News

Most Thunder players weren't born when the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building was bombed 30 years ago. But they have learned ...
Tuesday night at the Ardmore Public Library, John Whetsel shared his experience housing Terry Nichols, who was convicted of ...
A Swiss basketball fan traveled to Oklahoma City to watch his favorite team, the Thunder, and formed a friendship with locals ...
Thirty years ago, the Oklahoma City bombing became one of the deadliest acts of domestic terrorism in United States history.
It was April 19, 1995, when a truck bomb detonated outside a federal building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people in the deadliest homegrown attack on U.S. soil. Hartenstein didn't know much about ...
Keeping inmates safe from the threat of vigilantism — either from other inmates or the public at large — is a concern at any ...
Top row, from left: Lucio Aleman Jr., Teresa Antoinette Alexander, Richard A. Allen, Ted L. Allen, Baylee Almon, Diane (Hollingsworth) Althouse, Rebecca Needham ...
After review, Dallas County DA John Creuzot motioned to dismiss the felony theft charges against the four officials, ...
A single photograph captured the horror of that… WATCH: An Oklahoma City bombing survivor on why he’s worried about extremism today Dennis Purifoy survived the largest act of domestic ...
Investigative journalist Andrew Gumbel, and his co-author Roger Charles, dug through thousands of pages of records and government reports on the bombing for his book, “Oklahoma City: What the ...
The Blaze raised eyebrows this week by publishing an article suggesting there is more to know about the Oklahoma City bombing than the long-held conclusion that anti-government extremists Timothy ...