Patrick “Pat” Ryan, former U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Oklahoma during the
Clinton Administration and former NAFUSA member, passed away unexpectedly on
September 18, 2025, while vacationing with family and friends in Aruba. He was 79.
Pat is remembered as the U.S. Attorney during the Oklahoma City bombing prosecutions
and for his work with both the prosecutors in those cases and with the survivors and
families of the victims of that deadly bombing. He was also well known for wearing his
signature cowboy hat during the months he spent in Denver attending the trials of Timothy
McVeigh and co-conspirator Terry Nichols, who were convicted for their roles in the
bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19,1995. Pat, who was
sworn in as U.S. Attorney in June 2025, shortly after the bombing, said he wore his white
cowboy hat to remind the people back home in Oklahoma that, “Ok, we’ve got a guy there
who’s from Oklahoma, who is one of us, who is fighting for us.” Pat served as U.S. Attorney
until October 1999.
Pat received his J.D. from the University of Oklahoma in 1969 and then served four years in
the United States Air Force, including two years as the Chief Military Justice for Southeast
Asia from 1972 to 1974. At the time of his death, he was a Director of the law firm Ryan
Whaley Attorneys in Oklahoma City.
A flag is being flown over the Department of Justice in his honor. His cowboy hat is on
display at the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum.

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