Alright lets think critically here, if there were bombs inside the building... A Federal building.... Maybe they would want to save face and say, "Oh those were ours, they were for exercises" not "We screwed up majorly and somehow they got bombs inside a Federal building"
If you were there Wilbur I am sure you know Terrance Yeakey, the first police officer on the scene. He was about a block away when the bomb blew up. Somehow he ran right up to the scene and started saving people right away. Interesting that he didn't cough or get burned by the toxic gases that an Anfo bomb creates. It is interesting also that after he started challenging the official story of the Anfo bomb that he "killed himself" by slitting his wrists and neck, beating himself up, changing his mind and started walking for help, and then shot himself in the head at point blank range.
Unreferenced and full of half truths mixed with lies. The hallmarks of a troofer post.
What really happened, a very sad story:
http://www.nytimes.com/1996/05/11/us/a-policeman-who-rescued-4-in-bombing-kills-himself.htmlA Policeman Who Rescued 4 in Bombing Kills Himself
A police sergeant who rescued at least four people at the site of the Oklahoma City bombing committed suicide this week but left no note, prompting friends and co-workers to speculate that he was driven by guilt at not being able to have saved more lives and by despondency over a troubled family life, the police said.
The sergeant, Terrance Yeakey, 30, was found on Wednesday in a field near his hometown, El Reno, about 30 miles west of Oklahoma City. Sergeant Yeakey had apparently tried to slit his wrists, then shot himself to death, three days before he was to receive the department's medal of valor, the police said.
Sergeant Yeakey and his friend Officer Jim Ramsey were among the first policemen to reach the scene of the bombing, which killed 168 people at the Federal Building on April 19, 1995. Sergeant Yeakey rescued at least four people before falling through two floors of the building and injuring his back.
"He had a lot of guilt because he got hurt," Officer Ramsey said.
Sergeant Yeakey was divorced and was legally prevented from entering the house he and his former wife had shared with their daughters, ages 2 and 4, Officer Ramsey said. When asked about possible reasons that Sergeant Yeakey might have been despondent, Officer Ramsey said, "His ex-wife, his love for his two daughters that he could not see."
The police are investigating a report that Sergeant Yeakey had violated an order barring him from going near his former wife, said Capt. Bill Citty, a spokesman. Sergeant Yeakey also had a similar order against her, Captain Citty said. Efforts to locate her today were unsuccessful.
Officer Ramsey, 27, who is to receive the city's medal of valor along with nearly 90 other officers on Saturday for the bombing rescue. He choked back tears today while clutching a pile of letters from children praising Sergeant Yeakey, who had taught in the department's youth anti-drug program since August and had been on force for six years.
Repeatedly hailed as a hero of the bombing's immediate aftermath, Sergeant Yeakey shied away from the attention, said his supervisor, Lieut. Joe Ann Randall.
"There are some people that like to be heroes and some that don't," Lieutenant Randall said. "He was not one that wanted that."
Many police and rescue workers wear a golden pin in the shape of a ribbon to honor the victims. But Sergeant Yeakey would not wear the pin or return calls from the people he rescued, Lieutenant Randall said.
Sergeant Yeakey was attending night classes and working as a security guard in his off hours to pay child support, Officer Ramsey said.
Lieutenant Randall recalled an optimistic discussion of Sergeant Yeakey's future in the department just two days before his death.
"He was inspiring," she said of his work in the anti-drug program. "He brought joy into the unit."
Co-workers described Sergeant Yeakey as a larger-than-life figure among the students he taught in the anti-drug program, known as D.A.R.E., for Drug Abuse Resistance Education. He used humor along with his booming voice, imposing height and muscular physique to capture the children's attention and deliver the often dry messages, Officer Ramsey said.
Many students in his classes broke down in tears on Thursday when told of Sergeant Yeakey's death.
"Our D.A.R.E. officer is very funny," one child wrote in a letter. "He makes boring things a lot of fun."