Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Small Screen: Oklahoma bomber’s links with far right traced

It didn’t start out that way, but a new documentary tying various threads among far-right extremists and Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh serves as a history lesson and, indirectly, as a warning that something so horrible could happen again.
MCVEIGH.jpg
Timothy McVeigh, left, is led out of a courthouse in Perry, Oklahoma, after his arrest in April 1995.

It didn’t start out that way, but a new documentary tying various threads among far-right extremists and Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh serves as a history lesson and, indirectly, as a warning that something so horrible could happen again.

Oklahoma City, directed by Barak Goodman, airs Tuesday at 9 in PBS’ American Experience series after its première last month at the Sundance Film Festival. Producer Mark Samels developed it as a means to “excavate” the story behind the bombing, Goodman said.

“This was hatched a couple years ago,” Goodman said in an interview. “It was time to take a look at this worst case of domestic terrorism in American history  and find the roots of the story.”

The two-hour documentary unpacks separatist and white supremacy movements that dogged the U.S. in the 1980s and early 1990s, detailing anti-government rhetoric that still echoes. McVeigh’s involvement grows from selling anti-government bumper stickers in Texas to packing a Ryder truck with racing fuel and fertilizer and blowing it up.

“I thought to myself: ‘Why Oklahoma City? It’s a quiet place. Nothing happens here. It’s not supposed to happen here,’ ” Oklahoma City police officer Jennifer Rodgers says early in the film.

McVeigh considered targets in Little Rock, Arkansas, Dallas and Tulsa, Oklahoma, before settling on Oklahoma City because federal alcohol, tobacco and firearms agents assigned there were involved in a siege at the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas. He picked April 19 because it was the anniversary of the Waco siege’s fiery end.

The filmmakers concluded that McVeigh acted after hearing anti-government rhetoric for years.

“You cannot demonize a federal government and make these radical claims and put forth these radical conspiracy theories without there being some concrete real-world effects sometimes,” Goodman said.

Well before Oklahoma City, members of the Aryan Nations and their sympathizers blamed diminished white influence for their socio-economic troubles. The Order, another white supremacist group, mimicked a group of patriots in the book The Turner Diaries The book details using a truck bomb to blow up FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C.

McVeigh had been exposed to all of that by the time he wrote a letter to his local paper in 1992 asking whether a civil war was imminent and showed up at Waco in 1993 selling bumper stickers reading “Fear the government that fears your gun.”

While McVeigh wasn’t part of a militia group, exposure to anti-government rhetoric prompted him to strike back, Goodman said. He was caught quickly, convicted and executed for the 168 deaths at the Oklahoma City building.

The Southern Poverty Law Center estimates there about 500 anti-government groups in the country today. “They never quite go away,” Goodman said.