Link To 9/11 Hijackers Found In Sarasota

Sarasota family had 'many connections' to 9/11 terror attacks

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20130416/ARTICLE/130419732/2416/NEWS?p=1&tc=pg

By Michael Pollick
Published: Tuesday, April 16, 2013 at 12:31 p.m.
Last Modified: Tuesday, April 16, 2013 at 12:31 p.m.

Contrary to previous statements made by the FBI to the news media, a family living in the south Sarasota neighborhood of Prestancia had “many connections” to the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, according to newly released FBI documents.

The family, Anoud and Abdulazziz al-Hijji, had links to 9/11 hijackers — including Mohamed Atta and Marwan al-Shehhi, who trained at a Venice flight school in preparation for the assault on New York and Washington, D.C., that killed 2,996.

Anoud al-Hijji is the daughter of Esam Ghazzawi, a powerful Saudi businessman with long ties to the Saudi royal family. The al-Hijjis have denied any involvement or relationship with the 9/11 hijackers.

But the family abruptly left the Prestancia home that they had lived in for six years roughly a week before the 9/11 attacks, leaving behind clothes, food, children's toys and other living essentials.

In the newly declassified documents, the FBI's Southwest Florida Domestic Security Task Force reported that the exit was done “quickly and suddenly.” The family left no forwarding address at the time, according to Realtors and property managers who were interviewed by the federal agency.

After being alerted to the family's hasty exit by nearby residents and investigating the circumstances and participants, the FBI said it concluded that the family had no connection to the terrorists.

“At no time did the FBI develop evidence that connected the family members to any of the 9/11 hijackers,” Steven E. Ibison, the FBI special agent in charge of the agency's Tampa field office, said in a Sept. 15, 2011, statement made in response to media questioning about the al-Hijjis at that time.

But portions of the FBI documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act by BrowardBulldog — a journalism organization led by former Miami Herald reporter Dan Christensen, who has been investigating the attacks — seem to directly contradict those statements.

“Further investigation of the (name deleted) family revealed many connections between the (name deleted) and individuals associated with the terror attacks on 9/11/2001,” a portion of declassified FBI documents state.

The agency redacted many of the names in the 31 pages released under exemptions that protect people's names in law enforcement records. But it is clear who the subjects are because the documents specifically cite the al-Hijjis' residence, which was 4224 Escondito Circle in Sarasota's “Estates at Prestancia” development at the time FBI agents were investigating.

Though the FBI stands by its statements, the documents renew questions — previously raised by former Florida governor and U.S. Sen. Bob Graham and others — that the U.S. has not fully disclosed the extent of its knowledge about links between the 9/11 attacks and Saudi officials.

A majority of the terrorists who orchestrated and participated in the attacks were Saudis.

The story of the Prestancia home came to the fore again this week because of a story by BrowardBulldog. Christensen and his organization has been litigating with the federal government in an effort to obtain classified FBI reports that illustrate the relationship between the al-Hijjis and the 9/11 terrorists.

Abdulazziz al-Hijji could not be reached for comment, but in email correspondence with The (London) Daily Telegraph a year ago, he strongly denied any involvement in 9/11.

“I have neither relation nor association with any of those bad people/criminals and the awful crime they did,” al-Hijji wrote.

Revelations
Among the more explosive revelations in the BrowardBulldog story is that an unidentified “family member” — purportedly of the al-Hijji family — was a flight student at Venice's Huffman Aviation, according to the FBI documents marked “secret” but with the word since crossed through.

Huffman gained notoriety in the wake of 9/11 as the place where suicide hijackers Atta and al-Shehhi learned to fly. Those two men were in the cockpits when jets slammed into the World Trade Center towers.

The story also references documents detailing a third person on a redacted FBI list as having “lived with flight students at Huffman Aviation” and being “arrested numerous times by the Sarasota County Sheriff's Office.”

The BrowardBulldog noted that the recently released FBI documents disclosed nothing about Wissam Hammoud, an al-Hijji friend who is now serving a 21-year prison sentence for weapons violations and for attempting to kill a federal agent.

Hammoud, 47, and an “international terrorist associate,” according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, told investigators after his 2004 arrest that al-Hijji may have known some of the hijackers and that he considered Osama Bin Laden “a hero.” Though he acknowledged knowing Hammoud well, al-Hijji denied knowing 9/11 participants or revering Bin Laden in an interview with Christensen last year, the BrowardBulldog reported.

Hammoud was arrested in Sarasota County during July 1995 for driving with a suspended license, according to County Clerk of the Court records. He was subsequently given probation and the case was closed.

Questions
Though much about the allegations and evidence connecting the home in Prestancia to the 9/11 attacks is not new, the matter has lingered because of a lack of closure.

Questions remain, too, for Pat Gallagher, who was among the Prestancia residents who contacted the FBI in the aftermath of the terror attacks after “suspicious activity” — the agency's phrase — at the al-Hijji residence at Escondito Circle, including the family's sudden exit.

Though the house has since been sold twice, at the time it was owned by Ghazzawi, an importer and exporter whose circles included the Bin Laden Group.

Ghazzawi's influence also extends to his children. His 42-year-old son, Adel, is a board member of the New York-based think tank EastWest Institute, which counts the likes of Michael Chertoff, a director of Homeland Security under President George W. Bush and co-author of the Patriot Act, and retired Gen. James L. Jones, a former national security adviser to President Barack Obama, among its members.

The younger Ghazzawi operates Conektas, a firm in the United Arab Emirates that helps multinational companies establish businesses in the Middle East.

Abdulazziz al-Hijji was completing undergraduate work at the University of South Florida when he lived in the Ghazzawi house. He went on to receive a bachelor's in computer science.

FBI records indicate that he took a job after graduation with the Saudi oil concern Aramco in London, though he no longer appears to be working there, BrowardBulldog reported.

Interviewed by the FBI, Anoud al-Hijji said the family's flight was a “regularly scheduled departure.”

But the FBI conducted a substantial investigation centered on the al-Hijji household.

Six weeks after 9/11, agents found that Prestancia's digital scan system had picked up at least two license plates registered to Atta and Ziad Jarrah, another 9/11 terrorist, who had allegedly visited the Escondito Circle house in the months leading up to the attacks. The men purportedly identified themselves to security guards.

But the declassified FBI records say the agency “appears not to have obtained the vehicle entry records of the gated community.”

Graham — the former head of the Senate Intelligence Committee and chairman of the joint congressional inquiry into U.S. intelligence gathering surrounding the terrorist attacks — said he remains convinced that the federal government at several levels has failed to divulge all it knows about 9/11 and its Saudi connections.

He contends that 28 pages of a final report to Congress were censored because they dealt with the Saudi role in 9/11.

Ties
The U.S. and Saudi Arabia have had a special and mutually beneficial relationship since 1957, when the Saudi king made a state visit to President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

King Saud visited the U.S. with an entourage of at least 60, one of whom appears to have been Esam Ghazzawi's father, Abbas.

At the time, Eisenhower agreed to sell Saudi Arabia up to $500 million worth of weapons in exchange for permission to maintain an airbase in Saudi territory.

The deal did not gel overnight. Abbas Ghazzawi apparently worked on it, after flying into New York from Madrid on Jan. 25, 1957, according to a passenger list kept by U.S. officials. The elder Ghazzawi was accompanied by three other Saudis, including a man who would later serve as Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the U.S., Faisal al-Hegelan.

The Ghazzawi family's ties to America grew stronger years later when, in 1970, 17-year-old Esam Ghazzawi married American Deborah G. Browning. Their first child, Adel, was born that year on Nov. 19.

The family later established what has been a long presence in Southwest Florida, through the purchase of a pair of bayfront lots on Longboat Key's Putter Lane. Neighbors had little interaction with the man they referred to as “the Arab.”

“That's what we called him,” said former neighbor Betty Blair. “We didn't know his name. All we knew was his kids were in camp so he came for the summer. Two little boys.”

Esam and Deborah Ghazzawi bought the Prestancia home in September 1995, records show.

Five months earlier, Anoud Ghazzawi married al-Hijji. He was 19 and she was 17, their Sarasota County marriage license shows.

While here, they made an effort to blend in, driving popular cars like a Volkswagen Beetle, a Jeep Grand Cherokee and a Chevy Tahoe.

But they did not stay completely under the collective radar. FBI documents reference a dispute with the Prestancia Community Association over unpaid homeowner dues.

The Ghazzawis were frequent visitors to the al-Hijji household, neighbors, acquaintances and an attorney familiar with the case said.

Carla DiBello knew the al-Hijjis and met Esam Ghazzawi on several occasions. “I remember him being very eccentric. He loved going to big dinners and always had a lot of security,” said DiBello, who now lives in Beverly Hills and is in charge of developing business for Kim Kardashian Productions.

As for how Esam Ghazzawi made his living, “all I know about him was that he worked for the King of Saudi from what Anoud told me, but she was always very secretive about what her dad did for them,” DiBello said.

Ghazzawi is still active in business in the Middle East, and sits on the board of the London subsidiary of EIRAD, which makes connections for global firms.

When United Parcel Service wanted to do business in Saudi Arabia, for instance, EIRAD became its handler.

When the al-Hijjis left Southwest Florida for Saudi Arabia “on or about 08/27/2001,” according to the FBI documents, they flew first to Washington, where they met Esam Ghazzawi.

When Ghazzawi left the U.S., Adel Ghazzawi apparently took over the family's affairs here.

It was Adel, then 30 and an American citizen, who tried to get a Prestancia lien lifted so the house could be sold. The lien came after the series of brushes with Prestancia's community association.

“The HOA had great difficulties with them,” said Jone Weist, at that time property manager for much of Prestancia. “It was nothing criminal, but this is not a neighborhood where you let the grass grow for a month.”

Problems mounted when the family departed in 2001, leaving a large mound of garbage at the curb. Eventually, a foreclosure lawsuit was filed.

When not helping his family, Adel Ghazzawi worked with Conektas, a company that “assists multinationals in developing synergistic relationships with credible partners to successfully penetrate and establish solid businesses in the Middle East region.”

“Adel has a vast wealth of business, family and personal relationships within the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,” his biography reads.

On the EastWest website, Ghazzawi says he has raised more than $1 billion for Middle Eastern projects.

The family ultimately settled the homeowner case and sold the house in September 2003 for $440,000, to Joel Schemmel, records show. Schemmel has since sold the property, according to the county.

Documents
Because Floridians made up his former political constituency and many of the 9/11 terrorists lived in the Sunshine State just prior to the attacks, Graham has made it a personal mission to delve into the connections between the attacks and Saudi Arabia.

Graham, 76, says that neither he, nor his staff, ever received any information regarding the alleged activities in Prestancia from the FBI or other law enforcement.

The FBI contends there is a good reason for that.

“At no time did the FBI develop evidence that connected the family members to any of the 9/11 hijackers,” Ibison said in 2011.

Now, despite the documents from their files, the agency is standing by its assessment.

