Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

The mystery of John Doe No. 2 (Video Camera Recorded John Doe No. 2)
Salon.Com ^ | June 9, 2001 | David Neiwert

Posted on 06/17/2002 8:29:54 AM PDT by PJ-Comix

The main thing Joann Van Buren says she remembers about Timothy McVeigh is the $50 bill he wanted her to break. That, and the two men who accompanied him.

One day before he tore a hole in the nation's psyche with the bomb that destroyed Oklahoma City's Murrah Federal Building, McVeigh, Van Buren says, pulled up to the little Subway sandwich shop where she worked in Junction City, Kansas, driving the yellow Ryder truck that would contain the bomb.

Van Buren didn't pay any particular attention to them at first. Another clerk waited on the men, but when they tried to pay for their meal with a large bill, she took notice.

"As soon as the $50 bill came up, I had to go to the safe to get the change," says Van Buren today. "And when I gave them the change and they got their sandwiches, I remember them going back over to the corner, sitting down. And when they left, I remember three people getting into the truck. There were three people at the table."

The clerks she worked with later told FBI agents that two of the men matched the descriptions of McVeigh and his cohort, Terry Nichols. The third was a shorter, dark-haired and muscular man with an olive complexion: a perfect fit for the figure destined to be known as John Doe 2.

Luckily, the Subway shop actually had a video camera recording that day's events. When Van Buren contacted the FBI, agents interviewed everyone working in the shop on April 18. And when they were done, they confiscated the video recorded that day.

But if that tape showed a third co-conspirator with McVeigh and Nichols, no one outside the FBI can say. No one beyond the agency ever saw it. In the waning days of Nichols' trial, his defense attorneys discovered the details of Van Buren's story -- which had only been described in generic terms in the FBI's report, omitting her contention that two men accompanied McVeigh -- along with information contained in some 43,000 other "lead sheets" that the FBI until then had failed to turn over to them.

Michael Tigar, who led the Nichols defense, tried in 1999 to use the FBI's failures to produce all relevant documents to gain a new trial for his client. But U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch refused, saying the withheld material would not have altered the trial's outcome.

He likely was right. In fact, Nichols' jury had already refused to give him the death penalty largely because of some jurors' belief that more people were involved in the bombing than merely McVeigh, Nichols and Michael and Lori Fortier, the Arizona couple who were acquaintances with the two men and who were the prosecution's chief witnesses. That belief is also shared by thousands of conspiracy theorists who remain convinced the whole truth about the Oklahoma City bombing has not been told. Nichols' verdict stands as nearly the sole validation that the bombing may not have been the product of two lone bombers.

And when the FBI admitted it had failed to turn over another 3,100 documents to defense attorneys, fresh fuel was thrown onto those fires. McVeigh's execution was delayed a month as lawyers for both men started combing through the withheld information to see if it might give them an opportunity to overturn at least their sentences, if not their convictions. His execution is now scheduled for Monday.

But just as he hovered in the background of numerous eyewitness accounts like Joann Van Buren's, the figure of John Doe No. 2 almost certainly lurks within those withheld documents -- and he will continue to haunt the Oklahoma City case after McVeigh is executed. And, in an era that has seen more FBI foul-ups than any other time in history, the bureau's inability to explain away the repeated accounts of additional participants in the bombings has raised legitimate questions about the quality of its own investigation -- as well as fueled thoughts of larger conspiracies that will live beyond McVeigh.....

Even the simplest investigations of seemingly straightforward crimes -- let alone a massively complex one like the Oklahoma City case, in which some 35,000 witnesses were interviewed -- can be complicated by the randomness and unrelated coincidences of real life. An unattached stranger who wanders onto a scene at some point can become a suspected accomplice for no reason other than bad timing.

