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Topic: Terry Nichols


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In the News (Sat 30 Aug 08)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-04)
Nichols was spared the death penalty on both the state and federal counts when jurors could not agree on a sentence.
Nichols also was sentenced to 10 years and a $5,000 fine for a conspiracy count, and 35 years and a $25,000 fine for first-degree arson.
Nichols was convicted on federal involuntary manslaughter and conspiracy charges for the deaths of eight federal law enforcement officers who were among the 168 victims killed during the April 19, 1995, bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.
www.11alive.com /news/news_article.aspx?storyid=50272   (531 words)

  
 Terry Nichols biography .ms (via CobWeb/3.1 planetlab1.isi.jhu.edu)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-04)
Terry Nichols (born April 1, 1955) is accused of being the accomplice of Timothy McVeigh, an American terrorist in the Oklahoma City bombing (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA, April 19, 1995).
Nichols was convicted of eight counts of manslaughter in a United States District Court and is now spending life behind bars in a federal penitentiary.
Nichols was returned to Oklahoma in January 2000 to face 160 counts of first-degree murder, one count of first-degree manslaughter for the death of an unborn child, one count of conspiracy to commit murder and one count of aiding and counseling in the placing of a substance or bomb near a public building.
terry-nichols.biography.ms.cob-web.org:8888   (1436 words)

  
 CNN - The Nichols Trial: Nichols gets life for Oklahoma bombing
Nichols sat still with his hands clasped in front of his face and appeared to be dry-eyed throughout.
Nichols was convicted in December of conspiracy and eight counts of involuntary manslaughter.
Nichols' ex-wife, Lana Padilla, and their teen-age son, Josh, were in the Denver courtroom Thursday and wept after the life sentence was pronounced.
www.cnn.com /US/9703/okc.trial/nichols.sentence   (1121 words)

  
 lexisONE(R) Terry Nichols To Get Life Sentence   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-04)
Nichols, sentenced to life without parole in 1998 on federal bombing charges, was scheduled be sentenced on state murder charges Monday.
Nichols was previously convicted on federal involuntary manslaughter and conspiracy charges for the deaths of eight federal law enforcement officers who were among the 168 victims killed during the April 19, 1995, bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.
Nichols will have 10 days after he is sentenced to appeal his conviction and sentence, but Nichols' defense attorneys have urged him not to appeal.
www.lexisone.com /news/ap/ap080904c.html   (400 words)

  
 The Seattle Times: Nation & World: Terry Nichols apologizes, asks for forgiveness
Nichols had already been sentenced to life without parole in 1998 on federal charges for the deaths of eight law-enforcement officers killed in the April 19, 1995, bombing.
Nichols, 49, never testified during his trials and said nothing after he was convicted in federal court.
Nichols was convicted on federal involuntary-manslaughter and conspiracy charges for the deaths of eight federal law-enforcement officers who were among those victims killed during the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.
seattletimes.nwsource.com /html/nationworld/2002001184_nichols10.html   (533 words)

  
 Terry Nichols and Double Jeopardy by William L. Anderson
Nichols, after all, has been convicted in federal court for having a crucial role in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and received a life sentence.
Nichols is charged with taking a major role in the murder of nearly 200 individuals and injuring scores more, and the families and survivors of those killed or injured in those attacks surely do deserve their day in court.
Nichols, on the other hand, was convicted, with the conviction occurring in federal court, where the rules of evidence are loose and the playing field is heavily tilted towards the prosecution.
www.lewrockwell.com /anderson/anderson91.html   (1237 words)

  
 SignOnSanDiego.com > News > Nation -- Defense presents case for life in prison at Terry Nichols' murder trial
Leslie Nichols, testifying in the penalty phase of his brother's state murder trial, described a 1974 accident in which a fuel tank exploded and caused third-degree burns over 70 percent of his body, badly disfiguring his face and head.
Leslie Nichols was among nine witnesses, including his sister and both of Terry Nichols' ex-wives, who testified Monday as defense attorneys opened their case to keep Nichols off death row.
Nichols is already serving a life sentence on federal convictions for the deaths of eight federal agents in the blast.
www.signonsandiego.com /news/nation/20040608-0008-nicholstrial.html   (571 words)

  
 SPLCenter.org: Domestic Terrorism
Nichols also confessed that he had personally helped McVeigh build the bomb in the back of a Ryder truck the day before the attack.
Nichols was convicted of conspiracy and the involuntary manslaughter of eight federal employees in federal court in 1997 and sentenced to life without parole.
Nichols was convicted, but the jury deadlocked during the penalty phase.
www.splcenter.org /intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=531   (268 words)

  
 Terry Nichols Sentenced to Life With No Hope of Parole
Terry L. Nichols was sentenced Thursday to life in prison without release for his role as the chief collaborator in the Oklahoma City bombing, thus ending the largest federal investigation into the worst terrorist attack on U.S. soil.
The 43-year-old Nichols - a former Michigan farm boy who first met Timothy J. McVeigh, the anti-government zealot convicted earlier in the bombing, at Army boot camp in Georgia - also was ordered to pay $14.5 million in restitution to the federal General Services Administration for the destruction to the Oklahoma City federal building.
In contrast, Nichols was convicted of just one count of conspiracy, acquitted of two others and found guilty only of involuntary manslaughter in the eight officers' deaths.
www-tech.mit.edu /V118/N27/nichols.27w.html   (905 words)

  
 CNN.com - Jury deadlocks, sparing Nichols from death penalty - Jun 11, 2004
Nichols' mother, sister and ex-wife sat in the front row on one side of the courtroom, while bombing victims and their families sat on the other side of the aisle.
Nichols was accused of helping bombing mastermind McVeigh assemble the bomb and obtain the ammonium nitrate fertilizer used to build it.
Nichols' attorney, Creekmore Wallace, urged jurors not to be swayed by "that flood of tears, that flood of pain" related by victims who testified.
www.cnn.com /2004/LAW/06/11/nichols.trial/index.html   (670 words)

  
 Terry Nichols? - @forums   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-04)
Nichols was convicted May 26 of 161 counts of first-degree murder in the April 19, 1995, bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.
Nichols, 49, was acquitted of federal murder charges in 1997 but convicted of conspiracy and involuntary manslaughter charges in the deaths of the federal law enforcement officers.
Both Terry Nichols and Timothy McVeigh were associated with the Christian Identity church in the months preceding the bombing.
www.atforumz.com /showthread.php?t=235327   (1652 words)

  
 Terry Nichols
Nichols, following the age-old honor code of white supremacy which allows a special enlightened exemption from separatism when the non-white person is a woman in a sexually subservient position (just ask Sally Hemmings).
Nichols sent his wife back to the Philippines for a few months, while the conspirators did their initial work assembling the ingredients for the bomb, including purchases of fuel oil and the theft of detonation materials.
Nichols' defense team sought to introduce evidence that McVeigh's had other accomplices in the bombing plot, but the judge disallowed testimony relating to Elohim City, a white separatist compound visited by McVeigh, Nichols and other suspects in the months before the bombing.
www.rotten.com /library/bio/crime/terrorists/terry-nichols   (2578 words)

  
 Terry Nichols - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Terry Nichols (born April 1, 1955) was convicted of being an accomplice of Timothy McVeigh, the man convicted of murder in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA, April 19, 1995), which claimed 168 lives.
Nichols was convicted of eight counts of manslaughter in a United States District Court and was sentenced to life imprisonment in ADX Florence, a supermax prison in Florence, Colorado.
Nichols was returned to Oklahoma in January 2000 to face 161 counts of first-degree murder.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Terry_Nichols   (1424 words)

  
 CNN.com - Court tells feds to respond to Nichols appeal - June 4, 2001
Nichols was convicted on charges of conspiracy and involuntary manslaughter in the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City that which killed 168 people and wounded hundreds more.
Nichols attorney Michael Tigar said many of the documents dealt with the mysterious "John Doe No. 2" who one witness said was with McVeigh when he rented the truck used to carry the bomb.
Nichols was turned down in an earlier appeal for a new trial by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver, Colorado, and the U.S. Supreme Court.
archives.cnn.com /2001/LAW/06/04/scotus.nichols.02/index.html   (387 words)

  
 USATODAY.com - FBI finds explosives in home where Terry Nichols lived   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-04)
Nichols, who is serving multiple life prison sentences on federal and state charges, hasn't lived at the property for years, and FBI officials said the information that led to the discovery indicated Nichols had buried the evidence before the attack on April 19, 1995.
One of Nichols' attorneys said Friday the discovery was either a hoax or a major failure by the FBI to find all evidence after searching the home numerous times.
Nichols and McVeigh, who was put to death for his role in the Oklahoma City bombing, had used blasting caps, fertilizer and fuel to make the bomb used to destroy the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.
www.usatoday.com /news/nation/2005-04-01-nichols-search_x.htm   (858 words)

  
 OK City Bombing Criminal Complaint Against Terry Nichols
Nichols was with McVeigh in downtown Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, on April 16, 1995.
Nichols said that he did this after reading in several different newspapers that ammonium nitrate was used in the Oklahoma City bombing.
Nichols instructs McVeigh to "clear everything out of CG 37" and to "also liquidate 40." Terry Nichols also tells McVeigh he is on his own and to "Go for it!!" 22.
www.lectlaw.com /files/cur18.htm   (2316 words)