“What Ibison said back then, that is the conclusion, knowing everything we know today,” David Couvertier, an FBI spokesman, said Tuesday. “The Bulldog is getting information that was already taken into consideration.”

But Graham is unswayed.

In an interview Tuesday, Graham said he is “extremely pleased” with the FBI's release of new documents.

“Basically, they said they had conducted an investigation and hadn't found anything,” Graham said. “Now we know that as far back as April of 2002, they had a statement in their files written by a responsible law enforcement official, who I cannot name, saying there were many connections between the hijackers and this family in Sarasota.”

“There are more than those 30-some pages of documents which would indicate that the public statements of the FBI are not accurate,” Graham said.
 
Mystery of Sarasota Saudis deepens as Justice moves to end FOI lawsuit citing national security

http://www.browardbulldog.org/2013/...ves-end-foi-lawsuit-citing-national-security/

By Dan Christensen and Anthony Summers, BrowardBulldog.org
June 3, 2013 at 5:59 am

A senior FBI official has told a Fort Lauderdale federal judge that disclosure of certain classified information about Saudis who hurriedly left their Sarasota area home shortly before 9/11 “would reveal current specific targets of the FBI’s national security investigations.”

Records Section Chief David M. Hardy’s assertion is contained in a sworn 33-page declaration filed in support of a Justice Department motion that seeks to end a Freedom of Information lawsuit filed last year by BrowardBulldog.org.

The government’s latest court filings, thick with veiled references to foreign counterintelligence operations and targets, deepen the mystery about a once-secret FBI investigation of Esam and Deborah Ghazzawi and their tenants, son-in-law and daughter, Abdulaziz and Anoud al-Hijji.

The filings by Miami Assistant U.S. Attorney Carole M. Fernandez also seek to justify in the name of national security numerous deletions of information from FBI records about the decade-old investigation that were released recently amid the ongoing litigation.

They do not, however, explain why an investigation the FBI has said found no connection between those Saudis and the Sept. 11th attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people involves information so secret its disclosure “could be expected to cause serious damage to national security.”

The investigation, which the FBI did not disclose to Congress or the 9/11 Commission, was first reported in a September 2011 story published simultaneously by BrowardBulldog.org and The Miami Herald.

It began after neighbors in the gated community of Prestancia reported the al-Hijjis had suddenly departed their home at 4224 Escondito Circle about two weeks before the attacks. They left personal belongings and furniture, including three newly registered cars – one of them brand new.

According to a counterterrorism officer and Prestancia’s former administrator Larry Berberich, gatehouse log books and photographs of license tags were later used by the FBI to determine that vehicles used by the hijackers had visited the al-Hijji home.

The FBI later confirmed the existence of the probe, but said it found no evidence connecting the Ghazzawis or the al-Hijjis to the hijackers or the 9/11 plot.

RECORDS CONTRADICT DENIALS
The newly released FBI records contradict the FBI’s public denials. One dated April 4, 2002 says the investigation “revealed many connections” between the Saudis who fled Sarasota and “individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on 9/11/2001.”

The report goes on to list three of those individuals and connect them to the Venice, Florida flight school where suicide hijackers Mohamed Atta and Marwan al-Shehhi trained. The names of those individuals were not made public.

The FBI removed additional information in the report, citing a pair of national security exemptions to the Freedom of Information Act.

In his declaration to U.S. District Judge William J. Zloch, the FBI’s Hardy sought to explain those deletions and others. He said information was withheld “to protect an intelligence method utilized by the FBI for gathering intelligence data.” Such methods include confidential informants.

Hardy, who stated that he has been designated a “declassification authority” by Attorney General Eric Holder, said redactions regarding the Sarasota investigation were also made to protect “actual intelligence activities and methods used by the FBI against specific targets of foreign counterintelligence investigations or operations.”

“The information obtained from the intelligence activities or methods is very specific in nature, provided during a specific time period and known to very few individuals,” Hardy said.

DAMAGE TO NATIONAL SECURITY?
No details were provided, but Hardy said the information was “compiled regarding a specific individual or organization of national security interest.” He added that its disclosure “reasonably could be expected to cause serious damage to the national security.”

Disclosure would reveal the FBI’s “current specific targets” and “allow hostile entities to discover the current intelligence gathering methods used and reveal the criteria and priorities assigned to current intelligence or counterintelligence investigations,” Hardy said.

“With the aid of this detailed information, hostile entities could develop countermeasures which would, in turn, severely disrupt the FBI’s intelligence gathering capabilities” and damage efforts “to detect and apprehend violators of the United States’ national security and criminal laws.”

For months, the FBI claimed it had no responsive documents regarding its Sarasota investigation. But on March 28, Hardy unexpectedly announced the Bureau had located and reviewed 35 pages of records. It released 31 of them.

Prosecutor Fernandez now contends the FBI conducted a “reasonable search” and that “no agency records are being improperly withheld.”

Her motion asks the court to grant summary judgment in the government’s favor.
 
Graham: FBI hindered Congress’s 9/11 inquiry, withheld reports about Sarasota Saudis

http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/06/05/3434487/graham-fbi-hindered-congresss.html

By Dan Christensen and Anthony Summers
BrowardBulldog.org

Former U.S. Sen. Bob Graham has accused the FBI in court papers of having impeded Congress’s Joint Inquiry into 9/11 by withholding information about a Florida connection to the al-Qaeda attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people.

The information, first reported byBrowardBulldog.org in 2011, includes a recently declassified FBI report that ties a Saudi family who once lived in Sarasota “to individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on 9/11/2001.”

“The FBI’s failure to call (to the Joint Inquiry’s attention) documents finding ‘many connections’ between Saudis living in the United States and individuals associated with the terrorist attack(s)…interfered with the Inquiry’s ability to complete its mission,” said Graham, co-chairman of the Joint Inquiry.

Graham said the FBI kept the 9/11 Commission in the dark, too. He said co-chairmen Thomas Kean and Lee Hamilton and executive director Philip Zelikow all told him they were unaware of the FBI’s Sarasota investigation.

Moreover, Graham stated that Deputy FBI Director Sean Joyce, the Bureau’s second in command, personally intervened to block him from speaking with the special agent-in-charge of the Sarasota investigation.

“I am troubled by what appears to me to be a persistent effort by the FBI to conceal from the American people information concerning possible Saudi support of the Sept. 11 attacks,” Florida’s former governor said.

Graham’s remarks are contained in a 14-page sworn declaration made in a Freedom of Information lawsuit brought byBrowardBulldog.org in federal court in Fort Lauderdale.

The suit seeks the records of an FBI investigation into Esam Ghazzawi, a former advisor to a senior Saudi Prince – who had he lived was well placed to become king -Ghazzawi’s wife Deborah and son-in-law and daughter Abdulaziz and Anoud al-Hijji.

The Ghazzawis owned the home at 4224 Escondito Circle in the gated-neighborhood of Prestancia where the al-Hijjis lived until about two weeks before 9/11. Their hurried departure – leaving behind cars, furniture and personal effects – prompted neighbors to call the FBI.

News of the subsequent investigation didn’t surface until September 8, 2011 when its existence was disclosed in a story published simultaneously by BrowardBulldog.org and The Miami Herald.

The story reported that a counterterrorism officer, as well as Prestancia’s former administrator Larry Berberich, said that gatehouse logbooks and photographs of license plates showed that vehicles used by the future hijackers had visited the al-Hijji home. Analysis of phone records also linked the hijackers to their house, the counterterrorism officer said.

Sen. Graham told reporters in September 2011 that while Congress had relied on the FBI to provide all of its information about 9/11, he had not been made aware of the Sarasota probe.

After the story broke, the FBI acknowledged its investigation but claimed itfound no evidence to connect the Ghazzawis or the al-Hijjis to the hijackers or the 9/11 plot. Agents maintained, too, that the FBI made all of its 9/11 records available to Congress.

The Freedom of Information lawsuit was filed last September, after the FBI declined to release any records on the matter.

In March, as the case moved toward trial this summer, the Bureau unexpectedly released 31 of 35 pages it said had been located. The partially censored records flatly contradict the FBI’s earlier public comments and state that the Sarasota Saudis had “many connections” to persons allied with the hijackers.

Last month, the Department of Justice asked U.S. District Judge William Zloch to end the lawsuit, citing national security and saying the FBI has identified and released all documents responsive to its Sarasota probe.

But in his declaration, Graham, a former chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said those few pages “do not appear to be the full record of the FBI investigation.” He dismissed the government’s assertion that it lacks further documentation as “entirely implausible.”

“On a matter of this magnitude and significance, my expectation is that the FBI would have hundreds or even thousands of pages of documents,” Graham stated.

As evidence that records continue to be withheld, Graham cited a Sept. 16, 2002 FBI report about Sarasota that he was allowed to see after making inquiries at the FBI. That report should have been released, he said, but was not.

Graham’s declaration, and several by others involved in the case, were filed Friday along with a memorandum by BrowardBulldog.org attorney Thomas Julin asking the judge to deny the government’s request to shut down the lawsuit and to set the case for trial.

Julin is a partner in the Miami law firm of Hunton & Williams.
 
9/11 Families Press for Documents on Saudis From Sarasota

http://sarasota.patch.com/articles/9-11-families-press-for-documents-on-saudis-from-sarasota

By Linda Hersey

The coalition of families whose loved ones died in the terrorism attacks allege that the al-Hijji family had connections to the hijackers who attended a Venice flight school.

A coalition of families that lost loved ones in the 9/11 attacks is urging the FBI to release the full results of an investigation into a Saudi family that formerly resided in Sarasota.

The nonprofit group called "9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism" – comprised of 6,600 people – is alleging that Anoud and Abdulazziz al-Hijji, who lived in the Prestancia Estates in south Sarasota for six years, had ties to the 9/11 hijackers.

The Saudi family abruptly moved away, leaving behind their belognings, a week prior to the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. But their home was owned by a businessman with connections to the Bin Laden Group, according to the Herald-Tribune.

Now the "9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism" are "seeking information that would shed light on alleged Saudi financing of the terrorist attacks," according to the PR News Wire.

The group is endorsing efforts by the Broward Bulldog, a Florida non-profit corporation, and its founder Dan Christensen, to obtain documents related to the federal investigation into the Sarasota family. The Broward Bulldog was provided with some results of that investigation, but other documents were withheld or portions were deleted.

The Broward Bulldog is suing the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI in U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida.

The Bulldog has published a series of investigative pieces on the Saudi family and events leading up to the 9/11 attacks. The most recent post – Mystery of Sarasota Saudis deepens as Justice moves to end FOI lawsuit citing national security – alleges that the FBI is withholding documents because "disclosure about Saudis who hurriedly left their Sarasota area home shortly before 9/11 'would reveal current specific targets of the FBI’s national security investigations.' "

The Broward Bulldog reported:

"According to a counterterrorism officer and Prestancia’s former administrator Larry Berberich, gatehouse log books and photographs of license tags were later used by the FBI to determine that vehicles used by the hijackers had visited the al-Hijji home.

