Timothy McVeigh

"When guns are outlawed, I will become an outlaw."

Timothy James McVeigh was a terrorist and mass murderer who committed the Oklahoma City bombing, in which the Alfred P. Murrah Building in Oklahoma City was destroyed on April 19, 1995, claiming 168 lives.

Background
McVeigh was born in Lockport, New York, the middle child of William "Bill" McVeigh, who worked at a car radiator plant, and Mildred "Mickey" McVeigh. He grew up in Pendleton, New York, a small town not far from the Canadian border. His former neighbors later described as a cheerful, pleasant person. His grandfather, Eddie McVeigh, introduced him to hunting and firearms when he was young and gave him a .22 rifle when he was 13. He claimed to have been bullied in high school and to have created a fantasy world for himself in which he could exact revenge on his bullies. When he was a teenager, his mother left the family, and in 1986, his parents divorced. After graduating high school, he briefly attended the Bryant & Statton College, but dropped out. He began hacking into government computers from his Commodore 64 and became obsessed with the novel The Turner Diaries, which was written by William Luther Pierce, the then-leader of an American white nationalist movement, and is about an armed uprising against the U.S. government, though he didn't agree with the book's racial ideas. At one point in the novel, the protagonist destroys the FBI office in Washington with a bomb in a truck, not unlike the way McVeigh later carried out his bombing. A favorite movie of McVeigh's was, according to TruTV, Red Dawn, in which the U.S. is invaded by the Soviet Union and civilians begin a guerilla war against them. He was also interested in gun rights and the Second Amendment. In May 1988, aged 20, he enlisted in the U.S. Army as a gunner (though he had hoped for a position in the Green Berets) and served in the Gulf War. He signed up to join the Special Forces, but was deemed unsuitable for them during psychological examinations. Shortly afterwards, he decided to leave the Army and was honorably discharged in 1991. He was awarded a Bronze Star Medal for his service in the Persian Gulf War.

Back in Buffalo, McVeigh worked at a rent-a-cop agency, but eventually left the area because he thought its political views were too liberal. He started driving around and visiting old Army friends. A hard blow for him was when he was informed that he had been overpaid ca. $1000 during his time in the Army. He took up gambling even though he had financial problems and even left the National Rifle Association because he thought their stances on gun rights were too weak. He frequently voiced his contempt for the U.S. government and was a conspiracy theorist. In 1993, he packed up all his belongings and just drove around with them. The same year, the Waco siege began when the ATF attempted to serve a search warrant for the grounds of the Branch Davidians' ranch on suspicion of firearm law violations. McVeigh took a great interest in the situation and even appeared near the site of the siege, handing out gun right and anti-government leaflets and bumper stickers. On April 19, the siege ended when a fire broke out and many of the Branch Davidians, including its leader, David Koresh were burned to death. McVeigh took it very hard and began planning a strike on the U.S. government, which, he believed, was having too much control of its citizens. He recruited Terry Nichols, a friend from his Army days, to his cause.

The Bombing, Arrest and Execution
In April of 1993, after the Waco siege, McVeigh visited an older army buddy named Terry Nichols, who taught him how to construct explosive devices from simple, easily accessible components. He began planning a strike on the U.S. government, intending to attack some federal building. Prior to that, he had considered murdering various people involved in legal actions related to the Waco siege and the Ruby Ridge standoff. Nichols, who was also anti-government, agreed to aid him. Over the following two years, they planned the attack together, choosing the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, as their target. They had help from Michael Fortier, who had served with both of them in the U.S. Army, and his wife, Lori. Both were told of the plan, though they didn't tell the authorities. Michael Fortier also helped them transport weapons and Lori made McVeigh a fake driver's license. On April 19, 1995, the two-year anniversary of the day a fire broke out on the Branch Davidians' compound at Waco Ridge and the siege ended, McVeigh carried out their plan. Using a fake name, McVeigh rented a Ryder truck loaded with an improvised bomb. When the bomb was finished, Nichols went home to Herrington, Kansas while McVeigh drove away with the bomb to carry out the bombing.

The truck was parked in the building's parking area in the morning when people started arriving for work. At 9:02 am, the bomb exploded, completely destroying the building and killing 168 people. Over 800 additional people were injured. By then, McVeigh was already on the road in his 1977 Mercury Marquis. An hour and a half later, he was pulled over by an Oklahoma State Trooper on the I-35 75 miles away from the bomb site for speeding and driving a car without license plates. When the officer spotted a 9mm Glock in the glove compartment, McVeigh was arrested for speeding and firearm offenses. Over the next few days, the investigation of the bombing proceeded. It was initially believed to be the work of some terrorist organization, possibly one connected to the World Trade Center bombing two years earlier, or a drug cartel. When the FBI, who codenamed the investigation "OKBOMB", traced the truck back to McVeigh through a motel he had stayed at and accidentally signed his real name, they began investigating him for the bombing. On April 21, Nichols learned that he was being chased as well and turned himself in. The investigators found heaps of evidence implicating both of them in the bombing, such as bomb-making supplies, books on how to do it, a handdrawn map of Oklahoma City with the Alfred P. Murrah building and the location of McVeigh's getaway car marked, and a copy of Hunter, a book written by the same author as The Turner Diaries, on Nichols' property. Parts of the truck used to deliver the bomb which were launched by the blast were traced back to McVeigh, as were an alias he had used to rent it. He also matched a composite of one of two unidentified males seen on the scene of the bombing (the other man turned out to have been an innocent by-passer). After three days on trial, McVeigh was found guilty of using a weapon of mass destruction, conspiracy to do the same, destruction by use of explosives and eight counts of first-degree murder and was sentenced to death.

While on death row, McVeigh wrote several critical essays. One was titled An Essay of Hypocrisy and criticized the U.S.'s foreign policy during the invasion of Iraq. On June 11, 2001, he was executed by lethal injection at the Federal Correction Complex in Terre Haute, Indiana. His final statement was a handwritten statement which quoted the poem "Invictus", ending with the lines "I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul". After the bombing, several people who had aided him in the bombing in some way were also prosecuted. Terry Nichols was found guilty of being an accomplice and sentenced to life without the possibility of parole, a sentence he is still serving at the ADX Florence supermax prison in Florence, Colorado, where Ted Kaczynski and Eric Rudolph are both also incarcerated. The Fortiers were also both indicted. Michael, who had known of the plan but failed to report it to the authorities, was sentenced to 12 years in prison, though he had been a witness against McVeigh and Nichols during the trial. He was released in 2006, after serving eight years of his sentence, and entered the Witness Protection Program. Lori was granted immunity for her testimony. In 1997, a memorial dedicated to the victims of the bombing was established in Oklahoma City. Among its features are The Gates of Time, two bronze gates with the time of the bombing and the minutes before and after inscribed into them, and the Field of Empty Chairs, which consists of 168 empty chairs representing the 168 people who died in the bombing. The only standing wall of the Alfred P. Murrah building, the southeast corner and part of the southern wall, has been turned into the Survivors' Wall, where the names of over 600 survivors of the attack are engraved.

Modus Operandi
McVeigh destroyed the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building with a Ryder truck loaded with an improvised bomb consisting primarily of 108 bags of ammonium nitrate and three 210-liter barrels of nitromethane, a kind of fuel used in drag racing, among several other things. This is a variation of an improvised explosive device sometimes called a "fertilizer bomb" (ammonium nitrate is often used as a high-nitrogen fertilizer). The compound is also used for legitimate purposes, such as mining and civil construction.

Profile
The long hours in a dead-end job, the feeling that he did not have a home and his failure to establish a relationship with a woman brought McVeigh to the breaking point. He sought romance, but was rejected by a co-worker and still felt nervous around women. He felt he brought too much pain to his loved ones. He grew angry and sexually frustrated at his difficulties in finding a girlfriend and took up obsessive gambling. Most people who knew McVeigh remember him as being withdrawn, with a few describing him as an outgoing and playful child who withdrew as an adolescent. McVeigh said that the Army taught him how to switch off his emotions. He had special lifesaving training and may have saved the life of a comrade who had life-threatening shrapnel wounds in the Persian Gulf War.

Michelle Rauch reported on Zero Hour that McVeigh was worried about the intense presence of the government on "One Man and his followers private lives". McVeigh was very articulate and intelligent.

Known Victims
All of the following were caught in the Oklahoma City bombing.

Fatalities

 * Fatalities on the ninth floor:
 * Five killed at the Drug Enforcement Administration office:
 * Shelly Bland, 25
 * Carroll Fields, 48
 * Rona Kuehner-Chafey, 35
 * Carrie Lenz, 26
 * Kenneth McCullough, 36
 * Six killed at the U.S. Secret Service office:
 * Cynthia Brown, 26
 * Donald Leonard, 50
 * Mickey Maroney, 50
 * Linda McKinney, 47
 * Kathy Seidl, 39
 * Alan Whicher, 40
 * Fatalities on the eighth floor:
 * Fifteen killed at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development office:
 * Ted Allen, 48
 * Peter Avillanoza, 56
 * David Burkett, 47
 * Donald Burns, Sr., 63
 * Kimberly Clark, 39
 * Susan Ferrell, 37
 * Dr. George Howard, 45
 * Antonio Reyes, 55
 * Lanny Scroggins, 46
 * Leora Sells, 57
 * Jules Valdez, 51
 * David Walker, 54
 * Michael Weaver, 54
 * Frances Williams, 48
 * Clarence Wilson, Sr., 49
 * Fatalities on the seventh floor:
 * Nineteen killed at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development office:
 * Diane Althouse, 45
 * Andrea Blanton, 33
 * Kim Cousins, 33
 * Diana Day, 38
 * Castine Deveroux, 49
 * Judy Fisher, 45
 * Linda Florence, 43
 * J. Colleen Guiles, 59
 * Thompson Hodges, Jr., 54
 * Ann Kreymborg, 57
 * Teresa Lauderdale, 41
 * Mary Leasure-Rentie, 39
 * James McCarthy II, 53
 * Betsy McGonnell, 47
 * Patricia Nix, 47
 * Terry Rees, 41
 * John Stewart, 51
 * John Van Ess III, 67
 * Jo Whittenberg, 35
 * Fatalities on the sixth floor:
 * Two killed at the U.S. Marine Corps Recruiting office:
 * Sergeant Benjamin Davis, U.S.M.C., 29
 * Captain Randolph Guzman, U.S.M.C., 28
 * Fatalities on the fifth floor:
 * Seven killed at the U.S. Department of Agriculture office:
 * Olen Bloomer, 61
 * James Boles, 50
 * Dr. Margaret Clark, 42
 * Richard Cummins, 55
 * Doris Higginbottom, 44
 * Carole Khalil, 50
 * Rheta Long, 60
 * The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development office: Paul Broxterman, 42
 * Two killed at the U.S. Customs Office office:
 * Paul Ice, 42
 * Claude Medearis, SSA, 41
 * Fatalities on the fourth floor:
 * Eleven killed at the U.S. Department of Transportation office:
 * Lucio Aleman, Jr., 33
 * Mark Bolte, 28
 * Michael Carrillo, 44
 * Larry Jones, 46
 * James Martin, 34
 * Ronota Newberry-Woodbridge, 31
 * Jerry Parker, 45
 * Michelle Reeder, 33
 * Rick Tomlin, 46
 * Johnny Wade, 42
 * John Youngblood, 52
 * Eight killed at the U.S. Army Recruiting Battalion office:
 * Sergeant First Class Lola Bolden, U.S.A., 40
 * Karen Carr, 32
 * Peggy Holland, 37
 * John Moss III, 50
 * Victoria Sohn, 36
 * Dolores Stratton, 51
 * Kayla Titsworth, 3
 * Wanda Watkins, 49
 * Fatalities on the third floor:
 * Five killed at the Defense Security Service office:
 * Harley Cottingham, 46
 * Peter DeMaster, 44
 * Norma Johnson, 62
 * Larry Turner, 42
 * Robert Westberry, 57
 * Twenty-one killed at the Federal Employees Credit Union office:
 * Woodrow Brady, 41
 * Kimberly Burgess, 29
 * Kathy Finley, 44
 * Jamie Genzer, 32
 * Sheila Gigger-Driver, 28
 * Linda Housley, 53
 * Robbin Huff, 37
 * Christi Jenkins, 32
 * Alvin Justes, 54
 * Valerie Koelsch, 33
 * Kathy Leinen, 47
 * Claudette Meek, 43
 * Frankie Merrell, 23
 * Jill Randolph, 27
 * Claudine Ritter, 48
 * Christy Rosas, 22
 * Sonja Sanders, 27
 * Karen Shepherd, 27
 * Victoria Texter, 37
 * Virginia Thompson, 56
 * Tresia Worton, 28
 * Fatalities on the second floor:
 * Nineteen killed at the America's Kids Child Development Center office:
 * Baylee Almon, 1
 * Danielle Bell, 15 months
 * Zachary Chavez, 3
 * Dana Cooper, 24
 * Anthony Cooper II, 2
 * Antonio Cooper, Jr., 6 months
 * Aaron Coverdale, 5
 * Elijah Coverdale, 2
 * Jaci Coyne, 14 months
 * Brenda Daniels, 42
 * Taylor Eaves, 8 months
 * Tevin Garrett, 16 months
 * Kevin Gottshall II, 6 months
 * Wanda Howell, 34
 * Blake Kennedy, 1
 * Dominique London, 2
 * Chase Smith, 3
 * Colton Smith, 2
 * Scott Williams, 24
 * Fatalities on the first floor:
 * Forty killed at the Social Security Administration office:
 * Teresa Alexander, 33
 * Richard Allen, 46
 * Pamela Argo, 36
 * Saundra Avery, 34
 * Calvin Battle, 62
 * Peola Battle, 56
 * Oleta Biddy, 54
 * Cassandra Booker, 25
 * Carol Bowers, 53
 * Peachlyn Bradley, 3
 * Gabreon Bruce, 3 months
 * Katherine Cregan, 60
 * Ashley Eckles, 4
 * Don Fritzler, 64
 * Mary Fritzler, 57
 * Laura Garrison, 61
 * Margaret Goodson, 54
 * Ethel Griffin, 55
 * Cheryl Hammon, 44
 * Ronald Harding, Sr., 55
 * Thomas Hawthorne, Sr., 52
 * Dr. Charles Hurlburt, 73
 * Jean Hurlburt, 67
 * Raymond Johnson, 59
 * LaKesha Levy, 21
 * Aurelia Luster, 43
 * Robert Luster, Jr., 45
 * Reverend Gilbert Martinez, 35
 * Cartney McRaven, 19
 * Derwin Miller, 27
 * Eula Mitchell, 64
 * Emilio Tapia, 50
 * Charlotte Thomas, 43
 * Michael Thompson, 47
 * LaRue Treanor, 55
 * Luther Trenaor, 61
 * Robert Walker, Jr., 52
 * Julie Welch, 23
 * W. Stephen Williams, 42
 * Sharon Wood-Chesnut, 47
 * Two killed in the General Services Administration office:
 * Steven Curry, 44
 * Michael Loudenslager, 48
 * Fatalities in the surrounding areas:
 * Rebecca Anderson, 37
 * Two killed at the Athenian Building:
 * Anita Hightower, 27
 * Kathryn Ridley, 24
 * Two killed at the Oklahoma Water Resources Board Building:
 * Robert Chipman, 51
 * Trudy Rigney, 31

Injuries

 * More than 860 people injured

On Criminal Minds
McVeigh was mentioned (fairly briefly) in the Criminal Minds novel Killer Profile. In the episode Empty Planet, serial bomber Kenneth Roberts's use of the novel Empty Planet as a guide for his rampage appears to parallel McVeigh, who planned his attack influenced by the white supremacist novel The Turner Diaries. His mugshot photo briefly appeared in the episode Won't Get Fooled Again along with other bombers. McVeigh's mugshot is seen in the intro of each episode when it shows the entire team.