From those who were there: investigation reveals that at least 156 witnessed WTC explosions from Truth and Shadows
Todd Heaney and Frank DiLeo of Engine 209 help an injured firefighter. Photo: NY Daily News.
April 8, 2016
By Craig McKee
So much of the most important evidence the 9/11 Truth
Movement has in its arsenal can be attributed
to the work of researchers who went above and beyond what
others were willing to do.
One who has made such a contribution is Canadian academic Graeme MacQueen. The
retired university professor and author of The
2001 Anthrax Deception: The Case for a Domestic Conspiracy took on the
daunting task of examining close to 12,000 pages of oral histories given by
employees of the Fire Department of New York in the weeks and months after
9/11. These accounts reveal that many witnessed explosions in the World Trade
Center that morning, supporting the position that the towers were brought down
in controlled demolitions.
“It’s all well and good to say these buildings were demolished, but surely
someone would notice, right?” MacQueen said in an interview. “Well, they
This treasure trove of eyewitness evidence was just waiting to be examined, but for years the City of New York was determined to keep that from happening. It took a lawsuit by the New York Times to force the release of the pages in 2006.
The idea for the project, MacQueen explains, came from an article written early that year by David Ray Griffin, entitled “Explosive Testimony: Revelations about the Twin Towers in the 9/11 Oral Histories” in which 31 witnesses to explosions in the towers were identified. Fascinated by the selection of first-hand accounts that Griffin had presented, MacQueen thought a more detailed analysis of all 503 histories could reveal more. The accounts—from firefighters, emergency medical technicians, and paramedics—were recorded between early October 2001 and late January 2002.
“They suffered through the thing; many of them are sick now,” he explains. “They can tell me what they saw, what they heard, what they felt — just remarkable. What an opportunity to just get a sense of what it was like that day.”
As MacQueen discovered, many gave vivid descriptions of explosions. After carefully examining all the accounts, he arrived at a “cautious” total of 118 who reported blasts (he says he was actually criticized for underestimating).
“They’re more reliable, in my opinion, than most newspaper accounts because these people were taped, and the audio tapes were transcribed,” he says. “You get the name of the person; you get where they were, who interviewed them, and when they were interviewed. This is really useful.”
MacQueen: eyewitnesses important.
MacQueen posits that he was one of the first to read all of
the firefighter oral histories, which were officially named The World Trade Center Task Force Interviews.
(The accounts were taken by the Port Authority of New York at the instruction
of city fire commissioner Thomas Von Essen.) The result of MacQueen’s
investigation was an article called “118 Witnesses: The Firefighters’ Testimony to Explosions in
the Twin Towers,” which was published in the Journal of 9/11 Studies (of which he is currently co-editor) in
August 2006. More on the findings can be found in the AE911Truth book Beyond
Misinformation , which was released last September. (I was
a contributing writer to the book while MacQueen served on its technical review
committee.)
While the figure of 118 became established within the Truth Movement—even
though people were often not aware of where it had originated—MacQueen decided
in 2011 that he could investigate whether there were witnesses to explosions other than FDNY employees. He examined
police accounts assembled by the Port Authority Police Department and looked at
many media reports that featured interviews with eyewitnesses and first-hand
reports by journalists.
The result of this phase of work was a second paper, entitled “Eyewitness Evidence of Explosions in the Twin Towers,”
which he presented at the International Hearings on the Events of September 11,
2001, better known as the Toronto Hearings, that September. His findings led
him to increase the cautious total of witnesses to 156.
“I wasn’t just worried about my own credibility, I was really worried about the
credibility of the movement,” he said, adding that there could be many more who
witnessed explosions, and he encourages others to continue this research.
In MacQueen’s second paper, he quotes firefighters Dennis Tardio and Pat Zoda,
who many have seen in various 9/11 videos (including the Naudet brothers
documentary) describing the series of explosions they witnessed. MacQueen
writes:
Zoda says, as he moves his hand: “Floor
by floor, it started poppin’ out.” Tardio concurs and uses the same hand
gesture: “It was as if they had detonated, detonated (Zoda: “Yeah, detonated,
yeah”), you know, as if they were planted to take down a building: boom, boom,
boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.” Zoda adds: “All the way down. I was watching and
running.”
The paper quotes Paul Lemos, a set designer who was in the WTC vicinity to
participate in filming a TV commercial:
All of a sudden I looked up and about
twenty stories below…the fire…I saw, from the corner, boom, boom, boom, boom,
boom, boom, boom, boom, boom…just like twenty straight hits, just went down and
then I just saw the whole building just went ‘pshew’…and as the bombs were
goin’ people just started running and I sat there and watched a few of ‘em
explode and then I just turned around and I just started running for my life
because at that point the World Trade Center was coming right down…
Why eyewitnesses are so important
When he first began to look at the oral histories, MacQueen explains, he
thought it would be helpful for the movement if he could contribute some “solid
and quantifiable” data that could help test the controlled demolition
hypothesis, adding that the eyewitness record is a valuable complement to all
the forensic evidence that has been gathered. He admits there are significant
prejudices against eyewitness accounts because many feel they are unreliable.