"The FBI later confirmed the existence of the probe, but said it found no evidence connecting the Ghazzawis or the al-Hijjis to the hijackers or the 9/11 plot."

On June 5, former Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Bob Graham (D-FL), who also co-chaired the 9/11 Congressional Inquiry, filed a declaration in support of the FOIA request, writing, "I am troubled by what appears to me to be a persistent effort by the FBI to conceal from the American people information concerning possible Saudi support of the September 11 attacks."
 
9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism Demand FBI Come Clean About Sarasota Saudis Suspected of 9/11 Ties

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-rele...a-saudis-suspected-of-911-ties-210471621.html

NEW YORK, June 6, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Steering Committee of the 9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism endorses the efforts of investigative reporters Dan Christensen and Anthony Summers and calls on the FBI to come clean regarding an investigation involving a Saudi family, former residents of Sarasota, Fla., who may have provided aid to the 9/11 hijackers. Broward Bulldog, Inc., a Florida non-profit corporation, and its founder Dan Christensen filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit to obtain documents they were denied and are suing the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI in U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida.

On June 5, former Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Bob Graham (D-FL), who also co-chaired the 9/11 Congressional Inquiry, filed a declaration in support of the FOIA request, writing, "I am troubled by what appears to me to be a persistent effort by the FBI to conceal from the American people information concerning possible Saudi support of the September 11 attacks."

The 9/11 family members also seek information that would shed light on alleged Saudi financing of the terrorist attacks in their lawsuit, In Re Terrorist Attacks of September 11.

"First President Obama promises me personally to release the 28 pages removed from the congressional committee's report and doesn't, and now the FBI is pulling this stunt," said Bill Doyle, father of Joseph M. Doyle who died in the World Trade Center. "The FBI keeps contradicting itself. On one hand, they say they found no evidence connecting the Sarasota Saudis to 9/11. On the other hand, they say releasing the information would threaten national security. But they can't have it both ways. And the Courts should not let them get away with it."

Read the full statement by the 9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism, a group comprised of over 6,600 family members of those killed and injured in the attacks of 9/11 that is using the civil legal system to pursue those who financed and provided support for those cowardly terrorist attacks. The case is In Re Thomas E. Burnett, Sr., et al. v. Al Baraka Investment & Development Corp., et al.; In Re Terrorist Attacks on September 11, 2001. The families are represented by Motley Rice LLC.

SOURCE 9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism
 
9/11 Family Members Demand FBI to Come Clean about Sarasota Saudis Suspected of 9/11 Ties

http://www.justiceagainstterrorism.org/press-releases.php

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Alicia G. Ward
June 6, 2013

(843) 216-9548 office
(843) 532-7011 cell

On Behalf of the 9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism

Former Senator and 9/11 Congressional Investigation Co-Chair Bob Graham, Says the FBI Never Gave Information to Congressional Investigation or 9/11 Commission

The Steering Committee of the 9/11 Families United To Bankrupt Terrorism publicly endorses the efforts of investigative reporters Dan Christensen and Anthony Summers and calls on the FBI to come clean regarding an investigation involving a Saudi family, former residents of Sarasota, Fla., who may have provided aid or assistance to the 9/11 hijackers. Broward Bulldog, Inc., a Florida non-profit corporation, and Dan Christensen, founder, operator and editor of the BrowardBulldog.org website, have filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit to gain access to documents they have been denied and are suing the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI in U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida.

On Wednesday, June 5, former Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Bob Graham (D-FL), who also co-chaired the Joint Inquiry of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence into intelligence community activities before and after 9/11, filed a declaration in support of the FOIA request, in which he wrote, “I am troubled by what appears to me to be a persistent effort by the FBI to conceal from the American people information concerning possible Saudi support of the September 11 attacks.”

Graham further declared:

“I have contacted the co-chairs of the 9/11 Commission, Republican Thomas Kean and Democrat Lee Hamilton and I have asked them if the 9/11 Commission ever learned of the FBI’s Sarasota investigation. Both advised me that they were unaware of it. Kean told me that if the 9/11 Commission had learned of the Sarasota investigation it would have worked it hard because it seemed implausible that the hijackers had completed the planning of the September 11 attacks alone. Phil Zelikow, the 9/11 Commission’s executive director, also told me that the 9/11 Commission did not receive any documents from the FBI concerning the Sarasota investigation.”

“I also contacted Porter Goss, chairman of the U.S. House of Representative Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in 2002 and co-chair with me of the Joint Inquiry, and Eleanor Hill, staff director of the Joint Inquiry to ask them if he ever had become aware of the FBI’s Sarasota investigation. They said they had no awareness of that investigation.”

Citing the fact that vehicles used by the 9/11 hijackers apparently had visited the home of the Sarasota Saudis as recorded in the gated community’s security logs, and the sudden departure from the U.S. of the Saudi family just before the attacks, the 9/11 family members are also seeking information that would shed light on alleged Saudi financing of the terrorist attacks in their lawsuit, In Re Terrorist Attacks of September 11. However, instead of coming clean, the FBI continues to try to block a request under the Freedom of Information Act in Christensen’s case, claiming it would somehow damage national security. This continues a pattern of obstruction lasting more than a decade, including failure to disclose this information to Congress and to the 9/11 Commission.

“After almost 12 years, the time has come for the Department of Justice, the FBI and this administration to give the American people access to the truth about who financed the murder of 3,000 people on 9/11,” said Sharon Premoli of Dorset, Vt., who was pulled from the rubble of the World Trade Center and maintains the advocacy website, www.JusticeAgainstTerrorism.net. “It is simply implausible that release of this information would interfere with any current national security investigation. Rather, the FBI’s obstruction creates at least the perception of a cover-up to protect Saudi potentates. We owe Bob Graham a debt of gratitude for his persistence.”

“I wholeheartedly believe these documents will lead us to our ultimate goal of truth, accountability and justice we so desperately seek. This administration owes the families, survivors and those sick and dying from 9/11 the transparency they so passionately talk about. We will never be a safer America if we can’t stop the financial support to the terrorists who continue to plan and plot against us. I applaud Bob Graham for his dedication and action he is taking in exposing the FBI and DOJ's lies and deceit,” said Terry Strada of New Vernon, N.J., widow of Tom Strada, who died in the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001.

Graham recently had the opportunity to review certain documents related to the FBI’s Sarasota investigation — documents that had never been provided to the Joint Inquiry.

In his declaration to the Court, Graham wrote that these documents, “contradicted the FBI’s public statements concerning its Sarasota investigation. To me, the documents reflected that the investigation was not a robust inquiry concerning suspicions related to Saudi nationals who resided in Sarasota before September 11, 2001, that an important investigative lead was not pursued, and that unsubstantiated statements were accepted as true.”

“First President Obama promises me personally to release the 28 pages removed from the congressional committee’s report and doesn’t and now the FBI is pulling this stunt,” said Bill Doyle of The Villages, Fla., father of Joseph M. Doyle who died in the World Trade Center. “The FBI keeps contradicting itself. On one hand, they say they found no evidence connecting the Sarasota Saudis to 9/11. On the other hand, they say releasing the information would threaten national security. But they can’t have it both ways. And the Courts should not let them get away with it.”

The 9/11 family members and survivors praised Graham for his leadership in seeking to reveal the truth about alleged Saudi involvement in 9/11, and for his support of their litigation to hold accountable all those who helped finance the murder of their loved ones and injury to countless others.

The original FOIA claim was filed in September 2011 to declassify certain documents regarding a “closed anti-terrorism investigation into the activities of Saudi nationals who lived in and/or owned a residence at 4224 Escondito Circle, near Sarasota, Florida prior to 9/11.” The residents were Abdullazziz Al-Hijji and his wife, Anoud. The homeowners were Anoud AI-Hijji's parents, Essam and Deborah Ghazzawi. The FBI investigation began in the fall of 2001 and continued into at least 2003.

The 9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism

This group is comprised of over 6,600 family members of those killed and injured in the attacks of 9/11. They are united in the cause of pursuing justice and deterring future terrorist attacks. To do so, they are using the civil legal system to pursue those who financed and provided support for those cowardly terrorist attacks. The case is In Re Thomas E. Burnett, Sr., et al. v. Al Baraka Investment & Development Corp., et al., Case No. 03-CV-9849 (GBD); In Re Terrorist Attacks on September 11, 2001, 03 MDL 1570. The families are represented by complex civil litigation firm Motley Rice LLC.
 
9/11 family members demand the FBI ‘come clean’ about Sarasota Saudis

http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/06/07/3438694/911-family-members-demand-the.html

By Dan Christensen
BrowardBulldog.org

A group representing 6,600 survivors and relatives of those killed and injured in the 9/11 attacks has called on the FBI to “come clean” about its investigation of Saudis in Florida who may have aided the terrorist hijackers.

The reaction by 9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism on Thursday followed news that former U.S. Sen. Bob Graham had accused the FBI in court papers of concealing the existence of its Sarasota investigation and impeding Congress’s Joint Inquiry into the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

“After almost 12 years, the time has come for the Department of Justice, the FBI and this administration to give the American people access to the truth about who financed the murder of 3,000 people on 9/11,” said Sharon Premoli, who was pulled from the rubble of the World Trade Center.

Graham, co-chairman of the congressional probe, discussed the FBI’s performance in a sworn declaration given in support of a Freedom of Information lawsuit pending in federal court in Fort Lauderdale.

BrowardBulldog.org filed the suit last summer while seeking FBI records of its investigation of Esam Ghazzawi, a former advisor to a senior Saudi prince — who, had he lived, was well placed to become king — Ghazzawi’s wife, Deborah, and son-in-law and daughter, Abdulaziz and Anoud al-Hijji.

The Ghazzawis owned the upscale home at 4224 Escondito Circle where the al-Hijjis lived until about two weeks before 9/11. Neighbors called the FBI after the family’s hurried departure — leaving behind cars, furniture and other possessions.

Sources have said that security records — including photos of license plates — from the gated community where the al-Hijjis lived later revealed that vehicles used by the future hijackers had visited the al-Hijji home.

The FBI, however, has publicly denied finding any evidence linking the family to 9/11.

Yet 31 pages of FBI documents released to BrowardBulldog.org in March say something very different: that the Sarasota Saudis had “many connections” to “individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on 9/11/2001.”

The Justice Department recently asked U.S. District Judge William Zloch to end the lawsuit, citing national security and declaring that it has no more documents to produce.

Bill Doyle, who lives in The Villages, lost his son Joseph in the attacks.

“The FBI keeps contradicting itself,” Doyle said in a statement released by the group on Thursday. “But they can’t have it both ways. And the courts should not let them get away with it.”

Survivor Premoli is a Vermont resident who maintains the advocacy websitewww.JusticeAgainstTerrorism.net. “It is simply implausible that release of this information would interfere with any current national security investigation,” she said. “Rather, the FBI’s obstruction creates at least the perception of a cover-up to protect Saudi potentates.”

Terry Strada, a Mount Vernon, N.J., resident whose husband Tom died in the World Trade Center, said through the group that she believes the Sarasota “documents will lead us to our ultimate goal of truth, accountability and justice we so desperately seek.”

