Posted on 01/29/2002 1:36:51 PM PST by honway
In the audio interview in the links below, Tonia Yeakey tells the story of Terrance Yeakey, an American hero. He was the first OKC Police Department officer inside the Murrah Building after the bombing on April 19,1995. Terrance Yeakey went straight into the building and started rescuing survivors. A year later, on May 8,1996, Terry's body was found in a field one and a half miles from his car. His car was filled with blood. Terry was found with his jugular vein cut in two places, both wrists cut, and both arms cut at the elbow and rope burns on his limbs and a bullet in the head.
Tonia states that a member of law enforcement confirmed the body was drug from one place to another. The FBI immediately took over the investigation and ruled it a suicide without an autopsy, eventhough according to the funeral director the cuts were too deep and severe for the use of embalming fluid.
This is a story you need to hear and not from a journalist but in Tonia's own words, because she too is an American hero for courageously sharing her story with you.
Tonia Yeakey Interview Part II
It is my understanding that Yeakey's body was found on federal property near El Reno, this was the justification for over two dozen federal agents at the scene of a suicide.
____________________________________________________
According to this piece by David Hoffman, it appears this federal land was selected by two suspicious suicides in less than a year. Gladden was a guard in the prison where McVeigh and Nichols were incarcerated.
___________________________________________________________
Why would the Medal of Valor recipient make such a bizarre- sounding statement? In a letter he wrote to a bombing victim and friend, the officer tells the real reason for his reluctance to be honored as a hero:
Dear Ramona,
I hope that whatever you hear now and in the future will not change your opinions about myself or others with the Oklahoma City Police Department, although some of the things I am about to tell you about is [sic] very disturbing.
I don't know if you recall everything that happened that morning or not, so I am not sure if you know what I am referring to.
The man that you and I were talking about in the pictures I have, made the mistake of asking too many questions as to his role in the bombing, and was told to back off.
I was told by several officers he was a ATF agent who was overseeing the bombing plot and at the time the photos were taken he was calling in his report of what had just went down!
I think my days as a police officer are numbered because of the way my supervisors are acting and there is [sic] a lot of secrets floating around now about my mental state of mind. I think they are going to write me up because of my ex-wife and a VPO.
I told you about talking to Chaplain Poe, well the bastard wrote up in a report stating I should be relieved of my duties! I made the mistake of thinking that a person's conversation with a chaplain was private, which by the way might have cost me my job as a police officer! A friend at headquarters told me that Poe sent out letters to everyone in the department! That BITCH (Jo Ann Randall) I told you about is up to something and I think it has something to do with Poe. If she gets her way, they will tar and feather me!
I was told that Jack Poe has written up a report on every single officer that has been in to see him, including Gordon Martin and John Avery.
Knowing what I know now, and understanding fully just what went down that morning, makes me ashamed to wear a badge from Oklahoma City's Police Department. I took an oath to uphold the Law and to enforce the Law to the best of my ability. This is something I cannot honestly do and hold my head up proud any longer if I keep my silence as I am ordered to do.
There are several others out there who was [sic] what we saw and even some who played a role in what happened that day.
[Two Pages Missing]
My guess is the more time an officer has to think about the screw up the more he is going to question what happened... Can you imagine what would be coming down now if that had been our officers' who had let this happen? Because it was the feds that did this and not the locals, is the reason it's okay. You were right all along and I am truly sorry I doubted you and your motives about recording history. You should know that it is going to one-hell-of-a-fight.
Everyone was behind you until you started asking questions as I did, as to how so many federal agents arrived at the scene at the same time.
Luke Franey (a BATF agent who claimed he was in the building) was not in the building at the time of the blast, I know this for a fact, I saw him! I also saw full riot gear worn with rifles in hand, why? Don't make the mistake as I did and ask the wrong people.
