Was Oklahoma City the First 9-11?
The Secret Life of Timothy McVeigh
Corbett Report (2015)
Film Review
This documentary examines growing evidence that the “official” government version of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing is a fiction, just like the official version of 9-11. Corbett bases the film on the premise that McVeigh was involved in some questionably legal covert operation – based on the federal government’s refusal to unseal his defense records. Somehow McVeigh’s defense team managed to access classified documents they were prevented from releasing to the prosecution.
Prior to his execution, McVeigh informed his sister (in a letter published by the New York Times), fellow defendant Terry Nichols and death row cellmate Paul Hammer that he worked for a secret army operation that assisted the CIA in transporting drugs and carrying out covert assassinations. There have been numerous efforts to depose Nichols (currently serving 161 consecutive life sentences), but federal prison authorities are denying him access to his attorney.
Numerous journalists and former military and intelligence personnel believe that McVeigh was working for PatCon, a secret FBI team assigned to infiltrate the militia movement and radical right during the 1990s. Members of this team were tasked with infiltrating right wing groups and inciting them to commit violent acts that would justify their arrest. There is strong evidence that both the 1992 Ruby Ridge siege and the 1993 Waco siege were PatCon operations.
Many investigators also believe Andreas Strassmeyer, a German-born radical who tried to persuade various patriot groups to blow up federal buildings, was a PatCon operative. Although at least one eyewitness reported seeing him in the Murrah federal building, the FBI conveniently allowed him to escape to Germany before he could be interviewed.
The film also highlights other serious anomalies in the case against McVeigh, including
The FBI’s sudden decision, after two months, to call off the manhunt for John Doe #2 (McVeigh’s accomplice, identified by 24 witnesses and caught on surveillance footage).
The failure of the prosecution to show surveillance footage at trial that depicts the Ryder truck (alleged to contain a fertilizer bomb), McVeigh and John Doe #2 seconds before the explosion.
The FBI claim that they have lost the surveillance video.
A structural analysis showing an external truck bomb couldn’t possibly have caused the pattern of damage that occurred.
Multiple news reports that a bomb disposal squad deactivated a second and third bomb located inside the Murrah Federal Building.
A report by numerous ATF agents that they were tipped off not to come to work the day of the bombing.
McVeigh was found guilty in 1997 and executed in 2001.


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