Since 2002, the 9/11 Families group has been suing an array of individuals, banks, corporations and Islamic charities that the group’s lawyers have said were “historically implicated in the sponsoring of al-Qaeda’s terrorist activities.”

The suit, pending in federal court in New York, seeks more than $1 trillion in damages.

Broward Bulldog is a not-for-profit online only newspaper created to provide local reporting in the public interest. www.browardbulldog.org 954-603-1351
 
Post 9/11: Questions for Obama

http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/07/13/3497610/post-911-questions-for-obama.html

BY BOB GRAHAM
[email protected]

In the swirl of revelations, contradictions and confusion about the United States data mining program, Mr. President, you have called for a national debate on liberty and security in post 9/11 America.

I welcome this call, but the difficulties with your proposal include: how to have a debate on a subject you don’t know exists; and how to have a debate if the facts necessary to engage in an informed discussion are withheld?

As reported over many months in the U.S. and abroad — notably in the Miami Herald and BrowardBulldog.com — a 9/11 series of events that go to the heart of the issue of how to ensure that security is compatible with liberty have arisen from Sarasota.

At the core of this episode is a central, lingering question. Saddled with linguistic and cultural ignorance and limited personal experience, could the 19 hijackers have conducted such a complex operation alone? The co-chair of the 9/11 commission said it was “implausible.” Did the terrorists have the support of a network, perhaps directed by elements of a foreign nation state?

The events in Sarasota are directly relevant to those questions. Prior to 9/11, according to law enforcement investigators, neighbors and other witnesses, a prominent Saudi family living in Sarasota had extensive contacts with several of the future hijackers — including key operatives training to be pilots at a nearby flight school. About 10 days before 9/11, apparently in great haste, these Saudis left their Sarasota home and — accompanied by the occupant’s father-in-law who had long been an aide to a senior Saudi prince — returned to Saudi Arabia.

When these allegations were disclosed 10 years later, the FBI stated publicly that a thorough investigation in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 revealed no connections between the family and the hijackers. And further, that all of the information derived from the investigation had been made available to the 9/11 commission and the joint congressional inquiry.

Recently released primary source documentation (uncovered through a Freedom of Information request) based on evidence collected by law enforcement agents who participated in the investigation disclosed there had been “many connections between the (name of family redacted) and individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 . . .” The leadership of the 9/11 commission and the congressional joint inquiry have affirmed they were unaware of the pre-9/11 events or the subsequent investigation.

Neither of the FBI’s public assertions appears to be correct. The FBI has declared all the remaining documentation of the Sarasota events and subsequent investigation classified.

How is the public supposed to know or evaluate the truth of the matter?

One way to start would be to open the debate with questions that would illuminate the context of specific actions — such as the recently disclosed National Security Agency’s Prism program — but would not necessitate access to classified information.

For example:

Under what circumstances is it acceptable for the government to withhold information from — even deceive — the public?

In the summer of 1943, after the Tehran conference attended by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, Churchill said, “In wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies.” Churchill’s statement was justified at that time — decisions on the final battle plans of World War II were made at Tehran.

Some would say we have been in a continuous time of war since 9/11. Let’s have a debate as to whether and to what the Churchillian dictum applies today.

• What should be done if it is determined that a governmental agency has deceived the American people and then withheld the evidence of its incompetence or perfidy by the shield of classification? We need a public conversation as to whether it would be salutary to insert provisions in the Freedom of Information Act or elsewhere to sanction an agency which has engaged in this practice.

• Why have the Saudis been treated in a distinctively different manner than other nationalities? This stark difference was highlighted after the Boston marathon bombing in April.

Within hours of the massacre, the FBI was aggressively investigating whether the two Muslim Russian Chechen bombers had acted with the connivance of Muslims from Russia’s volatile North Caucasus region. Yet, more than 10 years after 9/11 it appears everything possible is being done to conceal Saudi assistance to the 19 hijackers — 15 of whom were Saudi nationals.

• Should the FBI continue to be the domestic intelligence agency for the United States? MI 5 in the United Kingdom and Shin Bet in Israel are stand alone, non-law enforcement related domestic intelligence agencies. One rationale for this separation is difference of mission. Law enforcement agencies are primarily directed to gather sufficient evidence after a crime has been committed to convict the perpetrator beyond a reasonable doubt. Domestic intelligence is structured to gather information to detect a peril and avoid it.

• Has the performance of the FBI been such as to convince Americans we are best protected by an agency that combines these goals?

Mr. President, those are some of the questions that concern Americans. We recall President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s call to duty in his 1961 farewell address:

“Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.” Today the situation is different. But, the challenge to properly mesh security concerns with the protection of our liberties continues.

Let the debate begin.

Bob Graham served for 18 years in the U.S. Senate and eight years as governor of Florida. He was chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee (2001-2003) and co-chair of the congressional joint inquiry into the role of the intelligence community in 9/11. He is the author of the novel “Keys to the Kingdom.”
 
Censored, Withheld Records: Sarasota, Saudis and 9/11

http://www.theledger.com/article/20130913/EDIT01/130919593/1036?p=1&tc=pg

Published: Friday, September 13, 2013 at 12:07 a.m.
Last Modified: Friday, September 13, 2013 at 12:07 a.m.

The reported links between the 9/11 terrorists and a Saudi Arabian family that lived in Sarasota are slowly coming into focus, despite the FBI's tenacious efforts to conceal them.

A Sarasota Herald-Tribune story Wednesday — the 12th anniversary of the terrorist attacks — reported that recently obtained FBI documents appear to confirm "many connections" between the family and the 9/11 hijackers who received flight training in Venice.

More could be revealed if a federal lawsuit filed against the FBI by a South Florida online newspaper is successful. The lawsuit seeks additional documents and agents' field notes related to their investigation of the family.

Among those interested is Bob Graham, the former Florida governor and U.S. senator who co-chaired a congressional panel that investigated the 9/11 attacks. Graham has filed a statement with the court in support of the lawsuit.

Tuesday, Halifax Media Holdings, the owner of the Herald-Tribune and The Ledger, asked the federal judge for the lawsuit for permission to file a friend-of-the-court brief in support of the plaintiffs.

These are the latest developments in a mystery that came to light two years ago when the Sarasota-Saudi-9/11 links were first reported in the online publication, the Broward Bulldog, as well as the Herald-Tribune and other Florida newspapers.

The public deserves a true accounting.

UNTOLD STORY
Twelve years after the 9/11 attacks one of the few untold stories is: Who financed and supported the attacks?

The question is crucial, Graham said. He told the Broward Bulldog that the final 28-page section of the inquiry's 2003 report, dealing with "sources of foreign support for some of the Sept. 11 hijackers," was censored by order of then-President George W. Bush. It is still being withheld from the public.

Graham said he believes that the information was concealed to provide "protection of the Saudis from embarrassment, protection of the administration from political embarrassment ... some of the unknowns, some of the secrets of 9/11."

The Saudi connections to the terrorist attacks are well-established. Most of the hijackers were Saudis. Osama bin Laden, the founder of al-Qaida, who claimed responsibility for the attacks, was the member of a wealthy Saudi family.

Whether the Saudi family in Sarasota had any role leading up to the attacks is unknown. The FBI investigation of the family was not reported to Congress or mentioned in the independent 9/11 Commission report.

What is known is that the family, closely related to a prominent Saudi financier, abruptly abandoned their home an subdivision two weeks before 9/11. They left behind clothes in the closets, food in the refrigerator, and three cars in the driveway and garage.

NEW INFORMATION
The 2011 story by the Broward Bulldog, reprinted by the Herald-Tribune, said phone records and subdivision gate records obtained by the FBI linked the family to the 9/11 hijackers training 15 miles away at the Venice airport.

The FBI confirmed that it had investigated the family but said the case was "determined not to be related to any threat nor connected to the 9/11 plot."

Yet, as the Herald-Tribune reported, the FBI this spring mailed Broward Bulldog editor Dan Christensen 31 pages of heavily redacted documents that state, in part: "Further investigation of the [name deleted] family revealed many connections between the [name deleted] and individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on 09/11/2001."

Pollick noted that it's clear who the subjects are because the documents specifically cite the Saudi family's home in Prestancia.

Even if the FBI has been truthful and none of information it obtained links the Saudi family to the 9/11 attacks, why not make their records public?

"The question is," Graham told Pollick, "why are they doing this? What interest does the FBI have in denying the existence of its own documents?"

"Beyond that, they have thrown a blanket of national security over virtually everything, and why are they doing that for an event that occurred ... 12 years ago?"

Those are good questions. The federal court should find that the public deserves answers and a full accounting of the Saudi family's apparent connection to the perpetrators of 9/11.
 
Graham: FBI held back Fla. 9/11 links
The former Florida senator accused the FBI in court papers of failing to give Congress details about a Saudi family in Sarasota and its possible connection to the attacks.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/09/25/3650008/graham-fbi-held-back-fla-911-links.html

By Dan Christensen and Anthony Summers

Former U.S. Sen. Bob Graham has accused the FBI in court papers of having impeded Congress' Joint Inquiry into 9/11 by withholding information about a Florida connection to the al-Qaida attacks that killed almost 3,000 people.

The information, first reported by BrowardBulldog.org in 2011, includes a recently declassified FBI report that ties a Saudi family who once lived in Sarasota "to individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on 9/11/2001."

"The FBI's failure to call [to the Joint Inquiry's attention] documents finding 'many connections' between Saudis living in the United States and individuals associated with the terrorist attack . . . interfered with the Inquiry's ability to complete its mission, " said Graham, who was co-chairman of the Joint Inquiry.

Graham said the FBI kept the 9/11 Commission in the dark, too. He said co-chairmen Thomas Kean and Lee Hamilton and executive director Philip Zelikow all told him they were unaware of the FBI's Sarasota investigation.

Moreover, Graham stated that Deputy FBI Director Sean Joyce, the Bureau's second-in-command, personally intervened to block him from speaking with the special agent-in-charge of the Sarasota investigation.

"I am troubled by what appears to me to be a persistent effort by the FBI to conceal from the American people information concerning possible Saudi support of the Sept. 11 attacks, " said Graham, who is also a former Florida governor.

Graham's remarks are contained in a 14-page sworn declaration made in a Freedom of Information lawsuit brought by BrowardBulldog.org in federal court in Fort Lauderdale.

The suit seeks the records of an FBI investigation into Esam Ghazzawi, a former adviser to a senior Saudi Prince - who, had he lived, was well-placed to become king - as well as Ghazzawi's wife Deborah and son-in-law and daughter Abdulaziz and Anoud al-Hijji.

The Ghazzawis owned the home in the gated-neighborhood of Prestancia, where the al-Hijjis lived until about two weeks before 9/11. Their hurried departure - leaving behind cars, furniture and personal effects - prompted neighbors to call the FBI.

News of the subsequent investigation did not surface until Sept. 8, 2011, when its existence was disclosed in a story published simultaneously by BrowardBulldog.org and The Miami Herald.

