later that day, President George W. Bush released a statement to the public describing the acts that occurred, the steps that were being taken to return communities to peace, and the steps the government was taking to retaliate against the people that committed this heinous act. President Bush explained the horrifying events, and then reassured the public that his administration would be unfazed by the attempt to disrupt the American way of life. Although this event was not something that he or the American people would soon forget, he stressed the importance of remaining positive…
September,11,2001 there was a big tragedy that affected the whole United States. A group of 19 militants that are associated with Islamic terrorism from Saudi Arabia hijacked, and took control over four airplanes. Two planes were purposely crashed into the World Trade Center in New York. The hijackers had this all planned out on what they were going to do. After, the two planes headed towards the World Trade Center, the other two planes were headed towards the Pentagon and the White House, but these two planes luckily did not make it to their destinations they crashed in a Western Pennsylvanian field. The terrorists were Islamic ISIS, Saudi Arabia, and was not just these two groups of people the attack included seven more Arab nations. The…
On September 11th, 2001, it was a day as Franklin Delano Roosevelt said about the attack on Pearl Harbor, “A Date that will live in infamy”, in that America had suffered the worst attack since Pearl Harbor. It was attacked by terrorists from al-Qaeda, which was planned by their leader, Osama Bin Laden. 19 terrorists hijacked 4 airplanes and crashed them into the World Trade Center in New York, the Pentagon in Washington D.C., and in a farm in Pennsylvania. Close to 3,000 innocent people lost their lives to these heinous attacks. There were people who had recollection of where were they during this event and remembered the heartbreak and the horror of this attack.…
The September 11th attacks on the World Trade center not only affected New York but also affected the entire country in a way that no other event has. The attacks shook the way of life of many people including those in the classrooms around Nebraska. After the attacks George W. Bush said, “Today, our fellow citizens, our way of life, our very freedom came under attack in a series of deliberate and deadly terrorist acts.” It was just that the way of life of citizens was threatened across the nation. The 9/11 attacks affected the country in a number of ways professional baseball did not play their games as well as college and professional football did not play that weekend in the wake of the attacks and even some parents showed up to schools to get their kids out of the classroom for that day and the next. September 11th 2001 was the deadliest attack on United States soil and was an event that will forever be remembered in history.…
The Oklahoma City bombing in 1995 was a huge explosion that destroyed a federal office building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. One-hundred and sixty-eight people lost their lives in the terrible act of domestic terror. The bombing is believed to be an act of retribution from a fundamentalist sect known as the Branch Davidians. The Branch Daviadians had run-ins with the government before. Their compound was destroyed and any of their members were killed in the show down with federal agents. The Branch Davidians were a secretive underground private militia that harbored foul feelings towards the government in Washington. They were alienated citizens armed to the teeth, and were hyper-suspicious of all government activity. It wasn't only these radical…
Central Idea: The bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building has impacted all of America in that we have American citizens becoming home grown terrorists on American soil, changes in security of Federal and public buildings, and added new laws to attempt to keep any more terrorist acts from happening in the future.…
September 11, 2001 is a date that all Americans will never forget. However, 9/11 did not just affect American lives but this event has touched the lives of most people across the globe. Before 9/11 many were able to board their flights thirty minutes before takeoff, yet today this is the opposite of what one is supposed to do. American culture continues to home small changes over the course of a year, however and event like 9/11 forces infinite changes. This significant date in American history continues to have positive and negative affects to American culture and American citizens. 9/11 has sparked positive and negative changes in American culture through news and media coverage, security measures and racial profiling.…
On the treacherous day of April 19, 1995, outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, there was a truck-bomb explosion. The bombing killed 168 people and injured over 680 others. The explosion destroyed or affected 324 buildings, burned and destroyed 86 cars, and shattered glass windows in about 258 buildings that were nearby. The aftermath cost over 652 million dollars. Until September 11, 2001, the Oklahoma City bombing was the worst terrorist attack that took place on U.S. soil.…
The Oklahoma City Bombing claimed the lives of 168 people and caused hundreds of injuries (“From Decorated Veteran to Mass Murderer” 1). But who did it, and more importantly why? The attack happened during a time when most Americans thought terrorism was an overseas problem and served as a wake-up call; no one expected that an act of terrorism would be carried out on US soil, let alone done by American citizens. The bombing left the country stunned and has caused various social and political changes in the US; Oklahoma City was not the only place impacted, the whole nation was.…