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The nation

©Associated Press, published March 27, 2001


Letters give glimpse of McVeigh

OKLAHOMA CITY -- Timothy McVeigh complains about life in his cell, jokes about his favorite TV shows and laments the children burned to death in the cult disaster at Waco.

In two years of correspondence with a reporter, though, he never mentions the Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people, including 19 children.

Phil Bacharach, former reporter for the weekly Oklahoma Gazette in Oklahoma City, says people looking for an answer to the April 19, 1995, tragedy won't find one by reading the letters published in the May issue of Esquire magazine.

"It is beyond me to reconcile the Timothy McVeigh who murdered 168 people with the writer of these letters," Bacharach writes. "True, this correspondence offers only a small window through which to look. I do know one thing: In the written word, at least, he has not a whisper of conscience."

McVeigh, 32, is scheduled to be executed May 16. He is now in a federal prison at Terre Haute, Ind. The letters were written while he was at Supermax, a federal prison at Florence, Colo.

In his letters, McVeigh tells Bacharach he spends as much time as possible relaxing in front of the television, catching The Simpsons and King of the Hill and his favorite movies, The Unforgiven, Forrest Gump and The Rock.

McVeigh calls the FBI "wizards at propaganda," saying agents manipulated the facts of the Branch Davidian inferno near Waco, Texas. Prosecutors say the Oklahoma bombing was retaliation for the Waco catastrophe, which happened exactly two years earlier.

A passage from a letter dated Nov. 26, 1996, may be the closest McVeigh ever comes to offering an explanation of the bombing.

"The public never saw the Davidians' home video of their cute babies, adorable children, loving mothers, or protective fathers," McVeigh writes. "Nor did they see pictures of the charred remains of children's bodies. Therefore, they didn't care when these families died a slow, tortuous death at the hands of the FBI."

Bacharach says it was an unwritten rule that he not ask McVeigh about his involvement in the bombing.

Bacharach says he had hoped to understand "what made a person who didn't seem like evil-incarnate commit that evil act." He never could.

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