The story reported that a counterterrorism officer, as well as Prestancia's former administrator, Larry Berberich, said that gatehouse logs and photographs of license plates showed that vehicles used by the future hijackers had visited the al-Hijji home. Analysis of telephone records also linked the hijackers to their house, the counterterrorism officer said.

Graham told reporters in September 2011 that while Congress had relied on the FBI to provide all of its information about 9/11, he had not been made aware of the Sarasota probe.

After the story broke, the FBI acknowledged its investigation but claimed it found no evidence to connect the Ghazzawis or the al-Hijjis to the hijackers or the 9/11 plot. Agents maintained, too, that the FBI made all of its 9/11 records available to Congress.

The Freedom of Information lawsuit was filed last September, after the FBI declined to release any records on the matter.

In March, as the case moved toward trial this summer, the Bureau unexpectedly released 31 of 35 pages that it said had been located. The partially censored records flatly contradict the FBI's earlier public comments, and state that the Sarasota Saudis had "many connections" to persons allied with the hijackers.

Last month, the Department of Justice asked U.S. District Judge William Zloch to quash the lawsuit, citing national security and saying the FBI had identified and released all documents responsive to its Sarasota probe.

But in his declaration, Graham, a former chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said those few pages "do not appear to be the full record of the FBI investigation." He dismissed the government's assertion that it lacks further documentation as "entirely implausible."

"On a matter of this magnitude and significance, my expectation is that the FBI would have hundreds or even thousands of pages of documents, " Graham stated.

As evidence that records continue to be withheld, Graham cited a Sept. 16, 2002, FBI report about Sarasota that he was allowed to see after making inquiries at the FBI. That report should have been released, he said, but was not.

Graham's declaration, and several by others involved in the case, were filed Friday along with a memorandum by BrowardBulldog.org attorney Thomas Julin asking the judge to deny the government's request to shut down the lawsuit and to schedule the case for trial.

Julin is a partner in the Miami law firm of Hunton & Williams.
 
9/11's lingering questions
OUR OPINION: Public deserves answers about Sarasota connection

http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/09/16/3649683/911s-lingering-questions.html

Reports of a previously unknown Saudi connection to the events of 9/11 in Florida cry out for a full airing. There are simply too many troubling questions surrounding the mystery of a hastily-abandoned house in Sarasota days before the attacks to sweep this matter under the rug.

The three-bedroom home in an upscale, gated residential compound was owned by a Saudi financier whose daughter, son-in-law and two young children lived there. They left a few days before 19 terrorists - 15 of whom were Saudis - carried out the plot to attack targets in this country. They left behind three cars, rooms of expensive furniture, food supplies, and other evidence of an abrupt exit, including clothes hanging in the closets, dirty diapers, mail left on the table and so forth.

More worrisome, they also had ties to the al Qaida terrorists. FBI agents, acting on a tip from a neighbor weeks later, found gate logs of vehicle tags showing that a car owned by hijacker Mohamed Atta had visited the compound. More information indicated that he and Ziad Jarrah, another hijacker, were in the car. Agents reportedly linked phone calls from the house to the Saudi attackers.

On Thursday, the FBI issued a statement saying it had followed up the information on the Sarasota house and "there was no connection found to the 9/11 plot." The bureau said it had informed Congress and the 9/11 Commission about its investigation.

That should not be the end of it, however. If there was an investigation, when did it end and what did they find? Who did they tell? What about the visits and phone calls? What was the nature of the connection between the hijackers and those who owned the house and lived there? There may be an explanation without connection to al Qaida, but after 10 years the public deserves answers.

Former Florida Sen. Bob Graham, who chaired the congressional investigation into the hijackings, emphatically disputes the assertion that the FBI informed Congress. That, too, should be cleared up. U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor, whose district includes Sarasota, has asked the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee to investigate, and Mr. Graham has asked President Obama's counterterrorism advisor to pursue the matter. Both of those requests should be honored in order to get a public accounting of what this all means.

The Saudi connection to the events of 9/11 has always been a matter of speculation and controversy. Over the years, the Saudi kingdom has itself come under attack by al Qaida terrorists. Its authorities have worked to diminish the influence of Islamic extremism, reportedly updating the scholastic curriculum to eliminate textbook references to jihad, slaying infidels and so forth, and hosting conferences of Islamic scholars to denounce terrorism.

That's progress. Unfortunately, some prominent Saudi officials still don't seem to get it. In an opinion article in The New York Times earlier this week, Prince Turki al-Faisal, a former Saudi ambassador to the United States and former director of its intelligence services, bluntly warned that U.S. failure to support the Palestinian bid for statehood at the United Nations would be a mistake. The headline: "Veto a state, lose an ally."

A proper regard for the lingering pain of Americans would dictate that the Saudis, of all people, should know better than to issue threats to this country on the anniversary of 9/11.

Ten years later, much about the Saudi connection remains unknown. An investigation prompted by the Sarasota connection would help to clarify matters.
 
Graham seeks deeper probe of 9/11 links
FBI records say a Saudi family in Sarasota was 'associated' with the terrorist hijackers, and the former Florida senator believes a new investigation is needed.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/04/18/3649925/graham-seeks-deeper-probe-of-911.html

By Dan Christensen and Anthony Summers

New FBI records connecting Saudis who lived in Sarasota before 9/11 to "individuals associated with the terrorist attacks" has spurred a renewed push to find out whether the al-Qaida suicide hijackers who killed almost 3,000 people had help.

"One question that has gone unanswered through the investigation of 9/11 is, 'Did the hijackers operate alone or did they have accomplices who facilitated their ability to act?' " said former U.S. Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla. "I think the information we have now makes a very strong case that they did."

Graham, co-chair of Congress' Joint Inquiry into the attacks a decade ago, met Tuesday with Senate Intelligence Committee member Ron Wyden, D-Ore., to discuss disclosures in the FBI records released to BrowardBulldog.org.

"He's very interested in getting to the bottom of the events in Sarasota, " said Graham, who plans to meet with senior Obama administration officials next week in Washington.

"The fact is that most of the hijackers spoke no English and had not been in the U.S. before, yet were able to carry out a very complicated plot while maintaining anonymity, " said Graham. "What we've discovered in Sarasota may be another step toward exposing a larger network of Saudi-related individuals who assisted the hijackers."

The FBI records provide new information about an investigation into what took place prior to 9/11 at the upscale home of Abdulaziz al-Hijji and his family in the gated community of Prestancia. Information in the records contradicts prior FBI statements that no evidence was found connecting the al-Hijjis to 9/11.

The names of individuals were redacted before the reports were made public, but are apparent because the documents describe unique, known events. The records were released in response to a specific request for information about the probe at al-Hijji's former residence at 4224 Escondito Cir.

Agents determined the al-Hijjis "fled" their home on Aug. 27, 2001 - two weeks before the attacks - leaving behind three cars, furniture, clothing, toys, food and other items.

"Further investigation of the [name deleted] family revealed many connections between the [name deleted] and individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on 9/11/2001, " an April 16, 2002, FBI report states.

The report lists three of those individuals. Two, including one described as a "family member, " were described as students at the nearby Venice airport flight school where suicide hijackers Mohamed Atta and Marwan al-Shehhi trained. The third person lived with some flight students, the report states.

BrowardBulldog.org previously reported that a counterintelligence officer speaking on condition of anonymity said an FBI examination of gatehouse log books and photos of license tags revealed that vehicles linked to the future hijackers visited al-Hijji's residence. Telephone records also reportedly showed indirect ties to the hijackers.

FBI agent Gregory Sheffield was the lead agent on the case. He wrote two 2002 reports that have been released, including one citing connections between al-Hijji and others tied to the attacks, the counterterrorism official said. Sheffield's name is blanked out of the FBI documents, too.

On July 22, 2002, Sheffield interviewed al-Hijji's wife, Anoud, and mother-in-law, Deborah Ghazzawi "regarding possible terrorist activity." The women, who had returned briefly to the home, denied fleeing before 9/11 or knowing certain unnamed individuals, according to the 2002 reports.

Soon after, Sheffield was transferred to the FBI's foreign counterintelligence, or FCI, division and left the area, according to the counterintelligence officer. The transfer suggested Sheffield may have recruited an al-Hijji family member as a source of information, the source said.

If so, that could explain why the FBI has reported finding only 35 pages of records regarding an investigation that records and interviews indicate resulted in the filing of numerous investigatory reports over a period of at least three years.

"I believe that the transfer of Sheffield to the FCI side of the bureau speaks volumes as to the lack of information available. If he was able to recruit a family member, then all information up to that point will be off limits under the National Security Act, " the counterintelligence source said.

Likewise, that scenario could account for a curious statement in another FBI report written after the Sarasota probe became public in September 2011. The report states, "The FBI appears not to have obtained the vehicle entry records of the gated community."

According to the counterintelligence officer, that statement is "not true." In fact, the source said, Agent Sheffield took the Sarasota files, apparently including the gatehouse and phone records, with him when he departed to his new, more-secretive FBI position.

Much remains unclear. Chunks of the released reports are blanked out for national security and other reasons. Four pages were withheld in their entirety.

Graham believes that what happened in Sarasota points to the idea that there was a broader support network of Saudis who provided aid and sympathy for the future hijackers.

Graham cites a "common outline" with events in San Diego, Calif., involving Khalid al-Mihdar and Nawaf al-Hazmi, two of the five Saudi hijackers aboard the American Airlines jet that was flown into the Pentagon.

The Joint Inquiry and 9/11 Commission reports describe how Omar al-Bayoumi, another Saudi living in San Diego, provided extensive assistance al-Mihdar and al-Hazmi, including housing.

One report said al-Bayoumi had access to "seemingly unlimited funding from Saudi Arabia" and that "one of the FBI's best sources in San Diego" reported al-Bayoumi appeared to be an intelligence officer for Saudi Arabia or another foreign power. The FBI also learned that al-Bayoumi "has connections to terrorist elements, " the report said.

"There is no evidence that Bayoumi knew what was going on; just that he'd been told to take care of these men, " said Graham, who has criticized the FBI for withholding key information about what happened in San Diego.

A former chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Graham believes a new investigation is now needed to get the truth.

"My goal is to have the investigation reopened and do a full inquiry into the Saudi aspects and then make the results available to the American people, " Graham said.

Such an inquiry should not be led by the FBI, Graham said.

"They are the ones who have significantly been responsible for us not knowing 10 years ago what the Saudi role was by withholding information and withholding witnesses, " he said.
 
Graham: Still no records on 9/11 probe
The FBI has been unable to prove that it shared information with Congress about possible links between a Saudi family in Sarasota and some 9/11 hijackers.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/09/11/3649780/graham-still-no-records-on-911.html

By Dan Christensen
Special to The Miami Herald

In September, news about a previously unknown FBI investigation into possible ties between 9/11 hijackers and a Saudi family living near Sarasota led the agency to deny there was any connection and assert that it made all of its files available to congressional investigators a decade ago.

