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LOOSE CHANGE, 2ND EDITION RECUT -- ILLUSTRATED SCREENPLAY |
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FOX News: Any large pieces of debris at all? Chris Kaniki: No. There was nothing, nothing that you could distinguish that a plane had crashed there. FOX News: Smoke? Fire? Chris Kaniki: Nothing. It was absolutely quiet. It was actually very quiet. Nothing going on down there. No smoke, no fire. Just a couple of people walking around, it looked like part of the NTST crew, walking around looking at the pieces. FOX News: How big would you say that hole was? Chris Kaniki: From my estimates, I guess it was probably about 20-15 feet long and probably about 10 feet wide. FOX News: What could you see on the ground, if anything, besides dirt and ash? Chris Kaniki: You couldn’t see anything. You could just see dirt, ash, and people walking around.
“It looked like somebody just dropped a bunch of metal
out of the sky.”
“It looked like someone took a scrap truck, dug a 10-foot
ditch and dumped trash into it.”
“I stopped being coroner after about 20 minutes, because
there were no bodies there.”
“I have not, to this day, seen a single drop of blood.
Not a drop.” Wally Miller, a Somerset County Coroner: “It looked like somebody just dropped a bunch of metal out of the sky.” In the Washington Post, “It looked like someone took a scrap truck, dug a 10-foot ditch and dumped trash into it.” And as for the passengers, “I stopped being coroner after about 20 minutes, because there were no bodies there.” In the Pittsburgh Review: “I have not, to this day, seen a single drop of blood. Not a drop.” It would seem that on one day, for the second time in history, an entire plane, along with its passengers, disappeared upon impact. Reporter: There are no signs of any survivors at the site of a Nigerian plane crash. That is the word from the Red Cross which has a representative on site. The first pictures of the crash scene show a large crater with a Boeing 737 broken into small pieces. The plane crashed shortly after taking off from Legos in a heavy storm. The flight was going to the Nigerian capital of Abuja and was believed to be carrying some senior Nigerian officials. So if Flight 93 didn’t go down in Shanksville, then where? You ready for this? Cleveland. UAL FLIGHT 93 LANDED SAFELY AT CLEVELAND HOPKINS AIRPORT, by 9News Staff At 11:43 on September 11th, WCPO, a local TV station in Cincinnati, Ohio, reported that two planes landed at Cleveland Hopkins Airport due to a bomb threat. United Airlines identified one of the planes as Flight 93. Are you confused? Well, it gets better. Check it out. At approximately 10:00 a.m., Cleveland Hopkins Airport was evacuated amidst rumors that a hijacked plane was going to land. Passengers had to leave but couldn’t drive. They had to walk or hitchhike. Buses weren’t allowed to leave. People were sent home.
“People … were forced to walk for
miles … because they were not even allowed to remove their cars. They
closed all [freeway exists] and even bus drivers were told that if they
[tried to leave], they would be shot.” NO EXPLOSIVES FOUND ON CLEVELAND PLANE, by Paul Singer According to the Associated Press, and local Ohio papers, one plane landed at approximately 10:45, but Delta Airlines confirmed that their plane, Delta 1989, landed in Cleveland at 10:10. Therefore, Flight 93 landed in Cleveland at approximately 10:45. Authorities searched Delta 1989 for two hours, and passengers were questioned individually. The plane dealer reported that the plane was evacuated at 12:30. But the Akron Beacon reports that a plane was evacuated at 11:15, which would make that Flight 93.
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