The FBI has maintained that coincidence is the best way to explain John Doe No. 2, whose character sketch was drawn mainly from the account of an eyewitness at the Junction City shop where the Ryder truck was rented. That witness, the FBI says, mixed up his recollections and mistakenly identified a man who came in the next day to rent a truck -- a 23-year-old soldier named Todd Bunting -- as an accomplice of McVeigh's. Bunting, who was cleared of any connection to the crime, vaguely resembled the composite drawing and wore clothes similar to those in the drawing, including a Carolina Panthers ball cap.

There is a kind of logic to the FBI's conclusion. The Oklahoma City case was anything but straightforward, and the agency was hit with a near-apocalyptic flood of tips about the possible perpetrators of the bombing. The vast majority of them turned into time-wasting dead ends and wild goose chases, and the investigators were forced to turn to Occam's Razor -- the maxim that the simplest explanation for a mystery is most often the correct one -- to shave down the possibilities.

McVeigh, a dead ringer for the John Doe No. 1 sketch, had been captured, and Terry Nichols (who looked nothing like John Doe No. 2) had turned himself in to authorities. The Fortiers were quickly tracked down and confessed to their relatively minor roles in the bombing as sympathizers who gave McVeigh a temporary base of operations and listened avidly as he planned the attack. And though there was no shortage of theories about the identity of Doe No. 2, no one who resembled him emerged as a possible co-conspirator.

Ultimately, investigators were forced to conclude that John Doe No. 2 was a phantom who never really existed. And that was the case they chose to take to the courts in their prosecutions of McVeigh and Nichols.

"There's nothing there," says FBI spokesman Steven Berry. "It's a case where every avenue we went down, there's nothing there. And we're certainly not going to get behind it and say there's something there or put it out that there is something when there's nothing there. It's chasing ghosts."

Indeed, McVeigh himself steadfastly denies there was any John Doe No. 2. He told the authors of "American Terrorist" that he and Nichols alone had built and detonated the bomb and vehemently denied that anyone else had been involved. He also denied the existence of Doe No. 2 in a May 2 letter to the Houston Chronicle.

But even McVeigh's own trial attorney, Stephen Jones, never believed him on this count. Jones believes McVeigh had substantial motive to lie about the involvement of others: For one, it covers the tracks of his cohorts, and it heightens his own role in the drama. Certainly "American Terrorist" captures McVeigh's desire for martyrdom -- he manipulated his appeals to expedite his execution -- and admitting anyone else into the scenario would certainly diminish his starring role.

Jones also told reporters that McVeigh failed a lie-detector test when asked about John Doe No. 2. And McVeigh, he says, frequently covered up any traces of potential co-conspirators. Once he insisted he had not accompanied Nichols to a farm co-op to buy ammonium nitrate, but after learning that a clerk at the store identified Nichols and said there was a second man with him, McVeigh flip-flopped, telling Jones he had been the man there after all. The clerk, on the other hand, insisted that it hadn't been McVeigh.

But when Jones' defense team attempted to track down Doe No. 2, it ran into the same dead ends as the FBI. Nonetheless, Jones himself came to believe McVeigh was associated with a gang of white supremacists operating out of an enclave in rural Missouri called Elohim City.

That theory is also a favorite of conspiracists who see the Oklahoma City investigation as a massive coverup. Many of them go well beyond Jones' relatively modest conjectures about the nature of the bombing to argue that the government itself was somehow involved in the bombing, as part of its plan to discredit the militia movement. The theory that McVeigh was set up looms large in the voluminous conspiracy theories that are the metier of the far-right Patriot movement. The Militia of Montana, for instance, continues to claim that there was a second blast -- a charge set by federal agents, they say -- recorded within seconds of the truck bomb (there was not; the seismic reports that form the basis of this claim actually recorded the impact of the mass of debris from the Murrah Building hitting the ground).

Others argue that a bomb made of ammonium nitrate and fuel oil could not have delivered enough force to cause the extraordinary damage of the Oklahoma City blast, and cite a study at a federal laboratory as proof. They are right. But then, the explosion set off by McVeigh actually was a high-octane mix of jet fuel and fertilizer, and the Murrah damage was entirely consistent with the force of that kind of bomb.

