-Caveat Lector-

Remember:More people have died in Ted Kennedy's car than have died in
United States Commercial Nuclear Power plant operations

 visit my web site at
http://www.info-quest.org  My ICQ# is 79071904
See the Pledge of alleginace to the flag that the 9th circuit court of
appeals doesn't want you to say.
for a precise list of the powers of the Federal Government linkto:
http://www.info-quest.org/Enumerated.html

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 19 Aug 2004 04:25:13 -0700
From: Les Lemke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:;>
Subject: [TheEagle-L] WHY DOES THE FBI KEEP THE PHOTOS HIDDEN FROM THE
    PUBLIC? WHAT DO THE PHOTOS SHOW????

A gas station's security cameras recorded the plane (or whatever it was) that hit the 
pentagon on 9/11, but the FBI took the film...film never to be seen again:

"Velasquez says the gas station's security cameras are close enough to the Pentagon to 
have recorded the moment of impact. 'I've never seen what the pictures looked like,' 
he said. 'The FBI was here within minutes and took the film.' "



Three Months On, Tension Lingers Near the Pentagon
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2001/12/1211_wirepentagon.html

Bill McKelway
Richmond Times-Dispatch
December 11, 2001


The Pentagon, the other "Ground Zero," looks deceptively unblemished.

Construction workers have cauterized and sealed its gaping, wedge-shaped wound. On a 
hillside a half-mile away, saddened mourners and stunned citizens have gathered daily 
for three months. They leave tokens of remembrance.
Thousands upon thousands of the patriotic mementos have been cleared away and stored 
inside the Pentagon itself-as though the five-sided building of concentric rings is 
strong enough to absorb not only the pain of the 190 people who died there, but also 
the grief of survivors.

"Thank you for the tremendous response!!" reads a printed sign at the site. It says 
that "all historical artifacts" have been collected "for their preservation and 
safekeeping."

Three months ago, on September 11 at 9:38 a.m., a Tuesday, Jose Velasquez heard the 
rumble of imminent death overhead. "I knew something was wrong. The planes come more 
from the north and west [to land at Reagan National Airport] not from the south. And 
not so low."

He was talking on the telephone that morning to a friend who was feeding him gauzy 
reports about airplane crashes at the World Trade Center in New York. But Velasquez 
slammed down the receiver and raced outside when he felt the gas station he supervises 
suddenly begin to tremble from a too-close airplane.

"It was like an earthquake," the Costa Rican native said last week. What Velasquez 
felt above him almost within touching distance was American Airlines Flight 77 just 
seconds before impact.

His gas station, open only to Department of Defense personnel, is the last structure 
between the Pentagon and the hillside that, hours later, would become a wailing knoll. 
"By the time I got outside all I could see was a giant cloud of smoke, first white 
then black, coming from the Pentagon," he said. "It was just a terrible, terrible 
thing to be so close to."

Today, Velasquez still trembles when he talks about the incident that has forever 
changed the military, government, and technology polyglot that is Northern Virginia. 
"Even today," said Velasquez, "people who come here tell me they are frightened to 
come to work. You can see it in their eyes."

Velasquez says the gas station's security cameras are close enough to the Pentagon to 
have recorded the moment of impact. "I've never seen what the pictures looked like," 
he said. "The FBI was here within minutes and took the film."

Undercurrent of Tension

Indelibly etched in the memories of millions of Northern Virginia residents are the 
events of September 11 and the sense of transformation they have wrought.

The change goes far deeper than the red, white and blue paraphernalia that adorns so 
many automobiles. The tenor of life has taken on a tuning-fork vibrancy, a tension 
that begs the question of what will befall us next but softened by a sense of 
necessary, resolute camaraderie.

At a convenience store, a reporter asked a Pakistani clerk how he has been treated of 
late. His store is off Columbia Pike, a road bisecting densely packed, multicultural 
Arlington County neighborhoods.

"Oh, fine, fine," says the man, who wears an American flag pin where a name tag should 
be. "I have been here 17 years, you know."

But as he talks, he is edging away from customers toward the refrigerated burritos, 
and his eyes look as if they are searching for a hiding place from overt attention.

At a parking payment booth at Reagan National Airport, attendant Sibghat Khan, a 
native of Pakistan, attributed his seniority and Northern Virginia's melting-pot 
society for keeping his job alive during lean times. But he's been laid off from a 
second airport job shuttling airplanes on the tarmac. Reduced flights have taken a 
toll at the sparkling, refurbished facility.

Are things back to normal? he was asked.

"I wish," he said worriedly.

Steady Mourning

The official mourning process is still an almost daily ritual. From his gas station, 
Velasquez can watch funeral processions enter Arlington National Cemetery. Four 
missing Pentagon personnel, two of them Northern Virginians, still have not been 
positively identified and accounted for.

Monday, retired Army Lt. Col. Gary F. Smith, 55, was laid to rest at Arlington. He 
will be deservingly remembered as a dedicated hero, his family and friends say.

