Timothy Mcveeigh Bombing Case

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There was a huge truck bomb explosion on April 19, 1995 it happened outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma city, Oklahoma. This bombing ended up leaving 168 people dead and and so many more injured. Timothy McVeigh was the one who set off this blast and was put to his death for these crimes in 2001. Timothy had a partner who's name was Terry Nichols and he ended up receiving life in prison. This tragic bombing was the worse attack from terrorist to have taken place on the United States soil, until September 11, 2001.

When this attack took place it started around 9:02 a.m.. when a truck that had been rented and packed with explosives exploded right in front of the nine story Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in the downtown …show more content…

There was an eyewitness that described Timothy McVeigh on April 21 and this led to his arrest. It was then discovered that Timothy McVeigh had been a U.S.. soldier from 1968-2001. When in his teen years, McVeigh, who had been raised in western New York, acquired a penchant for guns and began honing survivalist skills he believed would be necessary in the event of a Cold War showdown with the Soviet Union. He graduated from high school in 1986 and in 1988 enlisted in the Army, where he proved to be a meticulous and disciplined soldier. While he served in the military, McVeigh became friends with his fellow soldier Nichols, who was more than a dozen years his senior and shared his survivalist …show more content…

Just a couple of days later both Nichols and McVeigh was was indicted on the charges of unlawful use of explosives and murder.

On the day of June 2 1997, McVeigh was finally convicted of all 11 charges against him. On August 14 Timothy McVeigh was sentenced to the death penalty. In the next year to follow Fortier was then sentenced to 12 years in prison for not warning the proper authorities about the plan to bomb Oklahoma city. His release was the year of 2007 when he then was entered into the witness protection program.

December in 1997, Nichols was found guilty on eight counts of involuntary manslaughter and one count of conspiracy for the killing of federal law enforcement personnel, and then he was sentenced to a life in prison. He was then tried on his state charges in Oklahoma in 2004 and convicted of 161 different counts of first degree murder and fetal homicide. His sentence was 161 consecutive life terms in