The theories that have gained the most currency among the conspiracy set are traceable to an Oklahoma journalist named J.D. Cash, who has built a minor career out of linking McVeigh's activities back to Elohim City and other violent supremacist factions. The core of Cash's theories revolve around McVeigh's connections to a handful of people at Elohim City who shared anti-government (and deeply racist) views, suggesting that McVeigh and his co-conspirators were actually dupes of a federal informant acting as an agent provocateur.

However, Cash's theories crumble in the face of a careful examination of the facts of the case. Cash makes much of the shadowy presence of a German neo-Nazi named Andreas Strassmeier and McVeigh's attempts to contact him at Elohim City in the days before the bombing. But Strassmeier had little contact with McVeigh and was nowhere near any of the activities that produced the bomb, and he steadfastly denies any connection. Cash's chief witness, an ex-debutante turned white-power pinup girl named Carol Howe who eventually worked as a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms informant, has constantly changed her story in a way seeming to indicate that she was tailoring it to suit the needs of the conspiracists who promoted her tale.

These theories reached a kind of apex in the work of a British journalist named Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, whose 1997 book, "The Secret Life of Bill Clinton," postulated that the former president covered up the government's complicity in the bombing as part of a larger career of perfidy that included drug-running and murder. Though Evans-Pritchard's work gained some favor among mainstream conservatives -- Robert Novak, for instance, wrote a column extolling his theories -- nearly every aspect of "Secret Life" has been roundly debunked.

Cash's work surfaced again recently as a source for a report by the British newspaper The Guardian that linked McVeigh's activities to those of the Aryan Republican Army, a gang of Midwestern bank robbers whose whereabouts eerily paralleled those of McVeigh at key moments in the run-up to the bombing. However, like nearly everything proceeding from Cash, the piece was built on a fabric of coincidence and speculation.

Indeed, there has been no shortage of candidates for the identity of John Doe No. 2, but nearly all of them lead to the same kind of factual dead ends. And it is precisely those failures that tend to bolster the government's contention that the man in the sketch never existed as an actual conspirator in the bombing.

But the FBI's explanation of the John Doe No. 2 theories is nearly as full of holes as the conspiracists' scenarios -- or at least, it leaves dangling a long list of unanswered questions. When it is examined, a troubling portrait emerges of an agency eager to tailor its investigation for the purposes of prosecuting a criminal case, rather than doggedly seeking out the truth.....

(This is a long article. Click HERE for the full article.)



TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News
KEYWORDS: dirtybombplot; johndoe3; timothymcveigh
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-71 next last
To: PJ-Comix
Thanks, I'm getting really weirded out by all this coincidence.
21 posted on 06/17/2002 9:14:10 AM PDT by marty60
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]

To: Abundy
No, this is the government as run by perverted, perjurous traitors. Now a patriot is in the White House. Big difference to the discerning.
22 posted on 06/17/2002 9:16:40 AM PDT by justshutupandtakeit
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 16 | View Replies]

To: Ann Archy
Also, McVeigh had 2 vehicles to manuver (sp?). His getaway car and the Ryder truck. How did he get his car one place and then go get the Ryder truck to drive to the Murrah building all by himself?
23 posted on 06/17/2002 9:17:36 AM PDT by 3catsanadog
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: marty60
Nichols wifes maiden name is Padilla

No idea.

24 posted on 06/17/2002 9:20:17 AM PDT by MrB
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]

To: 3catsanadog
Also, McVeigh had 2 vehicles to manuver (sp?). His getaway car and the Ryder truck. How did he get his car one place and then go get the Ryder truck to drive to the Murrah building all by himself?

Wasn't the getaway car pre-parked earlier?

25 posted on 06/17/2002 9:32:05 AM PDT by PJ-Comix
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 23 | View Replies]

To: PJ-Comix
It supposedly means Smith. Joe Smith!
26 posted on 06/17/2002 9:56:56 AM PDT by Marysecretary
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]

To: Delbert
I say give Terry Nichols an incentive to talk!