I worry about you and your young family because of some of the statements that have been made towards me, a police officer! Whatever you do don't confront McPhearson with the bomb squad about what I told you. His actions and defensiveness towards the bombing would make any normal person think he was defending himself as if he drove the damn truck up to the building himself. I am not worried for myself, but for you and your group. I would not be afraid to say at this time that you and your family could be harmed if you get any closer to the truth. At this time I think for your well being it is best for you to distance yourself and others from those of us who have stirred up to many questions about the altering and falsifying of the federal investigation's reports.
I truly believe there are other officers like me out there who would not settle for anything but the truth, it is just a matter of finding them. The only true problem as I see it is, who do we turn to then?
It is vital that people like you, Edye Smith, and others keep asking questions and demanding answers for the actions of our federal government and law enforcement agencies that knew beforehand and participated in the cover-up.
The sad truth of the matter is that they have so many police officers convinced that by covering up the truth about the operation gone wrong, that they are actually doing our citizens a favor. What I want to know is how many other operations have they had that blew up in their faces? Makes you stop and take another look at Waco.
I would consider it to be an insult to my profession as a police officer and to the citizens of Oklahoma for ANY of the City, State or Federal agents that stood by and let this happen to be recognized as any thing other than their part in participation in letting this happen. For those who ran from the scene to change their attire to hide the fact that they were there, should be judged as cowards.
If our history books and records are ever truly corrected about that day it will show this and maybe even some lame excuse as to why it happened, but I truly don't believe it will from what I now know to be the truth.
Even if I tried to explain it to you the way it was explained to me, and the ridiculous reason for having [our] own police departments falsify reports to their fellow officers, to the citizens of the city and to our country, you would understand why I feel the way I do about all of this.
I believe that a lot of the problems the officers are having right now are because some of them know what really happened and can't deal with it, and others like myself made the mistake of trusting the one person we were supposed to be able to turn to (Chaplain Poe) only to be stabbed in the back.
I am sad to say that I believe my days as a police officer are numbered because of all of this....
dragged is the past tense of 'drag' - drug is a pharmaceutical
Jerry Bohnen is the father of one of my good buddies. I played basketball with his son John, and John is now at West Point. I had no idea that he was involved in keeping the Feds' secrets under wrap, and knowing the man, I believe the only way that this could be true would be if he feared for his life.
What a sick, sick thing for the FBI to have on it's hands. The truth will probably never totally come out, and if it did, I believe only a handful of people like you and me would give a rat's ass.
I am certain your friend John earned and deserved his appointment to West Point, otherwise, he would not have been accepted to the Point.
An appointment usually requires a Congessional nomination, and quite frankly, had Bohnen publicly challenged the U.S. government's version of the events in OKC, it is very likely that his actions may have disqualified his son for the nomination/appointment. Considering the appointment is equivalent to a scholarship of about $250,000 and the fact that the entire OKC Police Department was prepared to ignore the murder of one of their own, how much are we to expect from one private citizen?
Tonia Yeakey went public with significantly more incriminating information than Bohnen had and her story, unfortunately, has made little difference because the public in general does not care. If Bohnen chose a well earned bright future for his son over exposing the truth to an audience who could care less, who could blame him?
I am sorry for Mrs. Yeakey's loss, I'm sure her husband was a fine man, however I know that denial can make people think of some strange things.
After reading many responses to this article, I can see how people may feel strongly. Some people think that McVeigh was part of a government consipracy, I do not. However, to have a balanced analysis of this case, please post material form a more reliable source to back up your claim, like an Oklahoma newspaper, that has done unbiased research, and has had access to the autopsy. Then I can retract my statement.
I think that is the key. People can shout to the high heavens about all of this stuff, but unless it is on one of the "major" networks or on the cover of Time, or has a TV movie done about it, John Q Public could care less. It is much more important, obviously, for us to care about how Al Qaeda prisoners are treated than if the FBI killed 168 of our own citizens.
Oklahoma's Conservative Voice Since 1979 |
|
|
No autopsy was performed on the body of Terrance Yeakey
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
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.