Stephen Jones's retelling of his arduous task of defending the lead suspect in the Oklahoma City bombing is no whodunit. Rather, it reads more like a who-else-dunit.
Jones, a court-appointed defense attorney for Timothy McVeigh, spends pages building a case about who else might have been involved with the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah federal building that killed 168 people — or was it 169?
Those types of questions — what's to make of the dismembered leg that was found at the bombing site that couldn't be affixed to any of the 168 known victims of the bombing — are the foundation upon which Jones's book is built. Other such questions pepper the landscape of Others Unknown: Why were members of the Israeli intelligence community allowed to tour the site of the bombing before the rest of the building was destroyed when no one else, not even defense attorneys, were granted access? What about the mysterious Andreas Strassmeir, the German neo-Nazi who lived in Elohim City, Okla. and who received phone calls there from McVeigh in the run up of the bombing, but from whom the federal government never sought to formally interview? And then there's Elohim City itself, a radical extreme right-wing compound in eastern Oklahoma that was teeming with government informants who supposedly warned the Feds about an impending terrorist attack? Why was Elohim City ignored by the federal government? Were investigators simply incompetent? Or was something more sinister going on?
Jones continually approaches bizarre circumstances about the Oklahoma City bombing, but never conclusively solves any of these questions. Rather, these incomplete issues surrounding the government's investigation of the bombing — which seemed hell-bent on convincing the public that the bombing was the work of no one except McVeigh and Terry Nichols — paint a suggestive picture of a cast of characters involved in the deadly terrorist attack, but who never endured the scrutiny of federal investigators.
By now, anyone who has paid scarcely any attention to the aftermath of the Oklahoma City bombing realizes the enormous likelihood that many others were involved in the bombing. But precisely who else, and why the government sought to keep the case confined to two angry anti-government castoffs, is never fully answered in the pages of Jones's book.
This of course, cannot be Jones's fault. On one hand, he illustrates how the federal government fought viciously to keep the potentially exculpatory evidence out of the hands of defense attorneys, with the help of an obliging federal judge. On the other, his client appears to have never given Jones the full account of what happened on and before April 19, 1995.
Sadly, the truth about Oklahoma City is likely buried in withheld evidence, co-conspirators who are long gone, forgotten in the amber of history, or kept secret in the mind of the perpetrator whom the federal government was all too willing to kill in haste following his conviction.