Evening Edition: 30 Years After Oklahoma City Bombing, What Have We Learned?

Evening Edition: 30 Years After Oklahoma City Bombing, What Have We Learned?

22 Minuten
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A weekly podcast taking a closer look at the groundbreaking news stories coming out of our nation's capital. Including interviews with lawmakers, newsmakers, and political insiders.

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vor 8 Monaten
On the morning of April 19th, 1995 homegrown terrorists detonated a
truck filled with fertilizer outside a federal building in Oklahoma
City killing 168 people including 19 children, injuring nearly 700
others and destroying or damaging 300 buildings. Two friends
described as anti-government extremists and white supremacists,
Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, were apprehended, charged and
convicted of the crime. Three decades later the Oklahoma City
National Memorial & Museum still teaches us the long-lasting
impacts of the attack, honors those that died FOX’s Tonya J. Powers
speaks with Kari Watkins, President and Chief Executive Officer of
the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum, who says, after
all these years, the memorial stands to honor those who lost their
lives and to teach people violence is not the answer in a
democracy. Click Here To Follow 'The FOX News Rundown: Evening
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