Difference between revisions of "TWA Flight 800"
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The four-year [[NTSB]] investigation concluded on August 23, 2000, ending the most expensive air disaster investigation in United States history. It concluded that the crash was caused by a gas tank explosion.<ref name=dm>http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2344246/Are-conspiracy-theorists-say-TWA-flight-800-shot-right-Flimmakers-claim-jet-crashed-Long-Island-killing-230-hit-explosions-OUTSIDE-aircraft.html</ref> | The four-year [[NTSB]] investigation concluded on August 23, 2000, ending the most expensive air disaster investigation in United States history. It concluded that the crash was caused by a gas tank explosion.<ref name=dm>http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2344246/Are-conspiracy-theorists-say-TWA-flight-800-shot-right-Flimmakers-claim-jet-crashed-Long-Island-killing-230-hit-explosions-OUTSIDE-aircraft.html</ref> | ||
− | == | + | ==Response== |
+ | The [[Associated Retired Aviation Professionals]] was set up in early 1997{{by whom}}. Members include former military, civilian, and aviation professionals who are "committed to independently investigating the mysterious crash of TWA Flight 800". Their website, although dated, contains some pages of evidence and links and was online as of 2017.<ref>http://twa800.com/</ref> | ||
+ | |||
The wreckage is permanently stored in a custom-built [[NTSB]] facility in Ashburn, Virginia. The reconstructed aircraft is used to train accident investigators.<ref>{{cite news |title=Aircraft Boneyards|date= |publisher=History Channel |url=http://www.history.com/minisites/boneyard/ |work=Boneyard |accessdate = August 9, 2007 |archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20071024082940/http://www.history.com/minisites/boneyard/ |archivedate = October 24, 2007}}</ref><ref>http://www.ntsb.gov/TC/facilityloc.htm#wreckage</ref> | The wreckage is permanently stored in a custom-built [[NTSB]] facility in Ashburn, Virginia. The reconstructed aircraft is used to train accident investigators.<ref>{{cite news |title=Aircraft Boneyards|date= |publisher=History Channel |url=http://www.history.com/minisites/boneyard/ |work=Boneyard |accessdate = August 9, 2007 |archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20071024082940/http://www.history.com/minisites/boneyard/ |archivedate = October 24, 2007}}</ref><ref>http://www.ntsb.gov/TC/facilityloc.htm#wreckage</ref> | ||
Revision as of 15:21, 18 November 2017
Date | July 17, 1996 |
---|---|
Location | Moriches Inlet, near, East Moriches, New York |
Website | http://twa800.com |
Deaths | 230 |
Survivors | 0 |
Exposed by | Kristina Borjesson, Henry F. Hughes |
Interest of | James Kallstrom |
Description | A suspicious air crash, which occurred simultaneously with a live fire exercise being carried out by the US Navy. |
TWA Flight 800 was destroyed in 1996, killing all 230 people on board, in a fireball just out of New York. In spite of over 250 eyewitnesses reporting that they saw something like a missile, the most expensive NTSB investigation in US history concluded on August 23, 2000 that its explosion was due to an internal failure of the plane.[1]
Contents
Official narrative
TWA Flight 800 spontaneously exploded, probably caused by a random spark igniting one of the gas tanks. Over 250 eyewitnesses spoke of a missile were mistaken due to an optical illusion. The CIA produced a video explaining how this might look, adding an explanatory message in large text: “There Was No Missile.”[2]
Initial reports
Over 250 people said they saw something streaking toward the plane and then an explosion[2][3][4]. Many believed that the cause of the crash was a surface-to-air missile attack.[5][6][7]
A video about TWA 800 by Jack Cashill |
Roy Unz writes that a home video of a missile striking and destroying TWA 800, was sold for more than $50,000 and briefly broadcast on the MSNBC cable news channel before reportedly being seized as evidence by FBI agents.[2]
Violation of S.O.P.
WhatReallyHappened alleges that the US Navy "kicked out the New York Police Department divers, who had legal jurisdiction in the area", and sent its own deep salvage vessels to the area, and searched as wide as searched out 20 miles to either side of the known debris field. Information was leaked by the FBI and the US Navy which implied that there was an object of extreme biological danger aboard Flight 800, one which posed a serious risk to anyone who picked it up. Although later retracted, the story, coupled with reports of bio-suited soldiers along the beaches of Long Island, created the impression that the FBI and NTSB did not want anyone looking too closely at any of the wreckage.[8]
Press Conference
The film Shadows of Liberty includes footage of an early FBI press conference about the fate of TWA Flight 800 at which an activist asked "Why is the navy involved in the recovery when they are a suspect?" By way of answer, the chairman just pointed at him and declared "Remove him!" and he was summarily manhandled out of the room by 4 or 5 suited men. The commercially-controlled media 'journalists' continued with their set questions as if nothing had happened.
