19-04-2009, 04:06 PM
(This post was last modified: 19-04-2009, 04:22 PM by Bruce Clemens.)
"Are you suggesting that Padilla is Doe 2?"
Charles, I haven't connected enough dots to suggest anything yet, but the resemblance is quite good, no? I wonder if he had a tattoo on his arm...
There are many people who seem to come and go in this case- who may have been on someone's payroll. I am intrigued by one Army sergeant Michael Hertig who was in the Ryder dealership on or around the time McVeigh supposedly rented the truck with another "soldier", Todd Bunting
The jury said John Doe No. 2 is most likely Todd Bunting, a U.S. Army soldier who went to Elliott's Body Shop in Junction City, Kan., on April 18, 1995. A day earlier, McVeigh had gone to Elliott's and picked up the Ryder truck he used in the Murrah building bombing. Bunting went to Elliott's with Michael Hertig.
"The similarity of Mr. Hertig to the composite of John Doe No. 1 and the similarity of Todd Bunting to the composite of John Doe No. 2 are remarkable, particularly when you take into account Bunting's tattoo of a Playboy bunny on his upper left arm and the fact that he was wearing a black T-shirt and a Carolina Panthers ball cap when he was at Elliott's Body Shop," said the report.
-The Denver Post January 9, 1999 Saturday 2D EDITION Jury rules out warning, Doe No. 2 in OKC blast
BYLINE: By Howard Pankratz, Denver Post Legal Affairs Writer
SECTION: A SECTION; Pg. A-24
LENGTH: 1068 words
. . . Here’s a link to a series of photos showing a Ryder truck at a secure compound inside an Army base not far from Oklahoma City.
The site claims that the photos were taken just days before the bombing but provides no citations. The site states "In a recently discovered news article written by the Washington Post on June 17th, 1997, the Oklahoma National Guard authenticates the following photos as being exactly what they appear to be, photos of a Ryder truck in a clandestine base at Camp Gruber-Braggs."
However a Lexis Nexis search I did this morning fails to produce anything from the Washington Post for that date that confirms this.
Charles, I haven't connected enough dots to suggest anything yet, but the resemblance is quite good, no? I wonder if he had a tattoo on his arm...
There are many people who seem to come and go in this case- who may have been on someone's payroll. I am intrigued by one Army sergeant Michael Hertig who was in the Ryder dealership on or around the time McVeigh supposedly rented the truck with another "soldier", Todd Bunting
The jury said John Doe No. 2 is most likely Todd Bunting, a U.S. Army soldier who went to Elliott's Body Shop in Junction City, Kan., on April 18, 1995. A day earlier, McVeigh had gone to Elliott's and picked up the Ryder truck he used in the Murrah building bombing. Bunting went to Elliott's with Michael Hertig.
"The similarity of Mr. Hertig to the composite of John Doe No. 1 and the similarity of Todd Bunting to the composite of John Doe No. 2 are remarkable, particularly when you take into account Bunting's tattoo of a Playboy bunny on his upper left arm and the fact that he was wearing a black T-shirt and a Carolina Panthers ball cap when he was at Elliott's Body Shop," said the report.
-The Denver Post January 9, 1999 Saturday 2D EDITION Jury rules out warning, Doe No. 2 in OKC blast
BYLINE: By Howard Pankratz, Denver Post Legal Affairs Writer
SECTION: A SECTION; Pg. A-24
LENGTH: 1068 words
. . . Here’s a link to a series of photos showing a Ryder truck at a secure compound inside an Army base not far from Oklahoma City.
The site claims that the photos were taken just days before the bombing but provides no citations. The site states "In a recently discovered news article written by the Washington Post on June 17th, 1997, the Oklahoma National Guard authenticates the following photos as being exactly what they appear to be, photos of a Ryder truck in a clandestine base at Camp Gruber-Braggs."
However a Lexis Nexis search I did this morning fails to produce anything from the Washington Post for that date that confirms this.
"If you're looking for something that isn't there, you're wasting your time and the taxpayers' money."
-Michael Neuman, U.S. Government bureaucrat, on why NIST didn't address explosives in its report on the WTC collapses
-Michael Neuman, U.S. Government bureaucrat, on why NIST didn't address explosives in its report on the WTC collapses

