High Graphics | BBC Sport>>
Front Page |
World |
UK |
UK Politics |
Business |
Sci/Tech |
Health |
Education |
Entertainment |
Talking Point |
AudioVideo |
High Graphics | BBC SPORT>>
Front Page |
World |
UK |
UK Politics |
Business |
Sci/Tech |
Health |
Education |
Entertainment |
Talking Point |
AudioVideo |
World Contents:
Africa |
Americas |
Asia-Pacific |
Europe |
Middle East |
South Asia |
From Our Own Correspondent |
Letter From America |
Tuesday, 18 September, 2001, 17:04 GMT 18:04 UK
FBI probes 'attempted fifth hijack'
The FBI is chasing up thousands of leads
Suicide hijackers may have been on board a fifth American transcontinental plane on the day of the attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center, sources close to the FBI investigation have reportedly said.
One source told The Chicago Tribune that the FBI was searching for a number of passengers who were due to fly on American Airlines Flight 43 from Boston, which was grounded due to a mechanical problem.
There were other acts of terrorism in the United States and elsewhere that were part of this plan
Florida Senator Bob Graham
The plane had been scheduled to take off at 0810 local time, just 25 minutes after American Airlines Flight 11, which struck New York's World Trade Center.
One of the sources told the newspaper that the FBI was also "very interested" in people whose names appeared on the passenger lists of several other American flights which were in the air when the first attacks occurred.
Those planes were then prematurely landed under the orders of air traffic controllers in response to the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
Series of attacks
None of the passengers being sought by the FBI reappeared to board the same, rescheduled flights when the grounding order on commercial planes in the US was lifted last week.
Florida Senator Bob Graham, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the hijackings were intended to be the first in a series of global terror attacks.
"There has been credible evidence gathered since Tuesday that the attacks were not designed to be a one-day event," Senator Graham told the Orlando Sentinel.
"There were other acts of terrorism in the United States and elsewhere that were part of this plan," he said. Those were not necessarily other hijackings, but could have been terror tactics such as "putting a chemical in a city's water system, or blowing up a bridge in a major urban centre," he explained.
Related to this story:
Worldwide hunt for hijack plotters
(15 Sep 01 | Americas)
Bush ponders hits on terror chiefs
(17 Sep 01 | Americas)
Europe hunts for US clues
(15 Sep 01 | Europe)
Nineteen hijack suspects named
(14 Sep 01 | Americas)
Investigators recover Pittsburgh black box
(15 Sep 01 | Americas)
Evidence trails lead to Florida
(13 Sep 01 | Americas)
FBI probes ISPs for clues
(14 Sep 01 | Sci/Tech)
Q&A: Learning to fly a plane
(14 Sep 01 | Americas)
US terror threat remains
(18 Sep 01 | Americas)
Internet links:
Interpol |
Federal Bureau of Investigation |
The White House |
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
High Graphics | BBC Sport>>
Front Page |
World |
UK |
UK Politics |
Business |
Sci/Tech |
Health |
Education |
Entertainment |
Talking Point |
AudioVideo |
High Graphics | BBC SPORT>>
Front Page |
World |
UK |
UK Politics |
Business |
Sci/Tech |
Health |
Education |
Entertainment |
Talking Point |
AudioVideo |
World Contents:
Africa |
Americas |
Asia-Pacific |
Europe |
Middle East |
South Asia |
From Our Own Correspondent |
Letter From America |
Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | ©