On Aug 27, 12:17 pm, Cardinal Chunder
wrote:
> Hobo wrote:
> This must be news to the passengers who presumably booked, paid for,
> checked in and boarded a flight which kooks will no doubt claim didn't
> exist at all.
Well we know these un-dead hijackers at least were not on the non-
existant flights:
http://thunderbay.indymedia.org/uploads/2002/12/hijackers-still-alive.jpg
Resurrected Hijackers Suicide Hijackers Identified by the FBI Proclaim
Their Innocence
Of the 19 identities assigned by the FBI to the alleged suicide
hijackers of the four commandeered jetliners, at least six have been
disputed. The FBI's September 14, 2001 press release identifying the
suspects included names and, in some cases, other personal details.
The FBI's September 27, 2001 press release included color photographs
for each of the 19 suspects.
A handful of reports, most from one to two weeks after the attack,
identified at least six men living in the middle east whose names --
and in some cases other identifying details -- matched those on the
FBI's list.
# 1 Abdulaziz Alomari was identified by the FBI as the hijacker who
accompanied Mohamed Atta from the connecting flight from Portland and
helped him hijack and pilot Flight 11 into the North Tower. Abdulaziz
told the London-based Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper: "The name [listed by
the FBI] is my name and the birth date is the same as mine, but I am
not the one who bombed the World Trade Center in New York." 3 Saudi
Embassy officials in Washington defended the innocence of Alomari,
saying that his passport was stolen in 1996 and that he had reported
the theft to the police.
# 2 Saeed Alghamdi, a Saudi Airlines pilot, was identified by the FBI
of being a hijacker of Flight 93, which crashed in Pennsylvania.
Alghamdi was "shocked and furious" to learn this three days after the
attack, noting that his name, place of residence, date of birth, and
occupation matched those described by the FBI. "You cannot imagine
what it is like to be described as a terrorist - and a dead man - when
you are innocent and alive," said Alghamdi, who considered legal
action against the FBI.
# 3 Al-Hamzi was identified by the FBI as one of the hijackers of
Flight 77, thought to have crashed into the Pentagon. Al-Hamzi said:
"I have never been to the United States and have not been out of Saudi
Arabia in the past two years."
# 4 Al-Nami was identified by the FBI as one of the hijackers of
Flight 93. Al-Nami said: "I'm still alive, as you can see. I was
shocked to see my name mentioned by the American Justice Department. I
had never even heard of Pennsylvania where the plane I was supposed to
have hijacked."
# 4 Waleed Alshehri, a Saudi Arabian pilot, was identified by the FBI
as one of the hijackers of Flight 11. Alshehri turned up in Morocco
after the attack where he contacted both the Saudi and American
authorities to tell them he was not involved in the attack.
# 5 Abdulrahman al-Omari, a Saudi Airlines pilot, was identified by
the FBI as one of the hijackers of Flight 11. After learning this, he
visited the US consulate in Jeddah to demand an explanation.
# 6 Ameer and Adnan Bukhari were named by CNN as suspected hijackers
of Flight 175, the jetliner which crashed into the South Tower, in an
article dated 9/13/01. In a correction, CNN stated that Ameer Bukhari
died in a small plane crash in Florida, and that Adnan was still alive
in Florida, having passed a polygraph test to confirm his innocence
Hijackers alive http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7ixuf236Dk
Read about the un-dead hijackers http://911review.org/Wiki/HijackersAliveAndWell.shtml
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