Thirty years ago, in April 1971, he charged back into a burning chopper downed near Ky 
Tra in Vietnam to rescue fellow soldiers. On September 11, Smith, head of the Army's 
retirement program, was called to a meeting at the Pentagon. He never had a chance to 
duplicate the act of courage that won him the Soldier's Medal for heroism in Vietnam.

"He was at the point of impact," explained Smith's widow, Ann. He leaves four 
daughters and scores more adopted loved ones whom he coached in a Mount Vernon area 
recreational soccer league.

"This is a man who was totally dedicated to the military, to its retirees and widows, 
and to his community," said James Harrison, a casualty assistance officer who was 
Smith's longtime friend. Almost 30 miles from the Pentagon, at Rockledge Elementary 
School in Prince William County, the shock of September 11 has "pretty much worn off," 
principal Sandra Carter said.

It has been a difficult process for some families. "We had one family from the Midwest 
who had just moved here and they said they weren't going to put up with it all. They 
left to go back home," she said.

"We got our teachers together and made sure we were putting out the same message," she 
said, "to make sure the kids knew they could talk to us about it." Some children 
thought there were hundreds of planes and hundreds of attacks: Each television replay 
registered as a new event.

And there was this: "One father came to the school office that morning who worked at 
the Pentagon. He was so worried for his child," Carter said. Struggling to keep his 
composure, the dad dropped his gaze toward the floor. "My goodness. I've forgotten to 
wear my shoes," he blurted.

Tableau of Lights

John Doyle works a block from the White House. "We heard the impact of the plane 
hitting the Pentagon," he said. "It was that loud."

He scrambled back to his Arlington home, a place now that has become an odd refuge of 
sorts for thousands of people. They drive and stroll by at night, stunned by Doyle's 
Christmas light tableau, an outline of the World Trade Center and the New York skyline 
beside an outline of Washington, including the Pentagon.

"There's a hole in the Pentagon and it has red, white, and blue lights streaming from 
it," Doyle said. A neighbor of Arabian descent helped erect a dove of peace that 
oversees the display. "He joked with me about the crescent moon I put up being in his 
honor," said Doyle.

The idea for the cityscape came to Doyle in the days after the attack, when neighbors 
wondered how his ingenuity for lighting design would address the uncertainty of the 
times. He'd erected a champagne flute for the millennium; for 2001, a space odyssey.

"What we've done seems to touch something in people," he said. "They leave cookies and 
letters. One lady from New York broke into tears. It's hard to explain."

In the past months, Doyle said he senses that people have become much more aware of 
one another. "You see people talking a lot more to each other-in stores, on the 
streets. There's a kindness that you didn't see so much of before. There's a huge 
population of people and a lot of them aren't from this area. They think of home as 
somewhere else.

"Now there's more of a feeling that we're all in this together and it's important to 
make the best of what we have here."

Anxiety and Sharing

Jabbing through his answering machine messages the morning of September 11, The Rev. 
John D. Hortum could feel the anxiety building among his communicants. The World Trade 
Center disaster was underway.

One message, from a woman clearly in distress and terribly frightened, stuck out. "It 
took me a few seconds before I realized it was from my wife," he said.

Leslie Hortum was trapped in her car beside the Pentagon. Flight 77 had just flown 
directly overhead, clipping light poles as it went. A piece of wreckage was lodged 
against the car.

"It was just a terrible feeling," said Hortum, rector at the Church of Saint Clement, 
an Episcopalian church on the southern edge of Arlington County.

"It was another 20 or 30 minutes before there was anything on the television that 
anything had even happened in Washington. This was the first word I got," he said.

Hortum rushed to the church school, filled with kids. "We're under attack, under 
attack," he whispered to Christine Yeannakis, the school director.

"I figured he was telling me the vestry was upset about something. We had no idea," 
Yeannakis recalled.

Then a supersonic boom from somewhere in the sky hushed the playground and Yeannakis 
hauled the kids into the basement.

Over the next few hours, parents straggled in to retrieve their kids. "One lady walked 
all the way from the Pentagon in her high heels," Yeannakis said.

A low-flying plane or helicopter still sets nerves on edge, Hortum said. But the 
congregation seems to be settling in and many people have volunteered with the Red 
Cross.

"I think everybody is still sort of feeling that they don't really know how they're 
feeling," said Hortum. "Things have changed so much. There's an anger that people feel 
for having all this beset them, for having to feel this anxiety. But there's a very 
real sense that we need to be aware of people beyond ourselves."

Hortum said he and his wife have always been cognizant of the important moments 
they've shared over the years. "We've never been the type of people to not be aware of 
special times between us," he said. "But since September 11, I think we've made it a 
point to express those moments in words, to not just assume we are sharing something 
important."

Copyright 2001 Richmond Times-Dispatch

------------------
**COPYRIGHT NOTICE**
In accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107,
any copyrighted work in this message is distributed under fair use without
profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving
the included information for nonprofit research and educational purposes only.
[Ref. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml ]




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~-->
$9.95 domain names from Yahoo!. Register anything.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/J8kdrA/y20IAA/yQLSAA/zgSolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~->

"Please keep one liners to a minimum!"
Visit our new improved site at:
http://www.eaglehost.com/
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/theeagle-l/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to