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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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jan_mar
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03159926.000
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1994-02-27
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<text>
<title>
(Mar. 15, 1993) A Case of Dumb Luck
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 15, 1993 In the Name of God
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER STORIES, Page 26
A Case of Dumb Luck
</hdr>
<body>
<p>High tech, hard work and surprise twists give investigators
a swift break in the search for the tower bombers
</p>
<p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--With reporting by Edward Barnes/Jersey
City, Sophfronia Scott Gregory/New York and Elaine
Shannon/Washington
</p>
<p> The odds were heavily against investigators finding
anything so decisive so soon. Telltale clues presumably lay at
ground zero, the spot where the giant bomb had gone off in the
parking garage under Manhattan's World Trade Center towers. And
ground zero was buried at the bottom of a seven-story-deep
crater, hidden under rubble and surrounded by beams that would
have to be strengthened to prevent their collapsing on top of
overeager probers.
</p>
<p> Still, the search had to start somewhere. So late in the
afternoon of Sunday, Feb. 28--a bare two days after the blast
that killed at least five people and injured more than 1,000 in
the most destructive terrorist attack ever on U.S. soil--10
investigators began picking their way down a ramp leading to
what had been the garage's second parking level, shining
flashlights on the mangled remains of cars and trucks that had
been blown to bits. "Hey, look at this," said an agent from the
federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Joseph Hanlin, a
bomb expert from ATF, picked up a thin, charred, twisted bit of
metal about 18 in. long. "This is something that we need to
take."
</p>
<p> That piece of metal led investigators across the Hudson
River, to a Jersey City mosque of Islamic fundamentalists where a
frequent guest was a blind preacher who had long advocated holy
war. In a nearby apartment agents found electronics manuals and
wiring and other bomb-making material. By week's end authorities
had two men in custody. One, Ibrahim A. Elgabrowny, had dunked
his hands into a toilet to foil any testing for traces of
explosives, a prosecutor charged at his arraignment. The other,
Mohammed A. Salameh, an illegal immigrant from Jordan, had
rented the van that apparently carried the bomb into the Trade
Center garage. In a scene that no thriller novelist would dare
dream up, Salameh was arrested as he tried to get his $400
rental deposit back.
</p>
<p> Despite the early break in a case that was expected to take
months, if not years, to crack, there were still countless
questions. "At this point, we don't know if we're looking for
three or four more people, or 15 or 20," says an investigator.
Washington authorities feared that some terrorists might have
fled to the Middle East or were trying to do so; the Justice
Department circulated to airlines the names of three Muslims
and told the companies not to let them board flights out of the
country.
</p>
<p> Investigators were also unsure about the exact motives,
identity and whereabouts of the actual bombmaker and the driver
or drivers who wheeled the explosive-filled van into the
garage. (It is entirely possible that pieces of his or their
bodies lie amid the other wreckage at the bottom of the crater.)
Even so, the incomplete tale was already the most fascinating
real-life detective story in years.
</p>
<p> When they started down the ramp, the probers--eight from
ATF, two from the New York City police bomb squad--knew what
they were searching for. The blast had been so tremendous that
the explosives necessary to produce it could not have been
crammed into an ordinary car. So the investigators were looking
for pieces of a van or truck so badly burned and twisted as to
indicate that they had come from a vehicle at or near the
center of the blast. The piece of metal they found looked just
that heavily damaged, and the trained eyes of the probers
recognized it as part of the frame of a van.
</p>
<p> That find might only have started a months-long forensics
process. In order to identify the vehicle, investigators feared
that they might have to reconstruct an entire van from pieces
scattered not only on the ramp but also at the bottom of the
crater. Turning over the piece of metal, though, investigator
Hanlin noticed a blackened but decipherable sequence of five
numbers. They were part of the vehicle identification number
stamped on various parts of vehicles to help police trace one
that is stolen or wrecked in an accident. Experienced agents
know that the identification numbers are actually codes that
indicate the make, model and year of a car.
</p>
<p> After extrapolating the full VIN from the fragment, the FBI
contacted the Ford Motor Co., which checked its records and
found that the vehicle was a yellow Ford Econoline E-350 van
that had been sold to the Ryder Truck Rental Co. in Alabama.
Ryder officials turned up the license plate XA70668 and reported
that the van had been rented out of the company's Jersey City
office. By Wednesday, only three days after the piece of metal
had been found on the ramp, the FBI was in contact with Ryder
officials in Jersey City, who had no difficulty remembering the
van and its renter; he had been making a pest of himself.
