By JOHN SOLOMON
Associated Press Writer |
WASHINGTON – U.S. investigators pressed Thursday to identify terrorist
collaborators who may still be in a position to strike more Americans, and
agents located critical "black boxes" from two of Tuesday's hijacked planes.
Four U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, told The Associated
Press that authorities are investigating the possibility that some terrorists
involved with Tuesday's plots are still at large.
The FBI searched the country and abroad for possible suspects who had recent
flight training, ties to the hijackers or their backers, or attempted to enter
the United States recently, said these officials, who spoke only on condition of
anonymity.
Agents have been examining manifests of flights that were not hijacked on
Tuesday, to find matches with people who fit this profile, the officials said.
The concerns are also being driven by fresh intelligence suggesting a
continuing threat, the officials added.
The information "suggests we haven't seen the end of this current threat,"
one U.S. official said. He cited concerns terrorists may strike in a different
manner now that airport security has been beefed up.
Signs of fear were everywhere. The U.S. Capitol was evacuated for a
suspicious package and New York's airports were temporarily closed to incoming
flights. One man was arrested in New York with a fake pilot's identification. A
security ring around the White House was widened.
A number of people questioned in connection with the plot have been arrested
for immigration violations and were in the custody of the Immigration and
Naturalization Service, a Justice Department official said.
The department had previously said people were detained, including at least a
half dozen in Massachusetts and Florida, because of immigration problems. But it
wasn't until late Thursday that officials revealed that those people had been
arrested.
The INS has 48 hours after arrest to charge someone violating immigration
rules. Some of those detained could be charged Friday, said the official,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
No one has yet been charged in Tuesday's attacks.
In Minnesota, the possibility emerged that the FBI knew before Tuesday's
attack of at least one Arab man seeking the type of flight training the
hijackers received.
U.S. officials confirmed that a few weeks ago the FBI detained an Arab man in
Minnesota when he tried to seek flight simulator training for a large jetliner.
Those who hijacked the four airliners received similar training.
Officials said the FBI had no reason to charge him at the time and instead
began deportation proceedings. Those proceedings were ongoing when the attacks
took place Tuesday, and he was re-detained. He was not cooperating with the FBI.
Investigators recovered a black box flight recorder from the hijacked plane
that went down in Pennsylvania, and picked up a signal from the recorder in the
jet that slammed into the Pentagon.
The recorders could contain information about the last minutes of the
hijacked commercial jetliners.
FBI Special Agent Bill Crowley said the recorder in Pennsylvania was found at
about 4:20 p.m. EDT in the 8-foot crater caused by the crash. Crowley said the
recorder would be analyzed by the National Transportation Safety Board.
"We're hoping it will have some information pertinent to what happened on the
plane," Crowley said. "This development is going to help a lot."
The FBI has a transcript of communications between the pilots and air traffic
controllers for a portion of the flight that crashed in Pennsylvania, but has
not yet released it, officials said.
Overseas, German authorities said three of the terrorists who died in the
suicide attacks were part of a group of Islamic extremists in Hamburg who have
been planning attacks on the United States.
Hamburg investigators said two of the terrorists were Mohamed Atta, 33, and
Marwan Alshehhi, 23, whose training at a Florida flight school has been the
focus of intense FBI interest this week. The German investigators said the two
were from the United Arab Emirates.
Acting on a tip from the FBI, police in Hamburg detained one man and were
seeking another. The police did not say how the detainee might have been linked
to the attacks.
An FBI official was headed for the Azores Islands to interview two Iranians
detained a week ago after they tried to travel to Canada with fake passports,
authorities said. Mexican Defense Secretary Gen. Rafael Macedo said officials
are searching the country for at least nine people who may have helped plan the
attacks.
Attorney General John Ashcroft said a total of 18 hijackers took over the
four planes. The Justice Department had planned to release the hijackers' names
and photos, but pulled back late Thursday.
All were ticketed passengers but some may have used aliases, officials said.
Elsewhere, authorities were looking for a Muslim cleric who previously was
questioned by prosecutors in the 1990s embassy bombings case linked to bin
Laden.
The cleric, Moataz Al-Hallak, left the Northeast on Monday, the day before
the attacks, and traveled to Texas, according to authorities and his lawyer.
Al-Hallak's lawyer, Stanley Cohen, said FBI agents want to question his
client about whether he told people about the attacks before they occurred.
"I asked Moataz about it, and he was shocked and just laughed. It's
preposterous," Cohen said.
Al-Hallak appeared before a federal grand jury in New York in the case of the
U.S. Embassy bombings in Africa linked to bin Laden. He was never charged with
wrongdoing.
A number of people that could be involved in the plot were detained overnight
for having false identification, Justice Department spokeswoman Mindy Tucker
said.
One focus of the FBI is on flight schools in Florida and Minnesota that
trained some of the men apparently involved in the hijackings. The owner of a
Minnesota flight school said FBI agents had contacted him asking about specific
people.
In Florida on Thursday, FBI agents were interviewing three Saudi Arabian
flight engineers who are taking classes at Flightsafety International's school
in Vero Beach, company spokesman Roger Ritchie said. He declined to name the
engineers.
The school does not have simulators for Boeing 767 and 757 aircraft such as
the ones involved in Tuesday's attacks, Ritchie said.
Thomas Quinn, a New York-based spokesman for Saudi Arabian Airlines, said
many of the airline's pilots came to the United States for flight training.
The FBI questioned a Fort Smith, Ark., couple after telling police agencies
across the state Wednesday that the woman was "possibly related to the New York
City terrorist attack," state police spokeswoman Kim Fontaine said. The husband
was being held Thursday for federal immigration officials and the woman was
taken away by agents and her whereabouts were not released, the Southwest Times
Record newspaper at Fort Smith reported.
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Associated Press writer Karen Gullo contributed to this report.
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