But one high-profile case was that of Timothy McVeigh, a sailor of no relation to the Oklahoma City bomber with the same name. McVeigh's sexual orientation was discovered when a Navy investigator asked America Online Inc. for information from McVeigh's user profile. * * * The Navy sought to discharge McVeigh on the grounds that he had identified himself to America Online as gay * * *
Time McVeigh was gay? First I heard this reported.
1 posted on
06/17/2002 10:43:31 AM PDT by
ex-Texan
To: ex-Texan
Tim McVeigh was gay? First I heard this reported. You shold have read more closely: ... a sailor of no relation to the Oklahoma City bomber with the same name.
3 posted on
06/17/2002 10:50:16 AM PDT by
r9etb
To: ex-Texan
I think you're reading it backwards. The sailor, not the dead bomber, was the Navy man whose sexual tastes were questioned.
To: ex-Texan
Tim McVeigh was gay? First I heard this reported. Maybe that explains john doe 2.
5 posted on
06/17/2002 10:54:25 AM PDT by
palmer
To: ex-Texan
Nicolas Terry, a professor at St. Louis University School of Law, says he is less concerned about prosecutors' access... Terry Nichols was a law professor? What? I've never heard that before!!! < /sarcasm >
6 posted on
06/17/2002 10:59:01 AM PDT by
Sloth
To: ex-Texan
Fabulous police work to catch that killer.
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