He is now serving life, I believe.

I would be willing to cut him a break if he can give credible info which will give us some leads of terrorists.

27 posted on 06/17/2002 10:10:45 AM PDT by altura
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: altura
I say give Terry Nichols an incentive to talk!

They don't even have to release Nichols to give him an incentive. Just promise to replace his SOS dinners with T-Bone steaks.

28 posted on 06/17/2002 10:13:02 AM PDT by PJ-Comix
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 27 | View Replies]

To: Delbert
I think McVeigh was executed pre maturely

Some killers sit on death row for many years. Not McVeigh. I think that the government was afraid he might change his mind and talk about what really happened.

29 posted on 06/17/2002 10:43:04 AM PDT by janetgreen
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: 3catsanadog
Oh WOW!!! How DID he drive two vehicles????
30 posted on 06/17/2002 11:23:41 AM PDT by Ann Archy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 23 | View Replies]

To: eno_
"Just because jet planes use it instead of diesel or fuel oil does not mean jet fuel has vastly more energy."

Agreed.
Jets achieve high power outputs by the simple expedient of using vast quantities of jet fuel.

31 posted on 06/17/2002 11:32:08 AM PDT by Redbob
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: PJ-Comix
We know he didn't take a taxi while shuttling the vehicles around, because the feebees would have trumpeted it loud.

This also means, he had to leave a truck with a bomb unsecure or with someone to watch over it.

32 posted on 06/17/2002 11:43:34 AM PDT by razorback-bert
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies]

To: Ann Archy
I berlieve McVeigh stated that he pre-positioned his mercury there a few days previous to the cowardly attack and left it in an alley a few blocks away.
33 posted on 06/17/2002 12:06:46 PM PDT by Wm Bach
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 30 | View Replies]

To: steve50
The way Yossef Bodansky describes the bombs that went off outside our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, with a stronger secondary shock, they sound very much like descriptions I have read of the OKC blast.
34 posted on 06/17/2002 12:13:46 PM PDT by aristeides
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: VOA
Thanks for the ping! Interesting read!

Boomer Sooner!

35 posted on 06/17/2002 12:31:33 PM PDT by PhiKapMom
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Delbert
Would say your chances of getting something out of Nichols is far greater than McVeigh ever would have been. McVeigh wanted to be the lead martyr and played it to the hilt. With Nichols facing a State Trial, he might be more willing to cooperate. Just don't like the OKC FBI/ATF offices get near him IMO!
36 posted on 06/17/2002 12:34:54 PM PDT by PhiKapMom
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: razorback-bert;PJ-Comix;Wm Bach
IIRC, McVeigh left the Mercury in an alley across from the Murrah building, then had Nichols drive down from Kansas to pick him up.

I, too think McVeigh was executed prematurely. At first, I avoided the conspiracy theories like germs, but with passing events recently, Jeez, I dunno!

Guess my main problem with the conspiracy angles was the "multiple bombs/ANFO not powerful enough/buildings close by not damaged" BS that came from either so-called experts, or were outright fabrications.

Doubt we will ever know the whole truth!

37 posted on 06/17/2002 12:40:36 PM PDT by Don Carlos
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 32 | View Replies]

To: Wm Bach
You sure are the FIRST person I have heard say this!!
38 posted on 06/17/2002 12:41:16 PM PDT by Ann Archy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 33 | View Replies]

To: Don Carlos
Nichols and Fournier should be questioned as to whether they knew Padilla.

PJ---Who is still waiting for the Padilla early 1995 (until April) Timeline.

39 posted on 06/17/2002 12:59:15 PM PDT by PJ-Comix
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 37 | View Replies]

To: Don Carlos
This still leaves the truck unguarded.

I would be worried about someone smelling something odd (diesel,nito,fertlizer) in a truck primilary use for moving household goods and checking on it.

40 posted on 06/17/2002 1:12:10 PM PDT by razorback-bert
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 37 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-71 next last

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.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson