-Caveat Lector-

>From newsmax.com:

Crash probe eyes flight crew
by Laura Brown and Jules Crittenden
Friday, November 12, 1999

Federal criminal investigators probing the fatal crash of EgyptAir 990 are
focusing on unusual pre-flight behavior by the plane's flight crew and are
actively pursuing leads that suggest the disaster ``was not an accident,''
a source close to the investigation said yesterday.

``The accident side has come up empty-handed so far,'' the source said.
``However, the other side has been pursuing some very interesting leads
that this aircraft was in danger.''

Information unearthed in the wake of the Oct. 31 crash indicated that at
least one member of the flight crew had reason to believe that ``something
was going to happen to the airplane,'' the source added.

National Transportation Safety Board officials leading the investigation
stress that they have not ruled out any possible cause for the crash that
killed 217 people.

``We are looking at the entire crew . . . looking at the passengers . . .
all aspects of what could be involved in this. That includes financial
problems and personal situations of those on board,'' said a law
enforcement source. ``There is not a single thing to indicate a blast or
criminal activity. We are looking at various scenarios involving people in
the cockpit.''

But investigators discovered that one member of the flight crew was so
concerned something might happen to the plane that the crew member left
money and a message for another crew member's family, the first source said.

One of the flight attendants, Hassan Sherif, 26, called his wife Rania from
New York just before he boarded the flight, saying ``there was something
wrong with the plane,'' and that he was ``very worried.''

But it was unclear yesterday which crew members investigators might be
focusing on. There were a total of 18 EgyptAir employees - 14 of whom were
listed as crew members - on board the doomed jet.

In addition to Capt. Ahmed al Habashy, who commanded the flight, there was
another captain and two flight officers listed as crew members. A third
captain and three flight officers were listed as non-fare passengers. It is
unclear who was serving as co-pilot or why an unusually large number of
officers were listed as crew members. Ten flight attendants were also on
board.

The flight data recorder, recovered late Tuesday, gave no indication that
the Boeing 767 had mechanical problems. In fact, the data that was released
Wednesday shows the aircraft was flying normally at a cruising altitude of
33,000 feet until the autopilot was disengaged.

The plane then began a ``controlled descent'' to 19,000 feet at subsonic
speed, NTSB Chairman James Hall said.

Hall's comments about the plane's descent suggested that someone at the
controls deliberately headed the aircraft downward.

Aviation experts say the information could suggest that pilots may have
been responding to an onboard emergency such as rapid decompression by
trying to lose altitude rapidly.

Earlier radar information suggested the aircraft was diving at a rate of
more than 24,000 feet per minute.

No other details from the flight data recorder's readings have been
released, and officals said they were ``still in the process of recovering
data from the remaining five to 10 seconds.''

The NTSB said last week that radar data showed the plane dropped rapidly to
16,700 feet before quickly climbing back up to 24,000 feet, then plummeting
into the ocean. All 217 people on board are presumed dead.

The cockpit voice recorder is considered critical to the investigation,
sources said. Only with the conversation between pilots and other noises
can investigators tell what was going on in the cockpit.

The search for that second ``black box'' was called off yesterday because
of high seas, but salvage workers hope to resume the hunt for the crucial
recorder in the waters off Nantucket today .

``Right now it is a routine flight, they disengaged the autopilot, started
a controlled dive and fell into the ocean,'' said one source. ``We really
hope the voice recorder will cast light on it.''

Officials have refused to speculate about whether the crash may have been
caused by terrorism, mechanical problems or human error.

Sherif was one of two flight attendants on the plane who were best friends
who had just registered their marriages to a pair of sisters in Egypt but
had not yet formally wed. The registering of a marriage in Egypt
customarily takes place in advance of the wedding.

The flight's lead pilot, Ahmed al Habashy, and flight officer, Gameel al
Battouti, were both within months of retirement, news reports indicate.
Capt. Hatem Roushdy, chief pilot of EgyptAir's fleet of 767s, was on board
as a non-fare passenger.

News accounts shortly after the disaster indicate that flight officer Adel
Anwar, who was listed as a crew member, was due to be married in a matter
of days, but suggest those plans were on track and that Anwar and his
fiancee were eagerly preparing for the wedding.

Anwar had reportedly changed shifts with another pilot to get home sooner.
Meanwhile, his bride-to-be had quit her job at a travel agency on the day
of the ill-fated flight in order to become a homemaker, and was reportedly
packing her bags for the honeymoon and decorating the apartment they would
share, according to Anwar's brother Tarek, who spoke to reporters at the
airport in Cairo.

Officials have said that Navy crews have a location they are looking for
the voice recorder but it is under a substantial amount of debris.

Investigators say no decision has been made on when the salvage effort will
stop until after the other black box is found.

>From NitroNews:

CAROLYN CAUSED KENNEDY CRASH
NEWSPAPER SHOCK THEORY REVEALED

JFK Jr.'s wife Carolyn may have caused the fatal Kennedy plane crash, Nitro
News can reveal to America.

The shock story, filed by London's Daily Mail, details the tense hours
leading up to the mysterious tragedy.

That week, Carolyn stormed out of a marriage therapy session, and failed to
return home for two nights. When she finally called John at his Manhattan
headquarters, he slammed his office door  shut, and shouted down the phone:
"That's  it. You've gone too far. Get your stuff, get  out of my apartment,
and get out of my life."

Before leaving work, he left his wife's photograph face down on his desk,
and then checked into a New York hotel.

The reason the couple did not arrive together at the airport was because
they were not on speaking terms. In fact, John had decided not to attend
the family wedding, but was persuaded at the last minute by Lauren
Bessette, Carolyn's sister.

According to friends, the Kennedys had been sleeping in separate beds for
18 months. Carolyn, addicted to anti-depressants and cocaine, had even
hired a private detective to make sure JFK Jr. wasn't sleeping around.

By the time they boarded the Piper Saratoga, piloted by John, they knew
their marriage was over, and Carolyn had already contacted divorce lawyers.

One Kennedy friend revealed: "On coke, [Carolyn] became paranoid, and the
higher she got the weirder she acted. Once when we were alone, John told
me: 'The only thing worse than her being high is her not being high.
Carolyn on a downer is not a pretty picture.'

"[She] would often taunt her husband about the turbulent private lives of
his relatives. Once she told him: 'Dump me and you'll be another Kennedy
joke - one more Kennedy who can't hold a marriage together.'"

The friend also revealed shock details about JFK's plan to become the
Senator for New York in 2000: "His uncle Teddy Kennedy was delighted, and
the wheels were already in motion. Hillary Clinton had been informed and
agreed not to throw her hat in the  ring if John was running. And Guiliani,
also a close friend of John's, apparently felt  the same way."

But it was not to be. Before boarding the Piper Saratoga with John and
Lauren, furious Carolyn telephoned a close pal, and revealed her marriage
was in shreds.

John's friend has a theory about the doomed flight's last minutes:
"Initially I wanted to  believe that John became disorientated in the dark
and the plane simply fell into a spiral.

"But the more I think about it, and the more people I talk to who spoke to
Carolyn in the final hours, I begin to wonder if [she] herself did
something to cause the crash. Did she grab hold of him, scream at him,
distract him or what?

"I have also asked myself about John's state of mind during the flight.

"God knows what hell he was going through."

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