Funding for plot financed with $500,000 bankroll
Published:
30 September 2001 y., Sunday
Investigators of the Sept. 11 terrorist plot continued to focus Sunday outside the United States, following a paper trail that apparently leads through Europe and the Middle East. The FBI sent more agents to Germany in the search for the masterminds of the plot, which The Washington Post reported was financed with a $500,000 bankroll.
THE NEW YORK TIMES reported Saturday that within hours of the attacks, German intelligence agents intercepted a celebratory phone call between followers of alleged terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden. The callers referred to “the 30 people traveling for the operation,” the Times reported. This prompted the FBI to search frantically for two more teams of potential hijackers, the newspaper said.
The intricate efforts were not cheap: The attacks cost about $500,000 to finance, according to a report in The Washington Post. The Post said investigators had traced the money flowing into U.S. bank accounts used by suspect Mohamed Atta. The FBI documented numerous large cash withdrawals and a long trail of hotels, rental cars and airplane trips, according to the report.
Time magazine reports in its issue on newsstands Monday that Atta, a leader of the hijackers, received wire transfers of cash Sept. 8 and 9 via a money service in Florida. It said FBI records showed that the sender was Mustafah Ahmed, a suspected bin Laden financial operative in the Middle East.
The hijacking plot appears to have been planned in England, Germany and the Middle East, with some suspects in the attacks traveling into and out of the United Arab Emirates.
Šaltinis:
msnbc.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The use of animals in scientific experiments could soon be reduced by new legislation, approved by the Agriculture Committee on Monday, which strives to strike the right balance between improving animal welfare and assisting research against diseases.
more »
EU holidaymakers travelling by plane or train are protected by a whole range of consumer rights.
more »
The European Commission welcomes the European Parliament voting in favour of a regulation on rights of passengers travelling by sea and by inland waterways.
more »
Mobile phones, computers, TVs - we like them but where do they go when we are finished with them? In the worst case they can be dismantled by hand for scrap by children in developing countries.
more »
Following the death of President Algirdas Mykolas Brazauskas, on 28 June Lithuanian Embassies abroad opened the door for people, who want to sign the Condolence Book.
more »
Passengers will enjoy easier access to information about their rights when travelling by rail or air thanks to a Europe-wide publicity campaign in 23 languages launched by the European Commission today.
more »
Lithuania has been grieved by the heartbreaking news about the decease of Algirdas Mykolas Brazauskas, former President, Prime Minister, Signatory to the Act of Independence, and the first Head of State of Lithuania after the Restoration of Independence.
more »
We have lost a warm person and a prominent politician who had been at the wheel of state at challenging and difficult stages in the history of Lithuania.
more »
Europe's financial and economic crisis is increasingly becoming a social crisis too, and is testing European solidarity to the limit.
more »
In a move to enforce a style of dress they believe is in accordance with sharia law, the authorities in the Muslim Indonesian province of West Aceh are handing out long skirts to women wearing tight pants.
more »