New
York Firefighters’ Final Words Fuel Burning Questions About
9-11
Evidence that could
debunk the official explanation for the collapse of the World Trade
Center is being kept secret by the Department of Justice on a flimsy
pretext.
Exclusive to American Free
Press
By Christopher Bollyn
The Department of Justice has ordered secrecy
measures to keep the contents of a “lost tape” of firefighters’
voices at the World Trade Center from being made public. The
78-minute audiotape evidently debunks the accepted explanation that
intense jet fuel fires melted the towers’ steel beams and caused the
collapses.
The New York Times recently revealed
the existence of the tape of radio transmissions between
firefighters of the New York Fire Department (NYFD), which proves
that “at least two men” had reached the 78th floor Sky Lobby of the
South Tower. The firefighters had reported about the fires and
casualties they encountered and had begun evacuating the
survivors.
The article said that firefighters
“reached the crash zone on the 78th floor, where they went to the
aid of grievously injured people trapped in a sprawl of
destruction.”
While the article raises as many
questions as it answers, it points to a reason for the secrecy:
“Once they got there,” the article says, “they had a coherent plan
for putting out the fires they could see and helping victims who
survived.”
The report names two of the
firefighters who were at the crash site: Battalion Chief Orio J.
Palmer, who was organizing the evacuation of injured people, and
Fire Marshal Ronald P. Bucca. Both were among the 343 firefighters
who perished.
The voices of the firefighters “showed
no panic, no sense that events were racing beyond their control,”
the Times wrote. “At that point, the building would be standing for
just a few more minutes, as the fire was weakening the structure on
the floors above him. Even so, Chief Palmer could see only two
pockets of fire, and called for a pair of engine companies to fight
them.”
The fact that veteran firefighters had
“a coherent plan for putting out” the “two pockets of fire”
indicates they judged the blazes to be manageable. These reports
from the scene of the crash provide crucial evidence debunking the
government’s claim that a raging steel-melting inferno led to the
tower’s collapse.
As the FEMA “Building Performance
Assessment” report says, “Temperatures may have been as high as
900-1,100 degrees Celsius (1,700-2,000 Fahrenheit) in some
areas.”
“If FEMA’s temperature estimates are
correct, the interiors of the towers were furnaces capable of
casting aluminum and glazing pottery,” Eric Hufschmid, author of the
book Time for Painful Questions writes. Yet the voices on the tape
prove that several firefighters were able to work “without fear” for
an extended period at the point of the crash, and that the fires
they encountered there were neither intense nor
large.
The South Tower disintegrated in less
than an hour after being hit by a plane, which impacted between its
78th and 84th floors. “Fire has never caused a steel building to
collapse,” Hufschmid writes. “So how did a 56-minute fire bring down
a steel building as strong as the South Tower?”
Hufschmid’s forthcoming book presents
compelling evidence that explosives caused the towers to
collapse.
Pointing to the Meridian Plaza fire in
Philadelphia in 1991, Hufschmid writes, “The Meridian Plaza fire was
extreme, but it did not cause the building to collapse. The fire in
the South Tower seems insignificant by comparison to both the
Meridian Plaza fire and the fire in the North Tower. How could the
tiny fire in the South Tower cause the entire structure to shatter
into dust after 56 minutes while much more extreme fires did not
cause the Meridian Plaza building to even crack into two
pieces?”
The Port Authority of New York and New
Jersey (PA), the bi-state authority and owner of the World Trade
Center, retrieved the “lost tape.” A spokesman for the authority,
Greg Trevor, told AFP that the tape was found in PA police offices
at 5 WTC, “two or three weeks” after 9-11. The PA police monitored
radio transmissions from the WTC.
Because of an unexplained delay in
producing the tape, it was believed “for months” that firefighters
had gone no higher than about the 50th floor in each tower. The
delay, Trevor said, was due to the time required to transfer the
voice data to “encrypted CDs.”
In January or February, the PA offered
a copy of the tape to NYFD officials, who reportedly declined the
offer because they did not want to sign the confidentiality
agreement as demanded by the PA. The Independent of Britain added
that the PA “held back from sharing it with police and only
relinquished it on condition that a confidentiality agreement was
signed.”
“That’s not correct,” Trevor told AFP
regarding the allegation that the PA had withheld the tape from the
police. The PA had only handled the tape “under the instruction of
the U.S. attorney’s office,” he said.
Spokesman Bernard Gifford said NYPD
had not pursued a criminal investigation of 9-11, having “turned it
over” to the FBI.
Gifford wouldn’t say when this
occurred, although Joe Valiquette of the New York office of the FBI
told AFP that the federal bureau had run the investigation “from the
moment it happened.”
On Aug. 2 the relatives of the 16
firefighters whose voices were identified on the tape were allowed
to hear their last words in a New York City hotel. The families were
first required to sign a statement prepared by lawyers that they
would not disclose what was said on the tape.
Despite the fact that the contents of
the tape are being kept secret, the Times article says, “Only now,
nearly a year after the attacks, are the efforts of Chief Palmer,
Mr. Bucca and others becoming public. City fire officials simply
delayed listening to a 78-minute tape that is the only known
recording of firefighters inside the towers.”
While Fire Commissioner Nicholas
Scoppetta said he had not known the tape existed until “very
recently,” both the Times and CNN err in claiming that the NYFD is
the agency behind the extreme secrecy.
“The Fire Department has forbidden
anyone to discuss the contents publicly on the ground that the tape
might be evidence in the trial of Zacarias Moussaoui, the man
accused of plotting with the hijackers,” the Times
said.
When AFP asked the NYFD why the only
conversations between firefighters engaged at the scene of the crash
had to be kept secret because of Moussaoui, who was in prison in
Minnesota at the time, the spokesman replied, “Take it up with the
Department of Justice.”
Asked about the numerous reports by
eyewitnesses, including firefighters, of explosions inside the
towers before they collapsed, Mike Logrin, spokesman for the NYFD,
said, “We’re pretty sure there weren’t bombs in the building.”
On Sept. 11 the British Broadcasting
Corp. (BBC) interviewed one of its New York-based reporters, Steve
Evans, who was in the second tower when it was hit.
“I was at the base of the second
tower, the second tower that was hit,” Evans said. “There was an
explosion—I didn’t think it was an explosion—but the base of the
building shook. I felt it shake . . . then when we were outside, the
second explosion happened and then there was a series of explosions.
. . . We can only wonder at the kind of damage—the kind of human
damage—which was caused by those explosions—those series of
explosions,” he said.
Evans is a professional journalist and
although his observations of explosions in the second tower should
be taken into account, they are not. Numerous eyewitnesses reported
also seeing or hearing explosions.
Valiquette of the FBI told AFP that he
had not “heard anything” about reports of explosions in the building
and that he had “never heard any discussion of it” in the FBI’s New
York office.