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Investigator: Atta visited New York
12/08/2001
By PAT MILTON Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK — Mohamed Atta, suspected
ringleader of the Sept. 11 terrorist hijackings, rented rooms in New York City
in the spring of 2000 with another hijacker, a federal investigator said.
Authorities learned of their stay in New York while retracing the
hijackers' steps prior to the attacks, according to the investigator, who spoke
to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.
Investigators
confirmed that Atta and the second man rented rooms in Brooklyn and the Bronx,
and are trying to identify anyone who might have supported them.
Atta's trail in Brooklyn began with a parking ticket issued to a
rental car he was driving, said a senior Justice Department official, who also
spoke on condition of anonymity.
``We know a lot since Sept. 11,'' the
official said. ``We know how (the hijackers) came in and where they were. But
there's still a lot of pieces we don't know.''
Neither official would
elaborate on Atta's activities in New York or identify the hijacker who
accompanied him.
Marwan Al-Shehhi, a hijacker believed to be a relative
of Atta, entered the United States at about the same time. Atta and Al-Shehhi
are believed to have been at the controls of the planes that hit the World Trade
Center.
Atta, an Egyptian with ties to Islamic fundamentalists
in Germany, flew to Newark, N.J., on June 2, 2000 from Prague in the Czech
Republic, Czech authorities have said. The trip is his earliest confirmed visit
to the United States.
By July 2000, Atta and Al-Shehhi were taking pilot
lessons at a flight school in Venice, Fla.
Atta has emerged as a central
figure among the hijackers. In the months before the terror attacks he was seen
in Florida, Maryland, New Jersey, California and Nevada with the men who went on
to hijack four jetliners on Sept. 11. He also made at least three trips to
Europe between June 2000 and Sept. 11, once meeting with a suspected Iraqi
intelligence agent.
Unlike others who used stolen identities to confuse
authorities, Atta mostly used his own name and vital statistics as he traveled
the country in the months before the hijackings.
Witnesses have
identified Atta as a frequent visitor at a Paterson, N.J., apartment rented by
other hijackers six months before the attack. He also was seen in a suburban
Washington motel room where five men stayed from late August through Sept. 10.
On Sept. 10, Atta and another hijacker, Abdulaziz Alomari, checked into
a motel in Portland, Maine. The next morning, they flew to Boston, where they
barely caught American Airlines Flight 11. That jetliner crashed into the World
Trade Center.
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