</p>
<p> On Tuesday, Feb. 23, Salameh rented the van for a week,
putting down $400 in cash. Three days later--and less than
three hours after the Trade Center bombing--Salameh showed up
again and, presenting the keys as proof, claimed that the van
had been stolen from a supermarket parking lot the night before
and asked for his $400 back. He was told he would have to
report the theft to the police. On Monday, March 1, Salameh came
back, again asked for his $400 and once more was told he would
have to present a police report of the theft.
</p>
<p> The FBI would just as soon have watched Salameh for a while
in the hope that he would lead them to other suspects. But news
was starting to leak; by Wednesday night the FBI knew that New
York Newsday was about to report that a rented van stolen in New
Jersey was involved in the blast. James Fox, head of the New
York City FBI office, who coordinated much of the investigation,
says his office considered asking Newsday to hold the story but
decided not to because other papers and radio and TV stations
had pieces of the story and the agency could not stop all of
them.
</p>
<p> Instead, the fbi decided to mount a sting. Over the phone
early Thursday morning, Ryder agent Patrick Galasso told
Salameh he could get some money even without a police report of
the van's theft. A farcical scene followed. According to some
reports, two TV-news trucks showed up before the suspect did;
Connie Bello, a Ryder day manager, chased them away by telling
them they had the wrong Ryder office. It is known that Salameh
had in fact reported the supposed theft of the van to Jersey
City police. By some accounts two Jersey cops also showed up at
the Ryder office on Thursday morning, of all inconvenient times,
to check out the complaint; Galasso had to go outside and warn
them away. Finally, Salameh walked in and talked to an FBI agent
posing as a Ryder official. The agent offered Salameh $200 in
cash; Salameh loudly demanded more but finally took it and
walked out. FBI agents followed and arrested him a block and a
half away as he prepared to board a bus.
</p>
<p> Shortly after the arrest, the world learned that Salameh
would be brought into court that night for a "presentment," a
proceeding similar to arraignment. The White House had been
closely watching the case, and George Stephanopoulos, President
Clinton's communications director, had taken the unusual step of
confirming that an arrest had been made. He also promised that
FBI director William Sessions and acting Attorney General Stuart
Gerson would have something to say about the case at a Thursday
afternoon news conference. In fact, they annoyed reporters by
insisting that they could not make any comment pending the court
appearance that night, which only heightened the drama.
</p>
<p> About 7:45 p.m.--two hours late--Salameh, in handcuffs,
was led by marshals into the jammed Manhattan federal district
court of Judge Richard Owen. Salameh was a slight, dark-skinned
man about 5 ft. 8 in. tall, with close-cropped dark hair and
beard, dressed in sneakers and a light gray sweat suit that
billowed around him. Federal authorities in Washington later
disclosed some basic information about the suspect. He is 25
years old, an Arab who was born on the West Bank but grew up in
Jordan. He entered the U.S. in 1987 with a five-year visa and
remained in the country illegally. New York police commissioner
Raymond Kelly later said that Salameh was "not unknown" to his
department, and an FBI official in Washington confirmed that
Salameh's name had turned up in a search of the bureau's files
on suspected terrorists, though obviously before last week the
FBI had not had information enough to make an arrest.
</p>
<p> Through his court-appointed attorney, Robert Precht, who
had just met his client, Salameh requested an Arabic
interpreter. Judge Owen assigned one from the FBI, who leaned
close to Salameh's ear as the judge read the charge: the
suspect had aided and abetted the Trade Center bombing, and thus
helped kill five people, violating a federal antiterrorism
statute for which the death penalty could be imposed. The
wording of the charge was somewhat general because, says Fox,
the FBI does not yet know what Salameh's exact role was--whether he was the actual bomber, a minor figure in a terrorist
plot or something in between.
</p>
<p> The accused man requested bail. He said he could line up 10
people who would offer $50,000 cash, enough to secure a $5
million bond--an odd assertion for a suspect who had been
feverishly trying to get $400 back from Ryder. But declaring
Salameh a "serious risk," Judge Owen ordered the suspect held
without bail for a preliminary hearing March 18. Salameh later
told his attorney he was innocent and believed he was being
persecuted for his religious beliefs. Precht says his client
has requested a copy of the Koran, a watch so he can pray at
the proper times and a change in his feeding schedule so that
he can observe ritual daytime fasting for Ramadan. Salameh also
asked the lawyer to contact his father, who is still in Jordan.
</p>
<p> If Salameh is guilty, it still must be determined how to
account for what looked like his extraordinary stupidity in
renting a van under his own name, presenting a valid New York
driver's license with a real and traceable phone number and,
instead of disappearing after the bombing, calling attention to
himself by repeatedly trying to recover the deposit. Such
behavior seemed to indicate that the plot was a wildly
amateurish--though horribly successful--operation.
