Episodios

  • To KIll A Terrorist In Self Defense (Final Episode)
    Nov 5 2025
    In the final episode O'Neil thanked U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations, U.S. Department of Defense and Colorado Springs Police Department. He also thanked former Lockheed Martin employee Steven Griffin, former USA Boxing official Dickie Wood, former football coach Carl Freyermuth, baseball coach Dwayne Follette, his parents and his brother. He re-emphasized that he killed in self defense and that the Iraq War was justified.

    The results of O'Neil's boxing matches were reported by journalist and writer John J. Raspanti in 2018. Raspanti wrote the article "You Only Live Once. Just Ask Matthew O'Neil" for the company Maxboxing. Raspanti co-authored the 2016 hardcover book Intimate Warfare: The True Story of the Arturo Gatti and Micky Ward Boxing Trilogy. The book Everipedia Boxing Archives has the results of O'Neil's boxing matches. That book is in the library of The International Boxing Hall Of Fame.

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  • To Kill A Terrorist In Self Defense (Fort Taber-Fort Rodman Military Museum)
    Nov 4 2025
    The Fort Taber-Fort Rodman Military Museum opened in August 2004. Its average annual visitor rate is over 8,500 people, resulting in the museum being hailed as the "biggest little military museum in the country" by former mayor of New Bedford, Scott Lang. The museum is part of the The Fort Taber-Fort Rodman Historical Association, Inc. Its President is Bill Niedzwiedz.

    Some of the exhibits that are housed in the museum are a statue made by a German POW who was held at Camp Edwards on Cape Cod as well as artifacts recovered from area waters. The museum has photos and biographies of every local serviceman that was killed in the Vietnam War, including uniforms and personal items from some of those veterans. The Vietnam War room has an authentic Viet Cong uniform. Many of its volunteers are veterans and retired military personnel who provide an interesting and informative tour of the museum. Many different types of military guns and rifles are on display. There is a Civil War room, a World War I room, and a World War II display.

    In 2009 construction began on a 1,800 square-foot addition to the museum which was made possible by a starting donation from the Bank of America. The addition increased the available area for the museum to display donated artifacts from the Revolutionary War, Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation Southern Watch and Operation Enduring Freedom (Afghanistan) wars.

    The museum is open Wednesday thru Sunday from 1:00PM to 4:00PM, and it is closed only on Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s and Easter. It is located at 1000 S Rodney French Boulevard in New Bedford, Massachusetts. As of November 2025 Matthew E. O'Neil's picture and information are on display in the museum.
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  • To Kill A Terrorist In Self Defense (Cape Cod Military Museum)
    Jul 25 2025
    Cape Cod Military Museum is a museum that collects, preserves and displays military memorabilia, with an emphasis on educating young people and the community through displays, lectures and with oral histories. Its goal is to establish a permanent military library and archive. The museum's focus is military history concerning Southeastern Massachusetts. The museum was founded by Donald Ellis and Joe Yukna. The President of Cape Cod Military Museum is Joe Yukna. Yukna has done lectures for the museum, including lecturing Airmen on Camp Edwards. Its website is capecodmilitarymuseum.org. Yukna publishes a monthly bulletin disseminated via email giving subscribers periodic updates about the museum. It has had a display at Jonathan Bourne Historical Center. There is a long term plan for a permanent location for all of its artifacts, possibly at the Aptucxet Trading Post Museum in Bourne, Massachusetts. Cape Cod Military Museum is on Facebook. O'Neil's confirmed kill of the domestic terrorist is in the records department of the Cape Cod Military Museum. O'Neil is from Massachusetts. He was a member of the Air Force Martial Program on Schriever Air Force Base from 1997 to 2000. The base was renamed Schriever Space Force Base in 2021.
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  • To Kill A Terrorist In Self Defense (Devonshire Square Apartments)
    Jul 22 2025
    The incident between Senior Airman O'Neil and the terrorist took place at a business located off of a side street of North Academy Boulevard in Colorado Springs. O'Neil has stated that he believes that the car he was driving may have been tailed to the business. He drove a 1998 Hyundai Accent GL Sedan. O'Neil's car had 4 doors and was red. He has stated that he had never seen the terrorist before. The entire incident lasted less than 10 minutes. O'Neil lived by himself at Devonshire Square Apartments in Colorado Springs from early November 1999 to July 31, 2000.
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  • To Kill A Terrorist In Self Defense (Khobar Towers bombing)
    Jul 22 2025
    Operation Southern Watch was a military operation conducted by the U.S. Department of Defense from August 1992 to March 2003. United States Central Command's Joint Task Force Southwest Asia had the mission of monitoring and controlling the airspace south of the 32nd Parallell and 33rd Parallell in southern and south-central Iraq during the period following the end of the 1991 Gulf War until the invasion of Iraq in 2003.

    The Khobar Towers bombing was a terrorist attack that occurred on June 25, 1996, in Khobar, Saudi Arabia. A truck bomb detonated near the Khobar Towers housing complex. The bomb killed 19 U.S. service members and injured over 400 more. The complex housed coalition forces, primarily U.S. Air Force personnel involved in Operation Southern Watch. The bomb was detonated adjacent to Building #131, an eight-story structure housing members of the U.S. Air Force's 4404th Wing (Provisional).










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  • To Kill A Terrorist In Self Defense (Colorado Springs, Colorado)
    Jul 22 2025
    As of 2021, there are nearly 45,000 active duty troops in the Colorado Springs area. There are more than 100,000 veterans and thousands of reservists. The military and defense contractors supply more than 40% of the region's economy. Colorado Springs is home to the Peterson Space Force Base, Schriever Space Force Base, Cheyenne Mountain Space Force Station, Fort Carson Army Base, U.S. Air Force Academy, U.S. Space Command, and Space Operations Command. It is the largest contingent of space service military installations which are responsible for intelligence gathering, space operations, and cyber missions. Colorado Springs is 70 miles south of Denver, Colorado.
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  • To Kill A Terrorist In Self Defense (Major General (Ret.) Suzanne Vautrinot)
    Jul 22 2025
    Suzanne M. Vautrinot (1959-) is a retired U.S. Air Force Major General. She was commander of 11th Space Warning Squadron at the time Senior Airman (E-4) Matthew E. O'Neil killed a domestic terrorist. Vautrinot served on active duty United States Air Force from 1982 to 2013. Vautrinot graduated from Edison High School (California) in 1978. She was inducted into the Edison High School Hall of Fame in 2023. From April 29, 2011 to June 2013 she was the Commander of 24th Air Force; and Commander, Air Forces Cyber; and Commander, Air Force Network Operations, Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. General Vautrinot was responsible for the Air Force's component numbered air force providing combatant commanders with trained and ready cyber forces which plan and conduct cyberspace operations. Twenty-fourth Air Force personnel extend, maintain and defend the Air Force portion of the Department of Defense global network. She directed the activities of three operational cyber wings, two headquartered at Lackland Air Force Base, and one at Robins Air Force Base, Georgia, as well as the 624th Operations Center at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. Major General Vautrinot entered the Air Force as a commissioned officer after graduating from the United States Air Force Academy in 1982. Since her retirement from the U.S. Air Force she has served on the board of directors of many companies, including Symantec Corporation, Ecolab Corporation, CSX Corporation, Wells Fargo and Parsons Corporation. She has earned tens of millions of dollars from those corporations. In 2024, The American College Center for Military and Veteran Affairs honored Suzanne Vautrinot with the 2024 Soldier-Citizen Award. As of 2025 she resides in Colorado Springs, Colorado with her husband U.S. Air Force Colonel (RET.) Bill Keller.
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