We remember and honor those 168 who lost their lives on April 19, 1995, when a bomb went off in front of the Murrah building in downtown Oklahoma City.
In partnership with the Oklahoma City National Memorial Museum, KSWO is continuing to remember each of the 168 victims who were killed during the tragic Oklahoma City Bombing on April 19, 1995.
An expansion for the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum is in the works after plans were announced on Wednesday at the ...
As the 30th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing approaches, the memorial is planning for 30 more years of light.
We remember and honor those 168 who lost their lives on April 19, 1995, when a bomb went off in front of the Murrah building in downtown Oklahoma City.
A new expansion for the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum was announced Wednesday ahead of the notorious bombing's ...
On Day 88, we remember Larry James Jones. Larry J. Jones of Yukon, 46, was a computer program specialist with the Federal ...
Runners kicked off the countdown to the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon with a 5K event, honoring the victims, survivors, and ...
The kickoff training run for the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon is set for Saturday morning. The 5K route, which begins at the Oklahoma City National Memorial, will take participants over the Sky ...
Retired Oklahoma Supreme Court Justice Steven Taylor said the 12 Pittsburg County jurors picked for the Terry Nichols trial in 2004 were the real heroes of the case. “12 Pittsburg County ...
On Day 75, we remember Anita Christine Hightower. Anita Hightower, 27, left Fort Worth, Texas, in 1991 to take care of a sick aunt in Oklahoma City. She was a secretary for the Jo ...
An Arkansas native's film about the Oklahoma City Bombing was nominated for an NAACP Image Award.Princella Smith, of Wynne, wrote, directed, and produced Walk In The Light. It was one of five ...