It was a normal Wednesday for Florence Rogers. Then, Timothy McVeigh detonated a bomb outside of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995, setting off America’s deadliest domestic terror attack.
Rogers, the CEO of the Federal Employees Credit Union, had come in to lead an 8:20 a.m. meeting with her employees.
“I had just turned around in my chair and kind of reared back [to look at my computer screen] and was getting ready to discuss the next item that I’d mentioned, when the bomb went off,” she told the FBI in a 2015 interview reflecting on the attack. “It had to be longer, but it was just like seconds, and all of the girls that were in the office with me disappeared.”…