CNN, for the past decade, has shied away from publishing any real news or commentary questioning most national tragedies but instead labels anyone who questions the narrative provided by government conspiracy theorists.
That’s why on March 3 CNN asked “Why is this cop dead?” When an article titled Many users on the Internet were shocked with a caption, “Hero police officer saves at least three people after 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. A year later, he was found shot in the head.”
Wrote investigative work Thomas Lake And in it, Lake dives deep into the mysterious death of Oklahoma City police officer Terry Yeakey.
Alfred P., who was bombed in April 1995. Lake writes how senior police officer Terry Yeakey rescued three people from the rubble of the Murrah Federal Building.
A police officer rescued at least three people after the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. A year later, he was found shot in the head. What happened to Terry Yakey? My new investigative story: https://t.co/E32iIs5Sve
— ThomasLake (@ThomasLake) March 3, 2023
A CNN writer transitions shortly after Yeakey’s heroics and writes that the veteran police officer is “suspicious” of his supervisors and often goes on his own undercover missions.
Yeakey finally died a year after the Oklahoma City bombing.
His body was found in the woods with gunshot wounds to his wrist/neck and head.
Authorities ruled Yeakey’s death a suicide, but his sister and officers who worked with him believe he was murdered.
Here is an excerpt:
A CNN investigation found numerous anomalies surrounding Yeakey’s death, as well as a lack of transparency from authorities.
Yeakey died of a gunshot wound to the head, but no autopsy was performed. President of National Association of Medical Examiners Dr. According to Joyce DeJong, medical examiners may sometimes choose not to perform an autopsy when suicide is suspected and the cause of death is not in dispute. But three former law enforcement officials familiar with the Yeakey case said they thought an autopsy should be performed.
When asked why there was no autopsy on Yeakey, Oklahoma City Police Department spokesman Master Sgt. Gary Knight, a reporter for the state medical examiner’s office, wrote that their director of operations, Kari Learned, wrote, “Our office does not answer specific questions about the case.”
The piece has many users on social media surprised that CNN would publish it:
I have a strong rule against linking to CNN.
WTF tho?
CNN does an in-depth report on a police officer that few of us know about.
This is important work. https://t.co/VfaMB1A0RC
— Cernovich (@Cernovich) March 4, 2023
CNN seems willing to engage with the idea that the OKC bombing was staged by the federal government or covered up https://t.co/tBfFvAGRm9
—Ali Breland (@alibreland) March 3, 2023
The article concludes by giving details about Terry Yeakey, which gathers a lot of evidence about the truth behind the Oklahoma City bombing, and some new facts about his various encounters with secret agents in his final days. What a tragic and interesting story. Instead of constantly attacking Trump supporters and ‘racist’ Americans, CNN would do well to check the facts.