--- Begin Message ---
x ** TOP_VIEW ** x
The Bigger Picture

1.9.02
Tampa skyjacker family stunned; say alleged action TOTALLY out of character


That's because young Charles Bishop was either a victimized,
intel-military mind-control subject/agent -- OR was murdered right
before or right after takeoff, with the plane then flown remotely. OR
probably BOTH.

One of these scenarios is certainly how things were set up on September
11 also.

Charles Bishop was definitely NOT some freaky misfit here. This
fifteen-year-old HAD taken two years of flight training, which is a WAY
bigger accomplishment than many his age could boast of. he had NEVER,
EVER expressed anything like "support" or "sympathy' (eh?) for OBL
BEFORE in his life. And yet Feds claim a "note' was "found" -- a DAY
AFTER the crash -- either inn Bishop's pocket or in the plane, depending
on which lie you hear -- stating such crap.

This is starting to remind us of the mysterious indestructible 911
hijacker's passport, and the very NON-mysterious "smoking gun"
low-budget video from the BushMob, featuring a pudgy Caribbean bin-Laden stand-in.

= = = = = = = =
http://www.abcnews.go.com/wire/US/ap20020109_2199.html
WIRE: 01/09/2002 9:01 pm ET

Attorney says 15-year-old pilot's family doesn't know why he would crash
into building

The Associated Press


ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) The family of a 15-year-old who crashed a
small plane into a Tampa skyscraper has no idea why he did it, an
attorney said Wednesday.

"There was no warning. There was no thought he would ever commit
suicide," said Attorney Pamela Campbell, who represents Charles Bishop's
mother and grandmother. "This is an honor student with goals and aspirations."

Police said Bishop was carrying a note expressing support for Osama bin
Laden and the Sept. 11 attacks when he crashed the plane, which he stole
from a flight school before he was to begin a lesson.

Campbell said they were devastated and didn't know what had been
troubling him.

"There are so many speculations going on," the attorney said.

The teen-ager had been interested in aviation since he was 11, and his
mother and grandmother encouraged his goal of becoming a pilot by
providing him with lessons, Campbell said.

The high school freshman's parents divorced when he was a baby, and
Campbell said the boy's father had little if any contact with him.

Campbell said the boy's mother, Julia Bishop, 34, has barely slept or
eaten since the crash.

"Her whole world was Charles," Campbell said. "It's hard for her to have
hope for tomorrow."

Bishop stole the plane Saturday from the flight school at the St.
Petersburg-Clearwater International Airport, then crashed into the 28th
floor of the Bank of America Plaza as a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter
tried to get him to land.

The Federal Aviation Administration wants flight schools and businesses
that serve private planes to increase security.

On Wednesday the agency suggested that separate ignition and door keys
be required for private planes, that planes be secured so they can't be
flown without permission, that student pilots check in before getting
keys, and that employees and pilots be trained to look for suspicious activity.
--- End Message ---

Reply via email to