NTSB investigation
Many eye-witnesses claimed they had seen a streak of fire heading towards the plane before it crashed[1] and the initial NTSB investigation concluded that the cause was most likely criminal, so it passed control to the FBI, since the NTSB does not investigate criminal cases.[9] In the case of TWA 800, the FBI initiated a parallel criminal investigation alongside the NTSB's accident investigation.[10]
The four-year NTSB investigation concluded on August 23, 2000, ending the most expensive air disaster investigation in United States history. It concluded that the crash was caused by a gas tank explosion.[1]
Response
The Associated Retired Aviation Professionals was set up in early 1997[By whom?]. Members include former military, civilian, and aviation professionals who are "committed to independently investigating the mysterious crash of TWA Flight 800". Their website, although dated, contains some pages of evidence and links and was online as of 2017.[11]
The wreckage is permanently stored in a custom-built NTSB facility in Ashburn, Virginia. The reconstructed aircraft is used to train accident investigators.[12][13]
Failure to tighten standards
Pilot, accident investigator and author Rodney Stich (who published a book critical of the TWA800 official narrative) notes that safety regulations as regards fuel tanks were not tightened as a result of the event, "providing further support to the fact that no one, including the aircraft manufacturer, believes that a spark was involved".[14]
Boeing's difference of opinion
As evidence of Boeing's position, Rodney Stich quotes a December 9, 1999 The Seattle Times article that "The Boeing Co. said this week that the lack of evidence as to what sparked the blast that downed TWA Flight 800 three years ago points to an "external source," such as a bomb or missile. Boeing's statement in court documents Tuesday is the strongest to date revealing an aggressive legal defense that blames the 747 crash on a bomb or missile—which the FBI and National Transportation Safety Board long ago ruled out."[15]
Passengers
- Mohammed Samir Ferrat, a millionaire businessman who had accompanied US Commerce Secretary, Ron Brown on a 1996 trade mission to Ivory Coast, and according to some reports had also been scheduled to accompany him to Bosnia, where Brown was died after the Croatia USAF CT-43 crash.[16]
“Police are investigating the possibility that insurance fraud by a Swiss resident listed among the 230 people killed in the TWA Flight 800 explosion might have been behind the disaster, Swiss television reported last night. Swiss authorities have been investigating Algerian-born Mohammed Samir Ferrat, for 18 months, the report said... A Geneva lawyer, Gerald Page, alleged in an interview for the Swiss television report that Ferrat took out life insurance policies worth several million Swiss francs in the weeks before the plane crashed in July 1996, half an hour after taking off from New York... On August 19, a month after the crash, the local medical examiner in Suffolk County - in whose jurisdiction the disaster occurred - declared that Mohammed Ferrat had been positively identified as a dead passenger from TWA Flight 800. US investigators counted him out as a suspect early... The report showed footage of the late US commerce secretary, Ron Brown, at the Washington signing with Ferrat of a pounds 62.5 million contract between Sofin and the US construction firm Chatwick Inc, which was to build residences in the Ivory Coast.”
(27 May 1998) [17]
Other TWA 800 passengers included:[18]
- Charles Beatty, 50, senior systems engineer with the Naval Surface Warfare Center in Dahlgren, a Navy Research and Development Center
- Charles H. "Hank" Gray, 47, president and chief operating officer of Midland Financial Group, Inc. (which has many ties to Arkansas)[19]
- Pam Lychner, American crime victims' rights advocate
- Rodolphe Mérieux, physician, son of Alain Mérieux, the president of the pharmaceutical company Merieux Laboratories, the primary researcher in aids vaccines.
Related Document
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
File:Proof the Investigation is Politically Directed TWA Flight 800.pdf | report | 21 July 1997 | Joe Brancatelli | A report about what an airline executive with military background thought about TWA Flight 800 in the immediate aftermath. |
Rating
No definitive conclusion, but an introduction to a deep event which remain undeciphered to this day.
References
- ↑ a b c d http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2344246/Are-conspiracy-theorists-say-TWA-flight-800-shot-right-Flimmakers-claim-jet-crashed-Long-Island-killing-230-hit-explosions-OUTSIDE-aircraft.html
- ↑ a b c http://www.unz.com/runz/american-pravda-the-destruction-of-twa-flight-800/
- ↑ http://pix11.com/2013/07/17/twa-flight-800-crash-a-reporter-reflects-on-the-disaster-17-years-on/
- ↑ http://whatreallyhappened.com/RANCHO/CRASH/TWA/STATEMENTS.html
- ↑
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- ↑ http://whatreallyhappened.com/RANCHO/CRASH/TWA/twa.php
- ↑ National Transportation Safety Board. "The Investigative Process". Retrieved February 11, 2010.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "Scribunto").
- ↑ National Transportation Safety Board. "NTSB Board Meeting on TWA 800 August 22, 2000, Morning Session". Retrieved February 11, 2010.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "Scribunto").
- ↑ http://twa800.com/
- ↑
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- ↑ http://www.ntsb.gov/TC/facilityloc.htm#wreckage
- ↑ http://www.defraudingamerica.com/twa_flight_800.html
- ↑ http://www.defraudingamerica.com/twa_800_boeing_explanation.html
- ↑ http://www.nytimes.com/1996/08/18/nyregion/quietly-officials-seek-clues-in-lives-of-flight-800-s-dead.html
- ↑ The Guardian
- ↑
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- ↑ https://whatreallyhappened.com/RANCHO/CRASH/TWA/PASSENGERS.html