An interesting piece of investigative journalism by CNN on the suspicious death of Oklahoma City Police Officer Terry Yeakey. Yeakey, you may remember, rescued three people from the Alfred Murrah building in 1995. He was suspicious of his superiors and a year later was found dead in the woods from a single gunshot to the head but had scratches all over his arms. Of course, the Coroner decided against an autopsy and ruled it a suicide. Officer Yeakey's family and other officers believe he was murdered.
Why this article now, 28 years after the bombing and 27 after his death? This event is firmly memory holed and many believe never to be seen again.
I think this is part of an ongoing declass. A soft disclosure, at first, so as not to frighten the sheep. The cultivation of the seeds planted. It serves a double purpose of introducing the larger normie public to False Flags hopefully leading to acceptance of 9/11, Sandy Hook, Palm Nightclub, Uvalde and many others, most recently East Palastine.
This is the only path forward that avoids internecine violence.
Yeakey was one of the original redpills for me.
I live in Michigan and the Michigan Militia stuff reeked from the get go. Timothy McVeigh had mkultra written all over him and was the prototype for those that followed him. He was dead by 2001 at only 33 years old. Wonder why? lol
For some reason I am drawing a blank on what papers were kept there they needed to destroy. Any help?
There were pictures of an Arab man walking with Timothy, but the FBI was told that any muslim connections were off limits. Why? Because Clinton was creating the jihadist training for the future, and they didn't want any of that unravelling. Also there were many analysis, like this one that showed that a car bomb could never have destroyed those buildings that way (I mean, duh) so just like with 9/11 there must have been some charges placed inside the building.
As for what they were trying to destroy - I vaguely remember that it had to do with some financial documents.
This article covers a lot of stuff.