News Focus
News Focus
icon url

pdgood

12/25/13 5:30 PM

#582 RE: shajandr #581

" McVeigh is given the same privileges as most prisoners at El Reno, a medium-security federal facility: he is allowed to send and receive mail, read newspapers, receive visitors, and listen to the radio, though he has no television access. Reportedly during his time at El Reno he will receive at least four marriage proposals from women writing to him in prison. He will meet with his lawyers on a near-daily basis and will receive two visits from his father. He reads the Dallas Morning News and a number of right-wing publications, from the mainstream newspaper, the Washington Times, to the more extremist Spotlight, the John Birch Society’s New American, and a number of newsletters from militia leaders James “Bo” Gritz and Jack McLamb. [Stickney, 1996, pp. 194]"
icon url

pdgood

12/26/13 1:09 PM

#584 RE: shajandr #581

Bolt was tryin his usual shakedown game.

Along with the help of John Culbertson. Bolt fled the courtroom with a fake heart attack never to return despite court orders.

Bolt partnered up with fellow El Reno inmate Mel Robinson. Then Tim Booker of ORU. Along with KKK lecturer Leroy Hoback. Culbertson wrote his BS on the Murrah Building while Trafficant was in prison after Trafficants Bill on Security at the Merrah Building and other Fed owned buildings fell flat. Why did Culbertson end up in Rogers Arkansas from Ohio along with Jim Bolt as his new partner? Facts bro. Look at the facts and start addin. 2+2 doesn't always = 4 with these boys. When in doubt just have John Dodge file a suit. Now Dodge is dead and there's a new Dodge in place.
icon url

pdgood

12/29/13 4:35 PM

#586 RE: shajandr #581

Read up shajandr
From link: http://www.thefreelibrary.com/25+mysteries+mayhem.-a0197989568

"18 Oklahoma City Bombing

Timothy McVeigh told biographers that he considered bombing the 40-story building in downtown Little Rock then known as the TCBY

Tower before deciding instead to blow up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995.

Then as now, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the U.S. Attorney's Office were tenants in the building, now known as Metropolitan Tower.

But other Arkansas connections to the horrific murder of 168 people are less well known and far more mysterious.

The bombing happened on the second anniversary of the fire that ended an FBI siege on a cultist compound near Waco, Texas, and prosecutors said McVeigh and his co-conspirators set out to retaliate for the government's handling of that incident. But the bombing also happened a few hours before the state of Arkansas executed Richard Wayne Snell, a member of a radical white supremacist group known as the CSA--the Covenant, the Sword & the Arm of the Lord.

Snell was arrested in 1984 and subsequently convicted of the murders of a Texarkana pawn shop owner and an Arkansas State Trooper. The next year, some 300 federal agents laid siege to the CSA compound in Marion County; the 10th anniversary of that siege was the day after the Oklahoma City bombing.

Whether McVeigh also hoped to avenge that government action or Snell's scheduled execution is a matter of speculation. But there's also this twist: In 1983, 12 years before McVeigh succeeded, Snell had been involved in an aborted plot to blow up the Murrah building.

There's also a little mystery left in the peripheral involvement of an ex-con from northwest Arkansas.

In 2004, Jim Bolt of Rogers was a witness in a preliminary hearing in the state murder trial of Terry Nichols, who was already serving a life sentence in federal prison for his role in helping McVeigh plan the Oklahoma City bombing.

Bolt was called to testify about one or more photographs that supposedly showed the Murrah building at the moment of explosion, evidence said to be in the possession of a business associate named John Culbertson.

According to the Tulsa World, Bolt testified that Culbertson told him that no such photographic evidence existed. Then Bolt testified that he believed there was a photo of the blast but that he had never seen it.

Bolt's testimony was cut short, however, when he began to complain of chest pain. He never returned to finish his testimony. "