But, he says, it is possible to learn a great deal from what eyewitnesses
describe when the accounts are analyzed and when they are combined with other
types of evidence.
“Eyewitness evidence is really important,” he asserts. “Ordinary people can
identify; they can relate to that. If you start evoking their high school
physics, they just tune out. But if you can say, look, this was a cop who was
on the scene and says there was an explosion that was so strong it picked him
up and threw him across the concourse—well, they can relate to that.”
Firefighters offer vivid descriptions of explosions.
In his second article, MacQueen addressed the claim by some
that eyewitnesses are unreliable and therefore should be disregarded:
Eyewitness evidence certainly has its
vulnerabilities: we know that eyewitnesses can misperceive, misremember and
deceive. But, as with other kinds of evidence, we have developed ways of
checking to see if what the witnesses report is accurate. For example, we look
for corroborating evidence—further eyewitness evidence as well as evidence of entirely
different kinds.
He makes the point that it is important not only to look at how many people
perceived explosions but also how many of the histories seemed to contradict
them.
“You don’t just cherry pick; you don’t just look for things that support your
hypothesis, you look for the opposite as well.”
MacQueen explains in the second paper that of the 156 eyewitnesses, 121 are
from the Fire Department of New York, 14 are from the Port Authority Police
Department, 13 are reporters (most of whom were working for major television
networks), and eight are listed as “other”—mostly civilians who worked in the
area of the Towers.
“Members of the FDNY and PAPD are what we
call “first responders.” So 135 out of 156 witnesses, or 87% of the total, are
first responders. This is significant because these people have had much more
experience of explosions than most of us. Moreover, their statements were given
to superior officers as part of their professional duties, and the
circumstances in which the statements were collected make this eyewitness
evidence, in my view, very strong.”
One of the challenges for MacQueen when he began his project in 2006 was how to
analyze the documents—what to look for, what would support the existence of
explosions, and what would count against it. He read through the accounts once
to determine a list of terms that would be relevant to the subject and then a
second time to record how many featured key words like “explosion,” “bomb,”
“implosion,” and “blast.” As he proceeded, he says he made a point of erring on
the side of caution—meaning that someone who mentioned a loud rumbling or other
similarly vague description was not
included in the total.
A number of
those interviewed for the oral histories later changed their view about explosions,
MacQueen concedes, but this came after the official narrative was firmly
established, and that narrative did not include the use of explosives. Some
firefighters who originally said they experienced explosions later came to
think they must have been mistaken because the official story had the buildings
coming down primarily because of office fires.
“Our memory of these things will change, and it will tend to be in the
direction of the social consensus,” MacQueen points out.
But despite some changing their story as time passed, most of those who
reported explosions have stuck to their stories, and their powerful and
revealing oral histories are a tremendously valuable resource for anyone who
wants to know what happened at Ground Zero that day.
“It’s extremely important,” he says. “The whole global war on terror is at
stake here.”
***
A few
examples of what fire department employees described
Richard Banaciski
South Tower: We were there I don’t know, maybe 10, 15 minutes and then I just
remember there was just an explosion. It seemed like on television they blow up
these buildings. It seemed like it was going all the way around like a belt,
all these explosions.
Gregg Brady
North Tower: We were standing underneath and Captain Stone was speaking again.
We heard — I heard 3 loud explosions. I look up and the north tower is coming
down now…
Edward Cachia
South Tower: As my officer and I were looking at the south tower, it just gave.
It actually gave at a lower floor, not the floor where the plane hit, because we
originally had thought there was like an internal detonation explosives because
it went in succession, boom, boom, boom, boom, and then the tower came down.
Frank Campagna
North Tower: That’s when it went. I looked back. You see three explosions and
then the whole thing coming down. I turned my head and everybody was
scattering.
Craig Carlsen
South Tower: I guess about three minutes later you just heard explosions coming
from building two, the south tower. It seemed like it took forever, but there
were about ten explosions. At the time I didn’t realize what it was. We
realized later after talking and finding out that it was the floors collapsing
to where the plane had hit. We then realized the building started to come down.
The second one coming down, you knew the explosions. Now you’re very familiar
with it.
John Coyle
South Tower: I started running after him and looking over my shoulder. The
tower was–it looked to me–I thought it was exploding, actually. That’s what I
thought for hours afterwards, that it had exploded or the plane or there had
been some device on the plane that had exploded, because the debris from the
tower had shot out far over our head… But nobody knew what had happened. I
still thought it had exploded, something had exploded. At that point I had no
idea what had happened. It seemed that the thing had blown up.
North Tower: Everybody I think at that point still thought these things were
blown up. So I was fully expecting anything else to blow up.
Frank Cruthers
And while I was still in that immediate area, the south tower, 2 World Trade
Center, there was what appeared to be at first an explosion. It appeared at the
very top, simultaneously from all four sides, materials shot out horizontally.
And then there seemed to be a momentary delay before you could see the
beginning of the collapse.
Kevin Darnowski
South Tower: At that time I started walking back up towards Vesey Street. I
heard three explosions, and then we heard like groaning and grinding, and tower
two started to come down.
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