Untitled Document
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NEAR SHANKSVILLE: This photo
taken Sept. 12, 2001, shows the dust of debris still in the air near the
crash site of United Airlines Flight 93. Questions still remain as to
the actual cause of the crash.. |
INDIAN LAKE, Pennsylvania—Eyewitness testimonies have generally been excluded
from the official version of 9-11. In the Shanksville area, where many residents
believe Flight 93 was shot down, there are scores of eyewitnesses whose testimonies
contradict the government’s claim that courageous passengers fought hijackers,
forcing the jetliner to crash rather than be flown into a building.
Some local residents here are deeply offended by the official explanation of
what supposedly happened to United Airlines Flight 93, calling it a patriotic
pack of lies.
Fearful of retribution from federal agents, many eyewitnesses who spoke with
American Free Press asked that their names not be published.
While differing on some details of the plane said to be Flight 93, which passed
over Lambertsville, eyewitnesses agree that unexplained military aircraft were
in the immediate vicinity when a huge explosive “fireball” occurred
at the reclaimed coal mine near Shanksville.
Viola Saylor saw Flight 93 pass very low over her house in Lambertsville, which
is a mile north of the official crash site. She was in her backyard when she
heard a very loud noise and looked up to find herself “nose to nose”
with Flight 93, which she says was flying “upside down” as it passed
overhead. It was blue and silver, she said, and glistened in the sunlight. It
was so low that it rustled the leaves of her 100-foot maple tree in her yard.
It flew southeastward for about three more seconds and even gained elevation
before it crashed over the hill with a “thud,” she said.
“It was really still for a second,” she said. “Then all of
a sudden” she saw a “very quiet” and low-flying white “military”
plane coming from the area of the crash site, flying toward the northwest.
“It was flying very fast, like it was trying to get out of here,”
she said. “A second or two” behind the “military” plane
were two other planes, which Saylor described as “normal” planes.
Shown a photograph of a Fairchild A-10 Thunderbolt II, a low-flying combat
aircraft commonly referred to as a “Warthog,” Saylor identified
it as the military plane she had seen. She said she recognized the two engines
on the rear and the distinctive shape of the cockpit and nose of the plane.
Similar eyewitness reports of military planes over Shanksville on 9-11 remain
censored by the U.S. corporate media, although they were reported in two leading
British newspapers.
Susan McElwain, a local teacher, also reported seeing a white “military”
plane at the scene of the crash before witnessing an explosion. Ms. Mcelwain
told The Daily Mirror what she saw:
“It came right over me, I reckon just 40 or 50 feet above my mini-van,”
she recalled. “It was so low I ducked instinctively. It was traveling
real fast, but hardly made any sound.
“Then it disappeared behind some trees. A few seconds later I heard this
great explosion and saw this fireball rise up over the trees, so I figured the
jet had crashed. The ground really shook. So I dialed 911 and told them what
happened.
“I’d heard nothing about the other attacks and it was only when
I got home and saw the TV that I realized it wasn’t the white jet, but
Flight 93.
“I didn’t think much more about it until the authorities started
to say there had been no other plane. The plane I saw was heading right to the
point where Flight 93 crashed and must have been there at the very moment it
came down.
“There’s no way I imagined this plane—it was so low it was
virtually on top of me. It was white with no markings but it was definitely
military, it just had that look.
“It had two rear engines, a big fin on the back like a spoiler on the
back of a car and with two upright fins at the side,” Ms. McElwain said.
“I haven’t found one like it on the Internet. It definitely wasn’t
one of those executive jets.
[However,] the FBI came and talked to me and said there was no plane around.”
The plane Ms. McElwain describes is similar to the Warthog seen by Saylor over
Lambertsville.
“Then [FBI agents] changed their story and tried to say it was a plane
taking pictures of the crash 3,000 feet up,” she said. “But I saw
it, and it was there before the crash, and it was 40 feet above my head. They
did not want my story—nobody here did.”
The U.S. media has only reported what Bill Crowley, FBI spokesman from Pittsburgh,
said about other planes in the area: “Two other airplanes were flying
near the hijacked United Airlines jet when it crashed, but neither had anything
to do with the airliner’s fate.”
In an apparent slip of the tongue, Crowley said one of the planes, “a
Fairchild Falcon 20 business jet,” had been directed to the crash site
to help rescuers. The Falcon 20, however, is made by Dassault of France while
Fairchild made the A-10 Thunderbolt II, the plane described by Ms. Mcelwain
and identified by other eyewitnesses.
The Daily American of nearby Somerset did not want Ms. McElwain’s story.
In fact, the local paper has never reported that at least 12 local residents
saw several unexplained aircraft at the time of the crash.
Asked why the paper has not mentioned these eyewitness reports, managing editor
Brian P. Whipkey told AFP “They could not be substantiated.”
THE SCREAMING THING
At the horseshoe-shaped Indian Lake, about a mile east of the official crash
site, several eyewitnesses recalled hearing “a screaming thing”
that “screeched” as it passed over the golf course and lakeside
community immediately before a huge explosion shook the ground.
Chris Smith, the groundskeeper at the golf course, said something with a “very
loud screeching sound” passed over in the immediate vicinity of the golf
course before he heard a huge explosion.
“It was like nothing I’ve ever heard before,” Smith said.
The explosion that followed sounded like a “sonic boom,” he said.
Smith and others said they felt the shock wave from the explosion.
Smith said he was used to seeing a variety of military aircraft from the nearby
Air National Guard bases in Johnstown and Cumberland, Md.
Another groundskeeper said he saw a silver plane pass overhead toward the crash
site from the southeast after hearing the loud “screeching” sound.
The large silver plane was at an elevation of several thousand feet, he said.
A local veteran who flew combat helicopters in the Vietnam War told AFP that
the high-pitched screeching sound was indicative of a missile.
Shown a photo of an A-10 Warthog, the groundskeeper identified it as the kind
of plane that circled the crash site at a very low altitude three times before
flying away. He recognized the two vertical fins on the rear of the plane. “Nobody
was interested in what we saw,” he said. “They didn’t even
ask us.”
Mobile telephones and satellite televisions in the Indian Lake area did not
work at the time of the crash, he said. Paul Muro was in his yard in Lambertsville
when Flight 93 passed overhead. Muro, who lives a half-mile closer to the crash
site than Saylor, said the plane was flying rightside up and normally, although
it was very low.
Muro told AFP that he also saw a large silver plane approaching from the south,
the opposite direction of Flight 93, above the crash site at the time of the
explosion.
The silver plane then turned and headed back in the direction from which it
had come, he said.
Tom Spinelli works at the Indian Lake Marina. After 9- 11, he told a Pittsburgh
television news reporter about the unexplained aircraft he saw. “I saw
the white plane,” he said.
“It was flying around all over the place like it was looking for something,”
he said. “I saw it before and after the crash.”
AFP visited the marina and asked Spinelli about the planes he saw on 9-11.
“I’m sorry,” Spinelli said. ‘No comment’ is all
I can say.”
An Indian Lake resident told AFP that federal agents had visited the marina
after Spinelli had spoken to the Pittsburgh news channel, TV 4, and told him
to stop talking about what he saw.
Local firefighters were also told not to talk about what they had seen at the
crash site.