-Caveat Lector-

  Flight school says FBI trailed suspect prior to hijackings

  By Kevin Cullen and Ralph Ranalli, Globe Staff, 9/18/2001

  FBI Director Robert Mueller continued to insist yesterday that federal
authorities had no
  reason to suspect Islamic extremists were training at US flight schools
before last week's
  suicide hijackings, even as more evidence surfaced raising questions
about those
  assertions.

  The vice president of a flight school in Oklahoma told The Boston Globe
yesterday that three
  weeks before Tuesday's suicide hijackings, FBI agents interviewed him
about a suspected
  terrorist who had trained at the school.

  Dale Davis, the vice president of Airman Flight School in Norman,
Okla., said FBI agents
  showed up at the facility asking questions about Zacarias Moussaoui,
who was arrested in
  Minnesota last month after he tried to get flight simulator lessons on
flying a
  commercial-size jet.

  In addition, Davis said that FBI agents visited his flight school two
years ago to ask questions
  about a former student who had been identified by federal authorities
as an associate of
  Osama bin Laden, the Saudi-born dissident who is the prime suspect in
organizing last
  week's hijackings.

  Davis also said that two of the men who hijacked two flights out of
Boston's Logan Airport
  last week, including Mohamed Atta, who investigators believe was the
ringleader of the
  Boston hijackings, had visited the Norman flight school last year
before deciding to attend
  one in Florida.

  At a Washington briefing yesterday, Mueller repeated his assertion,
first made Friday, that
  federal authorities had no inkling that terrorists were using US flight
schools to acquire the
  training they needed to take the controls of commercial airliners as
they did on Tuesday.

  ''There were no warning signs that I'm aware of that would indicate
this type of operation in
  the country,'' he said.

  But the Globe reported Saturday that federal authorities have known for
at least three years
  that two associates of bin Laden had trained in the United States as
airline pilots.

  The link between the Al-Qaeda terror group, allegedly led by bin Laden,
and US flight schools
  emerged earlier this year at the trial of four men charged with the
1998 bombing of the
  American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. At that trial, during which
FBI agents were
  called as witnesses, an associate of bin Laden testified that he went
to a flight school in
  Texas.

  Prosecutors introduced evidence that a second associate of bin Laden,
Ihab Ali Nawawi, had
  trained at Airman Flight School, as did Moussaoui, who is now being
held in New York for
  questioning on suspicion that he is an associate of the hijackers.

  In a telephone interview, Davis confirmed that the FBI had suspicions
about Moussaoui at
  least three weeks before last week's disaster.

  The questions FBI agents posed to him appeared to be about whether
Moussaoui could
  have been a terrorist, Davis said, including whether the alleged
Algerian militant had ever
  made any ''extreme comments'' about the United States.

  When asked why they were inquiring about Moussaoui, Davis said, the
agents replied that
  ''he had done something very bad.''

  Davis said FBI agents had visited his school just two years earlier to
inquire about Ihab Ali
  Nawawi, who took flight training there in 1993 and was later charged in
connection with the
  1998 US Embassy bombings in Africa, which were blamed on bin Laden's
group.

  Davis also confirmed that Atta and another suspected hijacker, Marwan
al-Shehhi, visited
  Airman Flight School, staying overnight at the school's dormitory in
the nearby Sooner Inn,
  before deciding to train at another facility.

  ''They did a school visit in July of 2000 but went elsewhere for
whatever reason,'' Davis said.

  The Los Angeles Times yesterday quoted an unidentified federal official
saying that
  Moussaoui asked only for lessons on ''steering, not landing'' and
cheered when he watched
  a news account of the suicide hijackings at the jail in Minnesota where
he has been held
  since last month.

  Two other suspects being held for questioning in New York, Aybu Ali
Khan and Mohammed
  Jaweed Azmath, who had been living in New Jersey, were taken into
custody on a train in
  Fort Worth, Texas, and arrested after police found they were carrying
box cutters similar to
  those used by some of the hijackers. Investigators believe the
hijackers in Tuesday's attack
  used box cutters because the tool's plastic handle would not set off
metal detectors at
  airport security checkpoints.

  While authorities have not identified a fourth suspect being
interrogated in New York, CNN
  yesterday said that the man is a doctor from San Antonio, and that
Azmath and Khan may
  have been heading to his home there to hide. CNN said the man attended
the same flight
  school in Arizona as one of the hijackers of American Airlines Flight
77, which crashed into
  the Pentagon.

