1:50:00
A professor of history
at George Washington University--
1:50:03
Officials will not confirm reports
that the bombing had anything to do...
1:50:07
with the death of Mr. Faraday's wife,
who had been an FBI agent.
1:50:19
Students and colleagues both say...
1:50:21
that Farady's behavior was increasingly
erratic in the weeks leading up--
1:50:26
He was really intense, you know?
Knew all about these terrorists--
1:50:30
how they worked, what they wanted.
1:50:32
He was really into it.
It was my favorite class.
1:50:35
We went to this field trip once.
It was Copper Creek.
1:50:38
He practically broke down and started
crying, something about his wife.
1:50:42
We all sort of knew about it, but
he never really wanted to talk about it.
1:50:48
Faraday reportedly blamed the Bureau
for its role in his wife's death...
1:50:51
almost three years ago.
1:50:53
Specifically, sources
speculate his target...
1:50:55
may have been Agent Whit Carver, one of
the 184 people to perish in the attack.
1:51:00
Carver was a partner
of Faraday's wife at Copper Creek...
1:51:04
and Faraday
may have held him responsible.
1:51:06
All I know is what he told me
in his office one day after class.
1:51:10
I'll never forget that.
1:51:13
He said, "Sweetheart...
1:51:16
one day those men are going to pay.
1:51:19
One day those men
are going to burn. "
1:51:32
Yet all of them described Faraday
as solitary but friendly...
1:51:37
as a talented professor fascinated
by the American underground...
1:51:41
and as a loving father
to his ten-year-old son...
1:51:44
who is now in the care of relatives.
1:51:53
And so after exhausting hundreds
of thousands of man-hours and leads...
1:51:57
federal investigators are finally
ready to say...