But two months later, the FBI has been unable or unwilling to substantiate that it disclosed any information regarding its Sarasota investigation to Congress, says former Florida U.S. Sen. Bob Graham, who co-chaired Congress's inquiry into the terrorist attacks.

"My suspicion is that either, one, the documents don't exist; two, that if they do exist they can't find them; or three, they did find them and they did not substantiate the statements that they've made and that they are withholding them, " said Graham. He has long contended the FBI stonewalled Congress about what it knows about possible Saudi support for the 9/11 hijackers.

The FBI investigation began shortly after 9/11 when residents of the gated community of Prestancia, south of Sarasota, reported the abrupt departure of a Saudi family about two weeks before the attacks. The family left for Saudi Arabia, leaving cars, clothes, and a refrigerator full of food.

Neighbors said agents searched the house. But the most important information came when the FBI examined gatehouse security logs and photographs of license plates, according to then-homeowner's association administrator Larry Berberich and a counterterrorism agent.

They said the security records revealed that the home was visited by vehicles used by 9/11 terrorist leader Mohamed Atta and Ziad Jarrah. Atta piloted the first plane to strike the World Trade Center. Jarrah was at the controls when United Airlines Flight 93 crashed in a field in Shanksville, Pa.

The counterterrorism agent, who asked that his name not be disclosed, said an analysis of phone records found additional links between the residence and other hijackers and terrorist suspects, including Adnan Shukrijumah, a former Miramar resident who is on the FBI's Most Wanted list.

FBI agents in Tampa and Miami denied that any connection existed between the family and the terrorists.

Graham has said that he and other members and staff of the joint inquiry were not made aware of the Sarasota investigation by the FBI.

Graham asked the FBI in September to provide him with file numbers about the Sarasota inquiry and the dates those records were provided to congressional investigators. Graham said FBI agents produced 10 file numbers. But intelligence committee personnel determined "there was no information in any of the 10 files that was relevant" to the Sarasota investigation, he said.

Graham said, "The FBI asked [that] instead of finding the documents could they brief us instead. I said, 'No, that would not be acceptable.' "

The FBI turned down a Freedom of Information request The Miami Herald and Broward Bulldog that sought records about agents' findings in Sarasota, saying release of the records would be an invasion of the family's privacy.
 
Miami Herald joins suit asking FBI for 9/11 documents

http://www.heraldtribune.com/articl...rald-joins-suit-asking-FBI-for-9-11-documents

By Michael Pollick
Published: Friday, September 27, 2013 at 1:39 p.m.
Last Modified: Friday, September 27, 2013 at 1:39 p.m.

The Miami Herald Media Co. has joined the Herald-Tribune Media Group in urging a federal judge to make the FBI disclose details of its long-running Sarasota 9/11 investigation.

The two media companies want to be heard in an existing federal lawsuit against the agency by an independent news gathering organization in Fort Lauderdale, Broward Bulldog.

The FBI documents could shed light on the alleged interactions of a high-echelon Saudi family — living in Sarasota's Prestancia neighborhood just before the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon — and three hijacker pilots who trained in Venice about the same time.

The newspapers are seeking to persuade a federal judge that an FBI assertion of privacy interests is outweighed by the public's need to know what happened.

“The (Miami) Herald has covered, and will continue to cover, connections between 9/11 and Florida,” the media company's court filing says. “Several of the 9/11 hijackers had links to South Florida, the Herald's core coverage area.”

“The Herald has grave concerns about the connections between the 9/11 hijackers and the State of Florida,” the filing continues. “More importantly, the Herald would like to examine the thoroughness and outcome of the FBI's investigation, as well as determine whether the FBI misrepresented its findings to Congress or the public.”

U.S. District Court Judge William J. Zloch is presiding over the case, which was initiated in September 2012 by the Broward Bulldog and its Miami attorney Tom Julin.

U.S. attorneys representing the FBI and U.S. Department of Justice already have objected to the Herald-Tribune's request to intervene.

Saudi investigation
In late June, Judge Zloch denied the government's original motion to dismiss the case, filed by the FBI's attorney, assistant U.S. Attorney Carole M. Fernandez.

Zloch went further, asking Julin to describe in writing how the FBI might conduct a more thorough search for information relevant to the Broward Bulldog's Freedom of Information request.

The judge is expected to rule soon on the government's second attempt to get the case thrown out, known as a motion for summary judgment.

Fernandez, the federal attorney, has pointed to government efforts to satisfy Broward Bulldog editor Dan Christensen's request and she has followed up by noting how big a volume of material could still be searched.

She indicated that the FBI's Tampa office alone has hundreds of thousands of pages of documents related to the 9/11 investigation.

“The manual review which plaintiffs are requesting is not reasonable; nor is it warranted,” Fernandez said in an August court filing.

Records from the front gate at Prestancia from that time show that some of the 9/11 hijackers who trained in Venice visited the Saudi family, according to sources cited by the Broward Bulldog and a former security consultant involved in the case who was interviewed by the Herald-Tribune.

What started the back-and-forth over documents was the Bulldog's 10th anniversary 9/11 story, published on the news organization's website and also in the Herald-Tribune and the Miami Herald.

The article revealed details about a large, previously undisclosed FBI investigation centering on 4224 Escondito Circle, the home in Prestancia owned by prominent Saudi businessman Esam Ghazzawi.

His daughter, Anoud, and her husband, Abdulazziz al-Hijji, lived there until two weeks prior to 9/11, before departing suddenly for their homeland. They left food on the counter, a dirty diaper, three vehicles and an empty safe.

“Phone records and the Prestancia gate records linked the house on Escondito Circle to the hijackers,” the Broward Bulldog said.

Within days, the FBI issued a news release seeking to discredit the article's findings and sourcing.

That prompted Christensen to file state and national public record requests.

Those efforts have also drawn another ally. Bob Graham, the former Florida governor and U.S. senator, filed his own highly detailed declaration for the suit in May, in which he suggested that the government is obfuscating.

Graham, a former co-chairman of the 9/11 Commission, had already been trying within two presidential administrations to make public the chapter of the commission's report on how the terrorists were financed and supported.
 
9/11 victims' group lauds media suit over Saudi family

http://www.heraldtribune.com/articl...tims-group-lauds-media-suit-over-Saudi-family

By Michael Pollick
Published: Wednesday, October 2, 2013 at 10:07 p.m.
Last Modified: Wednesday, October 2, 2013 at 10:07 p.m.

SARASOTA - A support group for families who lost loved ones in the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks is applauding the Herald-Tribune and the Miami Herald for intervening in a federal lawsuit that seeks information about a Saudi family who abruptly left Sarasota just prior to the attacks.

The 9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism contends that the FBI has covered up information that could shed light on alleged Saudi financing of the terror plot, which killed more than 3,000 in New York and outside Washington, D.C.

“Maybe someday soon we’ll finally get to hear the truth,” said Bill Doyle, whose son, Joseph, died when the World Trade Center collapsed a dozen years ago.

“On the one hand, they say they have no evidence connecting the Sarasota Saudis to 9/11,” Doyle — who lived on Staten Island and now resides in The Villages near Orlando — said of the FBI. “On the other hand, they say releasing the information would threaten national security. Both of those things cannot be true. The federal court should not let them get away with it.”

In late September, the Miami Herald joined the Herald-Tribune Media Group in urging a federal judge in Fort Lauderdale to make the FBI disclose details of its long-running Sarasota 9/11 investigation.

The FBI documents could shed light on the alleged interactions between the terrorists and the one-time local family, relatives of well-connected Saudi businessman Esam Ghazzawi.

Ghazzawi owned the home at 4224 Escondito Circle in Prestancia, which was occupied by his daughter, Anoud, and her husband, Abdulazziz al-Hijji, until two weeks prior to 9/11.

When they departed, the couple left food in their refrigerator, dirty diapers lying about, an empty safe and cars in their driveway.

Records from Prestancia’s front gate show that some of the 9/11 hijackers who trained in Venice visited the al-Hijji household on multiple occasions, according to the Broward Bulldog, a Fort Lauderdale-based independent news organization, and a former security consultant interviewed by the Herald-Tribune.

But the FBI has stated publicly that it has cleared the family of any involvement in the plot.

“I don’t understand who they are protecting here,” said Sharon Premoli, a 9/11 survivor and a spokeswoman for 9/11 Families United, which has filed its own lawsuit in New York seeking details about the attacks. “I don’t understand why it is so intense, this shield, after the murder of 3,000 people.”

Premoli was on the 80th floor of the North Tower when a hijacked airliner slammed into her building. “That I am alive is a miracle,” she said.

Broward Bulldog founder Dan Christensen uncovered the Prestancia connection in 2011, and filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the Justice Department and the FBI the following year.

Prior to the lawsuit, the FBI had dismissed Christensen’s story as baseless and denied access to investigative files that he requested.

“I think it is important for the newspapers to participate to underscore the importance of the documents we are seeking,” said Christensen’s attorney, Thomas R. Julin. “Now, what you are seeing from the 9/11 families is this is not just a matter of local interest but a matter of national interest.”

Besides ruling on whether the media groups can chime in, U.S. District Court Judge William J. Zloch has two other critical motions to determine: a request to compel the government to do a better search for documents, as outlined by Julin in a court document requested by the judge this summer, and a motion by the government to throw the case out.

“My hope is that he will rule very soon, and that we will get a trial date set,” Julin said. “Then we can get an order requiring disclosure of all these documents that we know exist.”
 
Judge lets Herald-Tribune join suit over 9/11 case

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20140320/ARTICLE/140329952?p=1&tc=pg

By Michael Pollick
[email protected]
Published: Thursday, March 20, 2014 at 11:47 p.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, March 20, 2014 at 11:47 p.m.

A federal judge has approved requests by the Sarasota Herald-Tribune and the Miami Herald to join in a Freedom-of-Information lawsuit seeking to force the FBI to disclose details of its long-running Sarasota 9/11 investigation.

In a ruling issued Wednesday, Judge William J. Zloch gave friend-of-the-court status to the news organizations, allowing them to add their voices in the suit, initiated by an independent news organization based in Fort Lauderdale, The Broward Bulldog Inc.

“We see that as a good thing, recognizing the public importance of the documents that are being sought,” said the Broward Bulldog's attorney, Thomas R. Julin.

The Bulldog's case seeks case files about a Saudi family who abruptly left Sarasota just before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

The Florida nonprofit and its founder and editor, Dan Christensen, filed the original lawsuit in September 2012.

Attorney Carol Jean LoCicero, who represents the Herald-Tribune's parent company, Halifax Media Holdings LLC, has until noon Tuesday to file a brief.

“We are already working on it,” LoCicero said Thursday. “We are trying to show how broad the public interest is in this potential Sarasota relationship related to a national tragedy. The local angle is important. The Tampa field office was involved in investigating leads related to 9/11.”

A support group for families who lost loved ones in the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks applauded the Herald-Tribune and the Miami Herald in October 2013 for seeking to intervene in the federal case.