</p>
<p> There are other opinions, however. Some experts note that
sophisticated foreign terrorists sometimes make cynical use of
gullible young zealots who are misled as to what they are
really doing. Another theory holds that Salameh and/or
associates theorized, wrongly but understand ably, that the
blast would so obliterate all traces of the van that it could
never be identified. In that case, leaving a rented van missing
and unaccounted for would be the way to arouse suspicion, so
that reporting it stolen and demanding the deposit back would
be a way of diverting attention. But why rent a van at all,
rather than stealing one or buying one for cash and giving a
false name?
</p>
<p> In any event, Salameh's arrest promptly led to a widening
investigation. The complaint read at his court appearance
detailed the results of one follow-up. It seems that Salameh
had given Ryder a phone number that turned out to be registered
to one Josie Hadas at an apartment in Jersey City. Salameh may
have been living there, but FBI agents apparently found no proof
when they searched the apartment. What they did find, according
to the court papers, was a letter addressed to Salameh
(contents undisclosed), "tools and wiring, and manuals
concerning antennae, circuitry and electromagnetic devices." One
expert interpreted these as evidence that a "bombmaker" had been
in the apartment--the more so because "a dog trained in the
detection of explosives" sniffed around and "responded
positively."
</p>
<p> At the same time as the raid on the Jersey City apartment,
FBI agents went to an apartment in Brooklyn where Salameh
apparently had once lived (its address is on his driver's
license). There they found Ibrahim Elgabrowny, a 42-year-old
self-employed carpenter, who allegedly tried to punch an
investigating agent and was arrested on a charge of obstructing
justice. At a court hearing Friday, Judge Owen mysteriously
remarked that Elgabrowny might be involved "up to his eyeballs"
in the Trade Center bombing.
</p>
<p> On Friday federal authorities raided Space Station, a
storage facility about a mile from the apartment where Salameh
once lived. Witnesses saw three trucks emerge, hauling away what
were thought to be containers of sulfuric acid, nitric acid and
urea, chemicals that could be used to make explosives. Jersey
City police would say only that they "found a lot of stuff that
may be linked to Salameh" and took it to an undisclosed
destination for examination.
</p>
<p> From there the trail grows tenuous and circumstantial. The
mailbox on the Brooklyn apartment bears the names of both
Elgabrowny and his cousin El Sayyid Nosair, who is serving a
prison term on weapons-possession charges related to the 1990
slaying of Rabbi Meir Kahane, a Zionist zealot. Salameh is
known to have worshipped at a Jersey City mosque--actually a
bare room under a leaky roof--where he would have heard the
fiery sermons of Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman, a blind cleric from
Egypt whom the U.S. government is trying to deport. The sheik
vocally advocates overthrow of the Egyptian government of Hosni
Mubarak, a U.S. ally, and some merchants in the Little Egypt
section of Jersey City speak of the mosque and its communicants
with fear.
</p>
<p> The obvious suspicion is that the Trade Center bombing was
carried out by a group of Muslim fundamentalist fanatics who
regard all moderate Arab leaders as traitors to Islam, and the
U.S. as their prime support. Whether these somewhat nebulous
suspicions can ever be pinned down, let alone proved, is
another matter. Sheik Omar has denounced the Trade Center
bombing and claims not even to know Salameh.
</p>
<p> One of the loosest loose ends is that investigators are not
yet sure even what kind of explosive went off in the van. Early
reports had them concluding from traces of nitrates found at the
blast scene that dynamite had been used. But James Ronay,
explosives-unit chief at the FBI laboratory in Washington, says
the presence of nitrates in the rubble was "meaningless";
nitrates are contained in exhaust fumes, paint, cleaning
materials, foodstuffs and many other substances. Nonetheless,
his best guess is that the explosive was in fact dynamite or
something similar; the pattern of blast damage is more
consistent with dynamite than with the plastic explosives often
favored by terrorists. Fox also believes that "the velocity of
the blast indicates that [the explosive] is in the dynamite
family, which includes TNT and the so-called witches' brew of
fertilizer and fuel oil. Most of our guys who have been around
a while seem to think that's what it will turn out to be--witches' brew."
</p>
<p> One theory is that an unstable explosive was used that went
off prematurely--perhaps when the van was going over a speed
bump--and blew up the bombers along with their bomb. The blast
seems to have occurred either on the ramp or at the bottom of
it--not ordinarily a spot where bombers would park, get out
of the van and take an elevator up to the street. A foul odor
in the crater could point to the presence of bodies in the
wreckage, but it could have other causes as well.
</p>
<p> Even after investigators get down into the crater to check
out "the real hot stuff" and run down all the leads stemming
from Salameh, Fox warns, it may be years before the probers can
piece together a full picture of the bombing conspiracy. But
then, investigators were saying much the same thing about the
possibility of developing leads at all even as they were
closing in on Salameh. Perhaps they will get lucky again.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>