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True Crime Garage

Hate American Made ////// Oklahoma City Bombing

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4.7 • 34.4K Ratings

🗓️ 16 April 2025

⏱️ 62 minutes

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Summary

Hate American Made ////// Oklahoma City Bombing Part 6 of 6 www.TrueCrimeGarage.com On the morning of Wednesday, April 19th, 1995 an ex-army soldier turned homegrown terrorist Timothy James McVeigh blew up the Alfred P. Murrah building in downtown Oklahoma City. He had conspired with others to carryout this horrific act against his fellow Americans. April 19th, is also Patriot’s Day. In 1995 it was the sad two year anniversary of the conclusion of the Waco Siege resulting in the deaths of many American citizens. This too, would be that day that the state of Arkansas executed Richard Snell. Snell was convicted of hate crimes, murder, and a man who once conspired to blow up the Alfred P. Murray building.

Transcript

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0:00.0

By an unspeakable act,

0:07.0

8.

0:09.0

The apocalypse would occur soon.

0:12.0

More white supremacist groups, more anti-government groups.

0:16.0

David Koresh.

0:17.0

Ruby Ridge Siege.

0:20.0

Timothy McVey More than 80 people dead bombed a federal building in Oklahoma City

0:27.6

by an unspeakable act there is so little hope left the following is from McVeigh, the inside story of the Oklahoma bombing.

0:40.8

But I don't believe that it is proprietary to that publication.

0:46.6

I believe here, Captain, that this was in several publications in the first in the late 90s and then made its way to book form later.

0:56.9

But this portion reads right here, April 19, 1995.

1:01.6

Five minutes before the bomb ripped through the Alfred P. Mora Federal Building and killed 168 people.

1:10.6

Timothy McVeigh lit the backup fuse. McVey had pulled over in front of an

1:16.0

abandoned Firestone garage in downtown Oklahoma City, parking for a few minutes on the unused

1:23.6

driveway by a chain link fence. Across the street stood the high-rise Regency Towers

1:30.0

apartment complex. Inside a convenience store on the apartment's ground floor, a security camera

1:37.0

caught a hazy image of McVeigh's rider truck. The camera timed the photo at 8.57 a.m. Inside the truck, McVeigh picked up a long green cannon fuse from the floor. It ran through the wall in the back of the cab. He took it between his fingers and snapped a lighter to it. The fuse lit with a hiss of sparks and smoke.

2:04.6

He dropped the crackling fuse behind the seat, knowing cannon fuse burns at a steady rate of about 30 seconds a foot.

2:13.7

He put the truck into gear, eased back out, and drove up Fifth Street. A red light stopped him at

2:20.0

Fifth and Harvey. While waiting at the light, he lit another fuse, the primary, which he had

2:26.1

about a three-minute burn. As a U.S. Army doctorate dictated, the bomb now had two ways to explode.

2:54.5

Waiting at the red light, smoke billowing into the cab. McVey anxiously eyed the dark-glassed Alfred P. Murrah building looming one block ahead. Then as we all know, Captain, at 902 a.m. on that morning, that spring morning in Oklahoma City, the bomb explodes in the rider truck parked outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. So what we learn here is that

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