Of particular interest are agency documents that would shed light on the alleged interactions of a high-echelon Saudi family — living in Sarasota's Prestancia neighborhood just before the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon — and three hijacker pilots who trained at Venice Airport around the same time.

Records from the front gate at Prestancia from that time show that 9/11 hijackers visited the home owned by prominent Saudi businessman Esam Ghazzawi and occupied by his daughter Anoud and her husband Abdulazziz al-Hijjii, the Bulldog reported in a 10th anniversary piece published on the news organization's website and also in the Herald-Tribune, the Miami Herald and the Tampa Bay Times.

The article revealed the existence of a large, previously undisclosed FBI investigation centering on 4224 Escondito Circle in Prestancia.

Within days of publication, the FBI issued a press release seeking to discredit the article's findings and sourcing. That prompted Christensen to file state and national public record requests, which have yielded some corroborating information.

Al-Hijjii was still of interest to FBI Florida agent Leo Martinez and Sarasota Sheriff's office detective Michael Otis in April 2004. They interviewed former Sarasota cell phone shop operator Wissam Hammoud, who was in Tampa awaiting federal trial on unrelated but serious charges. A summary of the interview showed up in a document turned over by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.

According to Hammoud, al-Hijji's acquaintances included Adnan El Shukrijumah, who in 2010 was federally indicted for his alleged role in a terrorist plot to attack New York City's subway system. The FBI offered a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to El Shukrijumah's capture, and listed him as one of the “most-wanted terrorists.”

Hammoud told investigators that El Shukrijumah and al-Hijjii showed up together at informal soccer games on property surrounding a Sarasota mosque. Sukrijumah is from the east coast of Florida.

In an interview with the London Telegraph in February 2012, al-Hijjii emphatically denied any connection to hijackers, stating that he loved America.

Al-Hijjii acknowledged knowing Hammoud, but said Shukrijumah's name did not ring a bell.
 
Citing broad public interest, newspapers ask judge to deny U.S. bid to block 9/11 lawsuit

http://www.browardbulldog.org/2014/...k-judge-to-deny-u-s-bid-to-block-911-lawsuit/

By Dan Christensen and Anthony Summers
BrowardBulldog.org 911weremember

Two Florida newspapers have asked a Fort Lauderdale federal judge to deny the Justice Department’s effort to shut down a Freedom of Information lawsuit seeking records from an FBI investigation into apparent terrorist activity in Sarasota shortly before 9/11.

BrowardBulldog.org filed the suit in September 2012 alleging the government was improperly withholding records on the matter. The government, after unexpectedly releasing 31 highly censored pages last spring, argued the court should end the case due to national security considerations and asserted that a “reasonable search” had determined “there are no agency records being improperly withheld.”

Court papers filed Tuesday by attorneys for The Miami Herald and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune say they were intervening “to stress that the outcome of this case is a matter of intense interest to the media and the public generally.” The newspapers also argued that “government officials charged with investigating terrorist connections in our state must also be held fully accountable.”

“The Broward Bulldog has provided this court with ample evidence establishing that the FBI could not have possibly conducted adequate searches in response to its federal Freedom of Information Act request,” said the joint brief filed by Tampa attorneys Carol LoCicero and Rachel Fugate. “The stakes are simply too great to accept as a matter of law the government’s vague, often second hand conclusions as to the adequacy of its document searches.”

The newspapers’ friend-of-the-court brief asks U.S. District Judge William J. Zloch not to be “too quick” to accept an agency’s claim that it conducted “an appropriate search,” citing examples where records that should have been produced were not.

One cited case involves the conservative watchdog group, Judicial Watch, which sued in 2012 seeking records about the Obama Administration’s alleged coordination with the producers of Zero Dark Thirty, the motion picture about the hunt for Osama bin Laden. Allegations had been made that the White House provided the filmmakers with access to highly sensitive national security records in order to burnish President Obama’s reputation prior to the 2012 election.

A judge ordered the CIA to produce records about the matter, “but it was only months later that additional ‘overlooked’ documents were produced that included illuminating correspondence among the White House, the Department of Defense and the CIA suggesting a coordinated effort to provide a heightened level of access to the filmmakers and a desire that the administration be portrayed positively.”

Broward Bulldog.org, represented in the suit by Miami attorney Thomas Julin, first disclosed the existence of the FBI’s Sarasota investigation in September 2011.

The story reported how, a decade earlier, the FBI had found direct ties between 9/11 hijackers and a young Saudi couple, Abdulaziz and Anoud al-Hijji, who appeared to have hurriedly departed their upscale home in a gated community in the weeks before 9/11 – leaving behind cars, furniture, clothing, a refrigerator full of food and an open safe in the master bedroom.

Anoud al-Hijji is the daughter of the home’s owner, Esam Ghazzawi, a long-time adviser to a senior Saudi prince. Ghazzawi was also a focus of FBI interest after 9/11 when agents sought to lure him back to the U.S. from Saudi Arabia to close the transaction when the home was sold, according to a lawyer for the homeowner’s association.

Agents searched gatehouse logbooks and license plate snapshots and found evidence that vehicles used by the hijackers, including ringleader Mohamed Atta, had visited the home, according to a counterterrorism agent who spoke on condition of anonymity. A sophisticated analysis of incoming and outgoing phone calls to the home also established links to Atta and other terrorists, including Adman Shukrijumah, the agent said.

Shukrijumah, a former Miramar resident, is currently on the FBI’s “most wanted” list and the State Department is offering a $5 million reward for information leading to his capture.

The FBI publicly acknowledged its investigation but said it had found nothing connecting the al-Hijjis to 9/11.

Former Florida Sen. Bob Graham, who chaired Congress’ Joint inquiry into the attacks, has said the FBI never informed Congress or the subsequent 9/11 Commission about its Sarasota investigation.

The story has taken several twists since news of the investigation first broke.

In February 2012, Florida Department of Law Enforcement documents obtained using the state’s public records law showed that in April 2004 Wissam Hammoud, a now imprisoned “international terrorist associate” then under arrest in Hillsborough County, told the FBI that al-Hijji considered Osama bin Laden a “hero” and may have known some of the hijackers who trained at a flight school in Venice, about 10 miles from the al-Hijji residence. Hammoud also told the FBI then that al-Hijji had introduced him to Shukrijumah at a soccer game at a local mosque prior to 9/11. Hammoud confirmed making those statements in an interview.

Al-Hijji was reached in London in 2012 where he worked for Aramco Overseas, the European subsidiary of Saudi Aramco, the state oil company. He told The Telegraph that he knew Hammoud, but denied any involvement with terrorists. He called 9/11 “an awful crime.”

One year ago, six months after the lawsuit was filed, the FBI suddenly made public 31 redacted pages about its Sarasota investigation. The records flatly contradicted the Bureau’s earlier public statements that it had found no evidence connecting the al-Hijjis to the hijackers. Instead, the FBI records said the family had “many connections” to “individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on 9/11/2001.”

The declassified documents tied three individuals, with names blanked out, to the Venice flight school where Atta and fellow hijacker Marwan al-Shehhi trained. One of those individuals was described as a relative of the al-Hijjis, whose names were also redacted.

Last June, the Justice Department moved to end the lawsuit, citing national security. A senior FBI official told the judge disclosure of certain classified information about the Sarasota Saudis “would reveal current specific targets of the FBI’s national security investigations.”

The FBI did not explain how an investigation that it previously said had found no connection between those Saudis and the 9/11 attacks involved information so secret that its disclosure “could be expected to cause serious damage to national security.”
 
Judge orders thorough search of 9/11 records, rejects FBI’s bid to end lawsuit

http://www.browardbulldog.org/2014/...-911-records-rejects-fbis-bid-to-end-lawsuit/

By Dan Christensen and Anthony Summers
BrowardBulldog.org fbilogo

A federal judge Monday ordered the FBI to conduct a more thorough search of its vast files to identify documents about its once secret investigation of terrorist activity in Sarasota prior to 9/11.

Fort Lauderdale U.S. District Judge William J. Zloch’s order also rejected a request by the Department of Justice to throw out the Freedom of Information case filed by BrowardBulldog.org in September 2012. Justice has argued that the release of certain information about the matter “would reveal current specific targets” of national security investigations.

The suit alleges the government has improperly withheld information about a local Saudi family’s apparent connections to terrorists including 9/11 hijack pilot Mohamed Atta and Adnan Shukrijumah, the former Broward resident and alleged al-Qaeda figure who’s got a $5 million federal bounty on his head.

“This is a huge step in the right direction,” said Miami attorney Thomas Julin, who represents the four-year-old news organization. “The decision tells the FBI that this federal judge wants to make sure that the truth comes out.”

In his four-page order, Judge Zloch said he would issue a separate order detailing steps the FBI must take to comply with his order requiring the additional records search.

BrowardBulldog.org asked the court in July to compel the additional document search. The suit was filed after the FBI denied the news organization’s record requests under the Freedom of Information Act.

FBI RECORDS CONTRADICT PUBLIC STATEMENTS
Six months after the lawsuit was filed, the Bureau unexpectedly released 35 heavily redacted pages, including four pages that were completely blanked out, and asserted it had no more responsive documents to produce. The declassified pages flatly contradicted earlier public statements by FBI agents in Sarasota and Miami that the decade-old investigation had found no evidence of terrorist activity.

In his order, Zloch noted the government has provided him with un-redacted copies of those pages “for the court’s inspection.” Whether that information played a role in the judge’s decision is not known.

The Miami Herald and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, in a friend of the court brief last week, argued to the court, “The Broward Bulldog has provided this court with ample evidence establishing that the FBI could not have possibly conducted adequate (record) searches.

In the motion requesting a better search, attorney Julin proposed a number of measures the FBI could take to identify records: Use its $440 million Sentinel computer system, employ better word searches and conduct a manual review of all 15,342 documents about its 9/11 investigation, code-named PENTTBOM, said to be stored in the FBI’s Tampa field office.

The FOIA lawsuit seeks FBI records about its investigation of “activities at the residence at 4224 Escondito Circle in the Prestancia development near Sarasota, Florida prior to 9/11/2001 The activities involved apparent visits to that address by some of the deceased 9/11 hijackers.”

TIES TO TERRORISTS, TIES TO ROYALS
The address was the home of Abdulaziz and Anoud al-Hijji until August 2001, when the couple quit their home and returned to Saudi Arabia –leaving behind cars, furniture, clothing, food and other items. Anoud al-Hijji’s father, Esam Ghazzawi, a longtime advisor to a senior Saudi prince, owned the home.

Within hours of the attacks on New York and Washington, the al-Hijji’s neighbors began calling the FBI and other law enforcement agencies to tell them about the couple’s abrupt departure.

BrowardBulldog.org first disclosed the FBI’s Sarasota investigation in September 2011. The story reported how agents who searched Prestancia’s gatehouse found logbooks and snapshots of license plates that provided evidence that vehicles used by the hijackers, including Atta, had visited the home. An analysis of phone calls to and from the home also found links to Atta and Shukrijumah, according to a law enforcement source.

