Word: mcveigh
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Irven Box, a prominent Oklahoma City defense attorney who is following the trial of Oklahoma City bombing suspect Timothy McVeigh, said yesterday in reference to the change of venue of the trial to Colorado...
OKLAHOMA CITY: As fan mail goes, it doesn't get much better than having the FBI request it as evidence. Oklahoma Gazette reporter Phil Bacharach handed over to federal authorities a handwritten letter written by Timothy McVeigh last November in which the Oklahoma City bombing suspect detailed his beef against the Justice Department. The Gazette, a local arts weekly, made the letter public Tuesday. In the note, dated November 26, 1996, McVeigh commends an article Bacharach had written about him and provided this clarification: "You quote me as saying that the FBI are ?wizards at PR.? What I actually said...
...Pulitzer Board is appointing a committee to decide whether to establish on online journalism category for next year?s awards. One member of that committee is Rena Pederson, vice president/editorial page editor of The Dallas Morning News, which recently made headlines by breaking its exclusive story concerning Timothy McVeigh?s reported admission of guilt to his attorneys on its website before the story was published in its print edition. Gentlemen, start your computers...
...traumatic events in their lives, which is almost unheard of in federal courts. "Because of their thorough grilling of the candidates, no one will be able to say they couldn't find a fair and impartial jury, even though about 30 percent of them have heard the reports that McVeigh allegedly confessed to the bombing," Cole says. Adds TIME's Charlotte Faltermayer, legal experts believe Matsch's easy-going manner in conducting jury selection could be a good indicator of whether he will allow testimony on the defense's most important theory: that McVeigh was simply a pawn...
DENVER: Nearly two years after a massive bomb shattered a peaceful spring morning in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people, jury selection began quietly Monday some 600 miles north in Denver in the criminal trial of suspect Timothy McVeigh. In Oklahoma City, fewer than 75 survivors and relatives showed up at the 320-seat auditorium set aside by the federal government in an FAA building to watch the proceedings on closed-circuit television, though demand for seats is expected to grow keen once the trial begins. While extensive security precautions have been taken to lock down the area around the Denver...