April 19, 1993. The Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City was bombed, and the first responder was Terry Yeakey. Yeakey was a patrol cop in Oklahoma City, walking his beat when he heard the explosion. He was the first to arrive at the site of the massive explosion.
Apparently he got there too soon, before all the evidence had been removed. Yeakey saw things he wasn't supposed to see. He spent a year trying to find out what really happened that day, trying to track down who really blew up that building, killing hundreds of people, including eleven kids in the basement day-care center.
Finally, while trying to deliver the evidence he'd gathered to somebody (we don't know who) he was killed. He was beat to a pulp, chopped up, apparently escaped and dragged himself for a mile through the Oklahoma desert before being caught and shot through the head.
His death was ruled a suicide. The evidence he was trying to protect had all disappeared...the official story is that he just made that stuff up.
If he had lived another week, he was scheduled to receive a Medal of Valor from the OKC Police Department.
Over thirty people known to have information about the Murrah Bldg. bombing have since died in similarly mysterious circumstances. General Partin, Air Force demolitions expert, conducted tests that proved the Murrah Building bombing was an inside job. All of the evidence was destroyed...or was it? It's a heck of a story, and Congress needs to know the truth.
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