
DEA Remembers Those We Lost During the Oklahoma City Bombing
DEA Headquarters


DEA Agents were there when the rescue workers found the bodies of our fallen five employees, and they were able to carry each one of them out of the rubble. The five DEA family members we lost that day were:


DynCorp Legal Technician Carrie A. Lenz was working under contract to the DEA. At the time of her death, she was 26 years old and pregnant with her unborn son, Michael James Lenz III. Lenz graduated from Moore West High School in Moore, Oklahoma, in 1986 and received a bachelor's degree in marketing from Central State University in Edmond, Oklahoma, in 1990. She was working on a paralegal degree from Rose State College at the time of her death. Carrie had been employed by DynCorp since July 1991.

Carrol Fields was working as an office assistant for DEA. Fields spent her entire 29 years of federal service in the Oklahoma City offices of DEA and its predecessor agency, the Bureau of Narcotics, Department of the Treasury. She was 48 years old. Fields joined the Federal Bureau of Narcotics on August 30, 1965, after graduating from Shawnee High School in Shawnee, Oklahoma, on May 27, 1965. During her long and distinguished career, she received numerous performance awards, including the Administrator's Award for Distinguished Service in 1994.