  
 Did Terry Nichols and Ramzi Yousef meet?
While myth and misinformation surrounds Nichols' possible connections to al Qaeda, the provable facts in the case are shocking enough in context, and perhaps compelling merely due to the sheer volume of the circumstances.
According to his visa records and trial testimony, Nichols was scheduled to return to the U.S. on January 21, 1995, the same day Ramzi Yousef hoped to bomb almost a dozen U.S.-bound airliners simultaneously and possibly crash a hijacked airplane into the Pentagon or CIA headquarters.
Nichols tried to smuggle stun guns onto his flight when he left the U.S. On his return, he flew a Northwest Airlines route out of Manila that terminated in Los Angeles, matching one of the flights targeted by Yousef.
intelwire.egoplex.com /nichols022004.html   (3522 words)

  
 OK City Bombing James & Terry Nichols 4/95 Criminal Complaint
During this interview, JAMES NICHOLS stated that he is the brother of TERRY NICHOLS and is a friend of TIMOTHY JAMES MCVEIGH and that both have visited and/or resided with him at his farm in Decker, Michigan, over the past several years.
JAMES NICHOLS further stated that he was aware of "survival books" belonging to his brother, TERRY NICHOLS, and that he knew that those books contained information about making bombs an information dealing with ammonium nitrate bombs.
One of the two gave his name as Terry Tuttle, with a contact phone number of (517) 872-4008, and stated they would return Approximately two weeks later, the two individuals returned ad were informed that the store could not or would not obtain the 100% liquid nitro model airplane fuel for them.
www.lectlaw.com /files/cur19.htm   (1478 words)

  
 Worldandnation: Terry Nichols guilty of killing 161 in Okla.
Terry Nichols guilty of killing 161 in Okla.
Nichols was stone-faced and stared straight ahead at the judge as the verdicts were read, while his attorneys bowed their heads and clenched their hands together.
Oklahoma prosecutors brought the case with the goal of finally winning a death sentence against Nichols, who is serving a life term on federal charges in the 1995 bombing.
www.sptimes.com /2004/05/27/Worldandnation/Terry_Nichols_guilty_.shtml   (590 words)

  
 (5/13/2003) Terry Nichols Charged With 160 Murders
Terry Nichols, a former Herington, Kansas farmer, lowered his head into his hands as Oklahoma County District Judge Allen McCall ruled there was sufficient evidence to bind him over for trial.
Nichols, 48, was found guilty by the federal jury of conspiracy and eight counts of involuntary manslaughter.
Nichols former wife, Marife Nichols, testified she became jealous of Nichols because her husband was spending so much time with him.
www.monitor.net /monitor/0305a/terrynicholsmurder.html   (618 words)

  
 Intelwire: Is al Qaeda recruitment of U.S. soldiers linked to OKC Bombing?
Like Terry Nichols, who wed a mail-order bride in the Philippines in 1990, Hampton-El had strong ties to the Philippines and even considered marrying a Filipina in 1993.
Nichols' ex-wife wrote that this trip took place in early 1993 and lasted 60 days; media watchdog group Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting placed the trip from late January to early February.
Terry Nichols married a Filipina from Cebu City in 1990, and he reportedly stayed in Cebu during his visits to the Philippines.
intelwire.egoplex.com /hamptonel010609.html   (1739 words)

  
 Defense rests in Terry Nichols' murder trial   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-04)
Nichols' attorneys questioned 96 witnesses over 11 days in a case that was shortened when Judge Steven Taylor limited the defense's ability to offer evidence of alternative suspects in the bombing, which killed 168 people.
Nichols, 49, is serving a life prison sentence after a federal jury in 1997 convicted him of conspiracy and involuntary manslaughter in the deaths of eight federal law enforcement agents in the April 19, 1995, bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building.
In Oklahoma, Nichols is charged with 161 counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of the other 160 victims and one victim's fetus.
www.rickross.com /reference/mcveigh/mcveigh33.html   (561 words)

  
 CNN - Terry Nichols' brother says prosecutors lied - Jan. 11, 1998
DENVER (CNN) -- Terry Nichols' brother called prosecutors in the Oklahoma City bombing case liars Saturday and praised some jury members for criticizing the FBI investigation of the bombing.
Nichols was convicted of conspiracy and involuntary manslaughter in connection with the blast that killed 168 people on April 19, 1995.
Terry Nichols was convicted on December 23 of conspiracy and eight counts of involuntary manslaughter.
www.cnn.com /US/9801/11/nichols/index.html   (441 words)

  
 Free Essays - Terry Nichols (via CobWeb/3.1 planetlab1.isi.jhu.edu)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-04)
Terry Nichols was born inÂ…..Michigan, he grew up in a small town on a farm.
Terry Nichols was convicted of having strong evidence that he was definitely involved with the Oklahoma bombing, there were many suspicious trails of evidence that led back to him.
Nichols attorneys countered that the federal and state charges were fundamentally similar, and that the federal and the Oklahoma authorities had worked closely together throughout Nichols trial.
www.freeessays.tv.cob-web.org:8888 /b3417.htm   (576 words)

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