  A neighbor told The New York Times that one of the four men who lived
in the apartment that
  Khan and Azmath listed as their home worked for the Saudi consulate in
New York. That
  represents another lead for investigators, who already believe that the
hijackers exploited
  Saudi connections to gain access to the United States and go about
their business without
  attracting undue law enforcement attention.

  The Globe reported Friday that some of the hijackers had used
affiliations with Saudi Arabia,
  the United States' staunchest Arab ally, to gain access to the United
States and flight
  schools with less scrutiny from US authorities.

  Most of the terrorists who commandeered the four planes last week
trained at flight schools
  in Florida, gaining the aeronautics training they later used to kill
thousands. According to
  flight instructors, foreign students with Saudi backing receive only
cursory inspection by the
  US State Department before they are granted visas to come here.

  Investigators in Boston, meanwhile, have identified a third car
believed to have been used by
  the 10 men who hijacked two planes out of Logan International Airport.
The car was found
  parked at Logan Airport and was rented from a local Dollar Rent a Car
franchise.

  Previously, investigators had identified two cars rented from the
Boston office of Alamo Rent
  a Car. One of the cars was found in a Logan parking lot, while the
other had been left in
  Portland, Maine, by two suspected terrorists before they boarded a
flight they allegedly used
  to connect with the doomed American Airlines Flight 11. Investigators
believe the car found
  in Portland was used by Atta and Abdulaziz Alomari, who sat next to
Atta in the business
  class section of Flight 11.

  An FBI report first obtained by Der Spiegel shows that when agents went
through one of
  Atta's bags, which did not make the transfer from a connecting flight
from Portland, Maine,
  they found airline uniforms.

  Investigators are trying to determine if Atta or any of his associates
used the uniforms to gain
  access to areas of Logan Airport that would normally be secure, sources
said. They are also
  trying to determine if the uniforms were connected to a break-in last
April at the Hotel
  Nazionale in central Rome, in which two American Airlines pilots said
they were robbed of
  their uniforms, badges, and airport access badges.

  Investigators say they are still examining whether the hijackers had
inside help among
  ground staff at Logan Airport, even though it appears they simply
carried on the box-cutters
  and other knifelike objects they apparently used to take control of the
planes.

  FBI agents continue to show an interest in the Flagship Wharf
condominium complex, where
  bin Laden's brother owns six luxury units. Some members of the bin
Laden family live in the
  building, and Boston Police have maintained a full-time guard detail
there since Wednesday.

  Bin Laden is estranged from his family, which has denounced his
extremist views, but police
  are worried that the family or its property could face the sort of
vigilante violence that has
  been visited on many Muslims and their businesses across the United
States since the
  suicide hijackings.

  Sharon Grancey, the head of the Flagship Wharf condo association,
declined to comment.
  But a resident said the FBI has visited the complex several times since
last Tuesday.

  ''They've been in and out of the building,'' said the resident, who
spoke on condition of
  anonymity.

  CBS News reported that a federal grand jury has been empaneled in New
York to investigate
  the suicide hijackings. The grand jury will sit in suburban White
Plains because the federal
  court in Lower Manhattan is still closed because of the attack.

  Attorney General John Ashcroft said yesterday that associates of the
hijackers may still be in
  the United States.

  Ashcroft's warning in part explained why it took several days for most
airports, and even
  longer for Boston's Logan Airport, to open last week after Tuesday's
suicide hijackings.

  Ashcroft made his remarks during a briefing in Washington as he sought
congressional
  support for a package of new antiterrorism legislation, and as FBI
agents interrogated the
  four men in custody in New York.

  Also yesterday, Mueller acknowledged that the investigation is being
hampered by a lack of
  investigators who speak Arabic.

  ''We have had a language shortage for a period of time,'' he said. ''I
don't think it would be
  just the FBI. I think it's a number of federal agencies.''

  The FBI director refused to say how many people have been arrested in
the probe.

  ''There are a number of material witness warrants that have been
issued. They are sealed in
  most cases, and I cannot give you direct numbers,'' Mueller said.

  But he spoke of the enormous scope of the probe, saying that the FBI
has had 47,000 tips
  received over the Internet, while a telephone hotline has produced
7,800 tips. He said that
  the FBI's field offices have generated an additional 26,000 leads.

  Mueller said there were 500 investigators at FBI headquarters in
Washington, representing
  32 federal, state, and local agencies, running down all of the tips and
leads.

  Mueller said that 49 people who have been stopped and questioned in the
course of the
  investigation have been detained by the Immigration and Naturalization
Service.

  Globe Staff writers Andrea Estes and Shelley Murphy contributed to this
report.

  This story ran on page A1 of the Boston Globe on 9/18/2001.

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