Wow!
A
new investigation of the Murrah Building bombing in 1995 is coming from a hitherto unknown source. Kenneth Trentadue, a Utah lawyer, has been unsatisfied with the official story since '95, because his brother was among the "usual suspects" picked up after the bombing and questioned. The questioning was lethal.
Trentadue has released the results of a Freedom of Information Act request to FBI. As usual the FBI took many years to respond, which gave them time to "rectify" a set of security tapes from neighboring buildings. The tapes all show people panicking after the explosion, but all are missing a segment of time before the explosion. It would be normal for cameras to fail just after the shock wave, but missing images
before the explosion can only be deliberate.
Presumably there was some street activity just before the bang -- maybe cars or trucks driving away? -- that the FBI needs to conceal.
Trentadue's FOIA request to CIA was denied outright, on the grounds that their info would "do grave harm to national security." That answer isn't especially notable, because CIA never gives important information to mere Americans. What is interesting is that CIA, which primarily works at the international level,
has important information about this "purely domestic lone gunman".