An article from April 19th in the United Press International says the bombing killed, quote, an undetermined number of people. And the article goes on to say, quote, dozens, perhaps hundreds of people died in the blast. The governor's office put the confirmed death toll at 26 late Wednesday, but the number was expected to rise as rescuers searched the wreckage. This same article quotes the then-governor Frank Keating, saying that, quote, he had heard as many as 40 people were dead, but said that had not been confirmed. They also quote a doctor at one of the triage centers who told UPI, quote, they have found 80 people, but only two were alive, so they told us to go home. That would put the death estimate at 78, but the article also is clear that, quote, the medical workers' report could not be confirmed. Yeah. So there's caveats all over the place. I don't know what precise reporting it is that Bill Cooper is mad about in terms of death estimates, but it seems entirely likely to me that when he says Washington was reporting 81 dead, It could have been media reports like things about that triage doctor, where responsible media qualify it as not being confirmed and it's an estimate. Either way, this feels like a cheap way for him to play games that surround the idea that he's more careful than other media, and thus more trustworthy, which is kind of dishonest. Anyone reporting on this story as it unfolded on April 19th would obviously know that it would be impossible to have a concrete number of fatalities for quite a while. And even Bill's 22 number of confirmed deaths contradicts the UPI reporting of 26. Yeah.