Tuesday, March 30, 2010

A bit more info on the latest Trentadue case revelation

Someone from a foreign country was involved in the Oklahoma City 1995 bombing of the Murrah building, either as a participant, planner or government operative, suggests a Utah federal judge's ruling in a Freedom of Information Fight.
And the same ruling by U.S. District court judge Clark Waddoups showed the CIA assisted federal prosecutors in the cases they built against Tim McVeigh and Terry Nichols. The ruling last week in Salt Lake City came in the FOIA challenge made by Jesse Trentadue, an attorney who has been in a long struggle to get government documents regarding the 1995 death of his brother Kenneth in the Oklahoma City Federal Transfer Center.
Jesse Trentadue sought a dozen documents from the CIA and Judge Waddoups ruled they were considered 'national security' and would not be made available to the public. It was the first such national security defense ever used by the government in denying records to Trentadue.
...
The judge's ruling constituted the first documented involvement of the CIA in the handling of the investigation, either before or after the bombing that killed 168 persons. Does it mean there was foreign involvement in some manner in the bombing or the investigation?

There's a list of twelve exhibits Trentadue wanted to see, general 'this exhibit involves' information.

Every time something new comes out, every time there's another "Well, what have we here?" moment, this crap gets that much more involved. I'm beginning to agree with a line from a Garrett novel: "This thing couldn't get more tangled up if it had three wizards involved."

No comments: