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The Soon Coming Judgment Of God Upon America and How To Escape It                407
“Explosives Unit Lab Report” was falsified. The report described the type of bomb used, its size,
the type of detonator or fuse used and the type and size of containers used to house the bomb.
These conclusions were not based on crime seen evidence but on evidence obtained from the
Nichols ranch.
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These accusations of falsified evidence were made by, Fredrick Whitehurst, one of “the
FBI's top chemist in explosives analysis and had been described in an evaluation by superiors as
'without peer in the FBI bomb residue analysis unit'.” As a result of Whitehurst's accusations,
three officials in the FBI lab were reassigned. But Whitehurst, the hero in the story, was
suspended. “An angry Senator Charles Grassley (R-IA), who chairs the subcommittee which
oversees the Justice Department and FBI, was prompt to charge that the suspension appeared to
be 'a reprisal' against Whitehurst for his courageous actions.”
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Four former FBI agents who at one time were part of the Oklahoma City bombing
investigation team reported on 60 Minutes II on May 29, 2001 that they were aware of additional
bombing evidence which was ignored or mishandled by the government. “One agent, Rick
Ojeda, who received a commendation for his work on the case, says evidence he obtained that
might have helped convicted bomber Timothy McVeigh's defense was either ignored or not
properly documented by the FBI.”
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After the conviction and sentencing of Timothy McVeigh for his part in the bombing.
The justice department released 36,000 pages of undisclosed FBI tips and evidence that should
have been provided to McVeigh's defense team before the trial.
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In September 1997 FBI officials refused to accept evidence from Jayna Davis, a former
reporter for NBC affiliate KFOR-TV in Oklahoma City. Davis told WorldNetDaily.com that the
evidence included hundreds of pages of “public court records, police reports and statements from
intelligence and law enforcement sources.” The evidence included statements from 22 witnesses
who implicated “several Arab men as having acted in collusion with McVeigh and Terry Nichols
in the Oklahoma City bombing.”
Davis explained that “They rejected the materials outright and declined to sign a written
statement acknowledging that I attempted to turn the information over.” Davis had a notary
public, Pam Nance, with her to witness the FBI's actions. Nance confirmed the incident.
This all occurred on the eve of the Terry Nichols trial in September 1997. By denying the
records the FBI sought to keep the information from the defense and further to keep the
information from becoming public during the trial.
1563
General Partin notes that all evidence that could have possibly confirmed that the Federal
building was brought down by demolition charges within the building was removed and buried
behind a chain link fence protected by armed guards.
1564
William Jasper, editor for The New American was told by an officer from the Oklahoma
City Police Department (OCPD) that he was instructed that it was necessary to provide the
public with “misinformation”concerning particular aspects of the bombing for “security”
reasons. This instruction occurred at a required daily security briefing at the Murrah Building.
The officer was assembled with police, rescue, and recovery personnel. The instruction
concerning misinformation came from one of the top federal officials at the scene. They were
further warned “in no uncertain terms” that the governments “official line” was not to be
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