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To: OKCSubmariner;thinden; golitely;Fred Mertz
The audio link uses Real Player
2 posted on 01/29/2002 1:41:10 PM PST by honway
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To: Wallaby; Plummz; Uncle Bill; rdavis84;roughrider;BlueDogDemo
bump
6 posted on 01/29/2002 1:48:52 PM PST by honway
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To: honway; mancini; Uncle Bill; Hoosier Patriot; hove; ohmage; Lloyd227; ThreeYearLurker
Thank you for this post.  I had never heard about Mr. Yeakey, and the story is very interesting.  Very terrible, but it is one of those things we all need to know about.  I did an search for a picture of Mr. Yeakey and it led me to  this website .   Mr. Yeakey's death does not sound like a suicide at all.  Why did the F.B.I. involve itself in the investigation of his death in the first place?  Doesn't a law enforcement agency have to have jurisdiction to investigate a death?
61 posted on 01/29/2002 8:49:12 PM PST by Texas Gal
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To: honway
Friend: Guilt May Have Led to Officer's Death

05/11/1996
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- A reluctant hero of the Oklahoma City bombing who took his own life was wracked with guilt because an injury kept him from rescuing more victims, his closest friend said Friday. "The federal building claimed 169 lives," a tearful Officer Jim Ramsey said. "It just got another one."

Sgt. Terrance Yeakey, 30, was found Wednesday in a field near his hometown of El Reno. He had apparently tried to slit his wrists, then shot himself to death, just three days before he was to have received the department's Medal of Valor. Ramsey and Yeakey were among the first Oklahoma City police officers to reach the scene of the April 19, 1995, bombing that killed 168 people at the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. Yeakey rescued at least four people before he fell through two floors of the wrecked building and injured his back.

Yeakey did not leave a suicide note, said Capt. Bill Citty, the department's spokesman. That left friends and co-workers to speculate that he was driven by guilt over the bombing rescue and his despondence over a troubled family life. "He had a lot of guilt because he got hurt," Ramsey said. Ramsey, who is to receive the city's Medal of Honor Saturday for the bombing rescue, choked back tears as he clutched a thick pile of letters from children praising Yeakey.

Yeakey had taught in the department's D.A.R.E. program, which tries to keep kids away from drugs, since August. "I have to bury one of my very dear friends and four hours later I have to accept the highest honor that's ever been given in the police department," said Ramsey, 27. "I just want him back. I'm going to have to figure out how to function."

Repeatedly hailed as a hero of the bombing's immediate aftermath, Yeakey shied away from the attention, said his supervisor, Lt. Joe Ann Randall. "He didn't like it. There are some people that like to be heroes and some that don't," she said. "He was not one that wanted that." From the Tulsa World

80 posted on 01/30/2002 12:44:51 PM PST by honway
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