An FBI informant later reported that prior to 9/11 al-Hijji had introduced him to Shukrijumah at a soccer game at a Sarasota mosque.

Records obtained from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement show the FBI continued to investigate until at least 2004, when the informant was interviewed. The Bureau, however, never disclosed the existence of its investigation to either Congress’s Joint Inquiry into the attacks or the subsequent 9/11 Commission, according to former Florida Sen. Bob Graham, who co-chaired the Joint Inquiry.

Graham has accused the FBI of impeding Congress’s inquiry into 9/11.

The 31 pages of FBI records released one year ago say that the Sarasota Saudis who “fled” their home before the attacks had “many connections” to “individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on 9/11/2001.”

The records list three individuals, including one identified as a relative of the al-Hijjis, but their names were blanked out. All three, however, were tied to the Venice, Fl. flight school where Atta and fellow hijack pilot Marwan al-Shehhi trained.

Attorney Julin said Monday’s federal court ruling could lead to a better public understanding of the attacks that killed nearly 3,000 Americans.

“Maybe now we’ll get a chance to find out what the FBI knew about the Sarasota Saudis and why it did not tell Congress,” said Julin.
 
A conservative judge rebukes FBI as he orders it to find and turn over 9/11 documents

http://www.browardbulldog.org/2014/...rders-it-to-find-and-turn-over-911-documents/

April 6, 2014 at 6:01 am
By Dan Christensen and Anthony Summers, BrowardBulldog.org

Fort Lauderdale U.S. District Judge William J. Zloch has a reputation as a no-nonsense, conservative judge who can be short on patience, but is long on courtroom preparation and does not recoil from speaking his mind.

On Friday, after months of legal wrangling, Zloch spoke his mind for the first time on the FBI’s handling of a Freedom of Information lawsuit by BrowardBulldog.org that seeks records from the Bureau’s investigation into apparent pre-9/11 terrorist activity in Sarasota.

In a stinging, 23-page order, Zloch told the Department of Justice that it had failed to convince him that the FBI’s prior records searches had been “reasonably calculated to uncover all relevant documents,” as courts have said the law requires.

Zloch ordered the FBI to do something it had not done: use its sophisticated, $440 million Sentinel case management system to lead the search for relevant documents while adhering to various court-ordered conditions, including specific automated text searches. The judge gave the Bureau until April 18 – two weeks – to produce photocopies for his private inspection of all documents it identifies.

Zloch’s ruling is a “strong, clear directive to the FBI,” said former Florida Sen. Bob Graham, who in 2002 chaired Congress’ Joint Inquiry into the 9/11 attacks and has pushed Washington to release the FBI’s files about what happened in Sarasota.

“Since 2002 many sources, including the U.S. Senate, have been attempting to get information such as that which is likely to be disclosed under Judge Zloch’s order made available. This is the closest in 12 years that we’ve been to achieving that objective,” said Graham.

A MANUAL REVIEW OF HUGE PENTTBOM FILE
Further, Zloch ordered the FBI to conduct a manual review of all documents in its Tampa field office regarding the Bureau’s investigation of the 9/11 attacks, code-named PENTTBOM. He gave the FBI until June 6 to complete that more time consuming task.

The Department of Justice has opposed any additional search. In court papers filed last August, it argued that a manual review would require “extraordinary effort, time and resources to conduct.”

“The manual review which plaintiffs are requesting is not reasonable; nor is it warranted,” the department argued in court papers filed in August. “The FBI’s Tampa office alone has more than 15,352 documents (serials), which together contain, potentially, hundreds of thousands of pages of records related to the 9/11 investigation.”

Zloch disagreed. He decided a more thorough search is necessary due to “inconsistencies and concerns” about the government’s searches to date, as well as his need to assure himself that “the documents in dispute exist.”

Zloch noted, too, that early FBI assertions that its initial searches had yielded no responsive documents were followed months later, after the lawsuit was filed, by the release of 35 heavily redacted pages. Those pages, some partially blacked out on grounds of national security, contained no investigative reports yet did include some summary information that contradicted prior FBI public statements about the findings of its Sarasota investigation.

AN INVESTIGATION WITH NO DOCUMENTS?
“An investigation took place during this time period that apparently resulted in certain findings, yet seemingly, the search yielded no documentation. This alone moves the court to believe that a further search is necessary,” the order says.

Miami attorney Thomas Julin, who represents the non-profit news organization, said it appears Judge Zloch “definitely wants to get to the bottom of this and doesn’t like the fact that the FBI put out public statements trying to discredit the Bulldog’s reporting…His order makes it sound like he believes the government may be deliberately covering up.”

Zloch’s order goes beyond instructing the FBI to search and produce its own investigative reports. It also requires both the Justice Department and the FBI to “advise the court of any documented communications between defendants and other government agencies concerning the investigation” of the Sarasota Saudis. Again, Zloch wants that information by June 6.

“He’s showing real sensitivity to the likelihood that the FBI is acting under the direction of the Central Intelligence Agency or the National Security Agency,” said Julin. “If the FBI is simply following orders then he is telling the FBI he wants to know what those orders are and from who they are coming, whether it’s the CIA, the NSA or the President.”

The lawsuit was filed in September 2012, after the FBI denied requests under the Freedom of Information Act for copies of the agency’s reports about its Sarasota investigation.

A year earlier, BrowardBulldog.org had first disclosed the existence of the investigation in a story that reported how Abdulaziz and Anoud al-Hijji, a young Saudi couple, had abruptly moved out of their home in Sarasota’s Prestancia development and returned to Saudi Arabia two weeks before September 11, 20001. Anoud’s father, Esam Ghazzawi, a longtime advisor to a senior Saudi prince, owned the home.

Law enforcement focused on the al-Hijjis after suspicious neighbors called following the attacks to report that the couple had appeared to depart in haste, leaving behind their cars, furniture, clothing and even food in the kitchen.

HIJACKERS AT THE GATE
The story reported that agents who later searched Prestancia’s gatehouse found evidence in logbooks and snapshots of license plates that vehicles used by the hijackers, including ringleader Mohamed Atta, had visited the al-Hijji’s home. A law enforcement source said an analysis of phone calls to and from the home also found links to Atta and former Broward resident Adnan Shukrijumah, a fugitive and alleged al-Qaeda leader with a $5 million bounty on his head.

Documents obtained by BrowardBulldog.org from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement stated that a now imprisoned terrorist figure, Wissam Hammoud, told the FBI in 2004 that al-Hijji was an acolyte of Osama bin Laden who prior to 9/11 had introduced him to Shukrijumah at a soccer game at a Sarasota mosque.

Al-Hijj was interviewed last year by the London Telegraph. He acknowledged knowing Hammoud, but denied any wrongdoing.

The FBI never disclosed the existence of its Sarasota investigation to either Congress’s Joint Inquiry into the terror attacks or the subsequent 9/11 Commission, ex-Sen. Graham has said.

In his order, Judge Zloch explained that his doubts about the quality of the FBI’s prior records searches was rooted in part in the “gaps and inconsistencies” he observed in the handful of documents the FBI has produced to date.

He noted, for example, that one FBI document written after the Sarasota story broke in 2011 states that the investigation found no evidence connecting the Sarasota Saudis to the 9/11 hijackers while another, dated April 2002, says authorities found “many connections” between the family and “individuals associated with the terrorist attacks.”

“These statements seem to be in conflict, and there is nothing in defendant’s 35 produced pages that reconciles this stark contradiction,” the order says.
 
Unraveling Sarasota's 9/11 ties
FBI's handling of document requests is unacceptable

http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20140408/OPINION/304089997/2198/OPINION?template=printpicart

Published: Tuesday, April 8, 2014 at 1:00 a.m.

Instead of following the law and producing documents that could show whether or not Saudis living in Sarasota provided aid and assistance to the 9/11 terrorists, the FBI, a federal judge recently found:

• Provided records with "apparent" and unexplained chronological "gaps."

• Presented to the court "located documents" that "seem incomplete."

• Submitted "summary documents" that "do in fact seem to contradict each other."

The FBI's handling of requests for documents related to the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, which had links to locations and venues in Sarasota County, is unacceptable.

We and anyone interested in knowing more of the truth about 9/11 are grateful that U.S. District Court Judge William Zloch has steadily sought to require the FBI to adequately search for, find and release to the court documents requested under the Freedom of Information Act.

In contrast, it's troubling that the nation's top law-enforcement agency would not only be intransigent but would submit documents with gaps and contradictions to a federal court. The fact that the documents sought are relevant to one of the United States' greatest domestic tragedies compounds the concerns.

Saudis in Sarasota

The background:

In September 2011, two independent reporters writing for BrowardBulldog.org reported that a family from Saudi Arabia, who lived in Sarasota County's prestigious Prestancia development prior to September 2001, had connections with individuals associated with terrorism.

The report, reprinted three years ago by the Herald-Tribune, cited documents showing phone calls to the house were made by hijackers who trained in Venice to fly airplanes. The report also said the family was visited by people using a car licensed to Mohammed Atta -- who crashed the first plane into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11.

The FBI subsequently said the family was not "related to any threat nor connected to the 9/11 plot."

Yet neither the FBI nor anyone else has explained why the family, closely related to a prominent Saudi financier, abruptly left its Prestancia home two weeks before 9/11 -- leaving clothes in closets, food in the refrigerator and three cars in the driveway and garage.

Given the involvement of Saudi terrorists in the attacks, and evidence of Saudi financial support for them, the public deserves more than contradictory and incomplete information from the FBI.

The agency's credibility in this matter is not helped by the fact that its investigation of the family was not reported to Congress or mentioned in the independent 9/11 Commission report.

A more thorough search

In September and October 2011, the Broward Bulldog and reporter/editor Dan Christensen went to federal court to demand that the FBI release documents relevant to its investigation of the family. (Subsequently, Halifax Media Holdings, which includes the Herald-Tribune, and the Miami Herald filed "friend of the court" briefs in support of the plaintiffs.)

Judge Zloch, a Reagan appointee, has repeatedly ruled that the FBI is not complying with the Freedom of Information Act. The "gaps and consistencies" in documents provided to the court "underscore the need for a more thorough search," Zloch wrote in an order issued Friday.

The judge went to the trouble of identifying specific search functions for the FBI to perform -- citing the names, phrases and software to be used. Zloch gave the bureau deadlines, including one later this month, for conducting the additional search and submitting the relevant documents for his review.

It's vital to note that it's not known publicly whether the Saudi family had any role leading up to the attacks. But we do know, according to the FBI, that the family had "many connections" with "individuals associated with the terrorist attacks." Yet, according to Zloch, the search conducted by the FBI "yielded no documentation" of the investigation.

"This alone moves the court to believe a further search is necessary," Zloch wrote.

The judge emphasized that the efficacy of the investigation is not the matter before his court. At this point, Zloch wrote, the focus is on whether the FBI has submitted the documents required by federal law.

"Based on the limited information before it now," Zloch stated, "the court is unable to glean the whole truth."

The same can be said, unfortunately, for the nation as it relates to many things that happened before and after 9/11.
 
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