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The Soon Coming Judgment Of God Upon America and How To Escape It                413
once again to give her some life insurance policies. Rivera stated, “he sat on my living room
couch and cried and told me how he had a fight with [his supervisors] Lt. Randall and Maj.
Upchurch. He did not tell me what that entailed, but he was scared — he was crying so badly he
was shaking.”
As reported to Hoffman by Rivera, three government sources, including a US Attorney
and a US Marshal, provided information that conflicted with the City's account of Yeakey's
death. “As relayed by Rivera, the events on the morning of Officer Yeakey's death transpired as
follows:”
At 9:00 a.m., Officer Yeakey was seen exiting his Oklahoma City
apartment with nine boxes of videos and files. He then drove to the police station
where he had a fight with his supervisors.
He was told to “drop it” or he'd “wind up dead.”
Yeakey was also due for a meeting with the heads of several federal
agencies that morning. He apparently decided to skip the meetings, instead,
driving straight to a storage locker he maintained in Kingfisher.
What he didn't realize was that the FBI had him under surveillance, and
began pursuit. The six-year OCPD veteran and former Sheriff's Deputy easily
eluded his pursuers. Once at his storage facility, he secured his files.
What were in the files? According to one of Rivera's sources,
incriminating photos and videos of the bombed-out building. Perhaps more.
On the way back, the feds caught up with him just outside of El Reno. “He
had nothing on him,” at that point, said Rivera, “just copies of copies.”
While it is not known exactly what transpired next, Rivera's confidential
source “described in intimate detail,” the state of the dead man's car. The seats
had been completely unbolted, the floor-boards ripped up, and the side panels
removed, all in an apparent effort to find the incriminating documents.
There were also burn marks on the floor. Apparently, the killers had used
Yeakey's car to destroy what little evidence they had discovered.
At approximately 6:00 p.m. that evening, Canadian County Deputy Sheriff
Mike Ramsey was cruising the area near the old El Reno reformatory when he
noticed an abandoned vehicle in a field. “Immediately [the] hair stood up on the
back of my neck,” said the deputy. Ramsey came upon the empty car which he
immediately recognized as [his friend] Yeakey's. There was blood on both seats,
and a razor blade lying on the dash. Yeakey was nowhere to be found.
The Oklahoma City Police assumed jurisdiction over the crime scene even though it was
in Canadian County. Although Yeakey's car was obviously a crime scene, it was never dusted for
prints. Yeakey's body was later found a mile-and-a-half away in a ditch. The official Oklahoma
City Medical Examiner's report revealed that Yeakey had numerous “superficial” lacerations on
the wrists, arms, throat, and neck, and a single bullet wound to the right temple. The bullet
entered above the right ear and exited below the left ear. If Yeakey had been interrogated before
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