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Star witness in Okla. City bomb case to be freed

The prosecution’s star witness in the Oklahoma City bombing trials will be freed Friday, more than a year before his sentence was scheduled to end.
/ Source: The Associated Press

Michael Fortier, the prosecution’s star witness in the Oklahoma City bombing trials, will be freed this week, more than a year before his sentence was scheduled to end.

Survivors of the 1995 attack and relatives of the 168 victims received a letter from the Bureau of Prisons this week indicating Fortier’s release date of Friday.

“He’s the luckiest man in the world,” said Paul Heath, who was on the fifth floor of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building when the bomb exploded outside. “Fortier, by being willing to do a plea bargain, won the Powerball lottery of the justice system.”

Messages left with the Bureau of Prisons were not immediately returned.

As part of his deal with prosecutors, Fortier testified against bombing conspirators Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols at their federal trials and later at Nichols’ state murder trial.

12-year sentence
He was sentenced to 12 years and ordered to pay $200,000 in fines after pleading to having prior knowledge of the bombing plan but not alerting authorities, to helping McVeigh and Nichols move and sell stolen guns, and to lying to federal authorities.

Fortier’s sentence likely was shortened because of good behavior and for time served before his formal sentence in 1998, said Irven Box, an attorney who covered the trial as a legal analyst for KWTV in Oklahoma City.

McVeigh was executed June 11, 2001. Nichols was convicted on both federal and state charges and is serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole.

Family members of some bombing victims say Fortier’s role in the April 19, 1995, plot was peripheral and they believe justice was served.

“I think he’s served enough time,” said Bud Welch, whose daughter Julie was killed while she worked at the Social Security office in the building. “I hope he’s in line to be a good citizen now.”

Jim Denny, whose two children were seriously injured in the bombing, said he also believes Fortier should be released.

“McVeigh already got his punishment, and Nichols will be in prison for the rest of his life,” Denny said. “Let this guy get out and get on with his life.”

Testified with his wife
Fortier, 37, and his wife, Lori, both testified against McVeigh and Nichols and acknowledged assisting the two in their plan to blow up the building, said McVeigh’s attorney, Stephen Jones.

“It’s intellectually indefensible to say that they weren’t conspirators, because they were. Their own testimony indicates that,” Jones said. “They knew the date, time and place of the bombing and both of them assisted materially.”

Jones said Lori Fortier testified that she helped make a false identification card that McVeigh used to rent the truck used in the bombing. Lori Fortier was granted complete immunity for her testimony and never served any prison time.