[iwar] [fc:Hijackers.caught.on.airport.tape]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-09-20 20:17:46


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From: Fred Cohen <fc@all.net>
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Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 20:17:46 -0700 (PDT)
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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Hijackers.caught.on.airport.tape]
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Hijackers caught on airport tape

by Hugh Muir

They hurried through the departure lounge ...  anxious passengers
slightly late for a flight.  But the two men pictured by security
cameras were on their way to commit the world's worst terrorist outrage. 

 US government officials today released a photograph of Mohammed Atta
and a man they think is Abdulaziz Alomari, key members of the terrorist
team who flew American Airlines Flight 11 into the north tower of the
World Trade Center, killing 81 passengers and crew. 

They were filmed as they passed through Portland Airport on their way to
Boston, where they hijacked the flight to Los Angeles.  Atta, 33, who
had received pilot's training, is believed to have flown the doomed
airliner.  The security picture appears to end the debate about whether
Atta really was one of the hijackers.  Yesterday his father claimed he
had spoken to him since the disaster. 

In a second breakthrough, officials now say they are succeeding in
following the money trail used by the hijackers to fund their operation. 
It is now believed that all 19 hijack suspects shared a single contact
within the US who provided them with cash. 

The money was used to pay for flight lessons, rent and even withdrawals
at automatic cashpoints.  Two of the hijackers, Hani Hanjour and Majed
Moqed, were pictured together withdrawing money from a cash machine in
Florida.  The FBI and the Federal Reserve have sent letters to banks
throughout the country, asking for any records of financial transactions
involving the 19 suspects, including credit card receipts. 

Investigators hope recent changes in international banking agreements
will allow them to follow the money back to sources outside the US,
particularly the prime suspect Osama bin Laden.  Analysts are also
checking reports of unusual trading in the US stock options market
before the attack.  An extraordinary number of trades were betting that
American Airlines stock price would fall.  A similar inquiry has been
launched in Britain. 

But the investigation into the terrorists is being hampered by questions
of identity.  It appears that five of the hijackers were using stolen
identities.  Many of them seem to have adopted the personas of real-life
commercial and military pilots. 

In Saudi Arabia, five of the alleged hijackers have emerged, alive and
astonished to see their names and photographs appearing on satellite
television.  Yesterday, the Londonbased Asharq al-Awsat newspaper said
it had interviewed Mr Alomari in Riyadh, and that he had left the US in
April 2000.  It said the American-educated engineer had reported to
police that his passport was stolen when his flat in Denver was burgled
in 1995. 

Ahmed al-Shehri, a Saudi diplomat told another newspaper that details of
another hijacker matched his son Waleed, who now lives in Morocco. 

The pilot with Saudi Arabian Airlines graduated four years ago from
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida.  Another Saudi pilot,
Said Hussein al-Ghamdi, whose picture was released by the US authorities
may in fact be living in Tunis and may have been falsely accused.  While
the American authorities remain convinced that Bin Laden masterminded
the attacks, they are also hinting that a number of states may have
helped.  The first criminal charges arising from the attacks have been
filed against three Detroit men - Karim Koubriti, 23, Ahmed Hannan, 33,
and Farouk Ali-Haimoud, 21, who are accused of fraud and misuse of
visas, passports and other immigration documents. 

Further details are also emerging about what happened on the hijacked
planes themselves.  Federal investigators believe that some of the
pilots and co-pilots of the aircraft were murdered before the planes
crashed. 

FBI technicians have recovered fragments of conversations from within
one of the doomed cockpits; much of it is described however as "a
jumbled mixture of grunts and screams". 

They have confirmed that the bodies of two stewardesses from United
Flight 93, which crashed in Pennsylvania, were found with their hands
bound. 

The FBI has launched a nationwide manhunt for 190 people it believes may
have information relating to the terrorist attacks.  As many as 37 on
the bureau's "watch list" are believed to have had flight training. 
Some had booked reservations on flights scheduled to take place after
last week's attacks, including flights coming out of Boston and San
Antonio this weekend.  FBI officials are seeking to play down fears of a
second wave of attacks on Saturday.  Spokeswoman Mindy Tucker said there
is "no credible evidence", although Americans have been warned to be
vigilant. 

There is, however, new evidence of the extent to which Bin Laden has
been seeking to arm himself.  According to the Russian news agency
Itar-Tass, the Russian secret services prevented a deal to buy weapons
grade uranium by a Pakistani company controlled by Bin Laden. 


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