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9/11 AIRPLANE PASSENGER LISTS

MEDIA PUBLISHED FAKE PASSENGER LISTS FOR AMERICAN AIRLINES FLIGHT 11

By Gerard Holmgren [email protected]

Wed May 11, 2005

Copyright. This article may be freely reproduced as long as it it is not for commercial purposes. Please include the authors name, the URL where you found it, and the copyright notice.

As everyone knows, on Sept 11 2001, 5 Arabs allegedly hijacked American Airlines flight 11 and crashed it into the Nth Tower of the World Trade Centre at 8.46 A.M. It was part of a crime which killed approximately 3000 people.

Any crime of this magnitude, is - or should be - subject to rigourous examination by investigative and law enforcement authorities, such as the FBI. In any crime involving the illegal use of a plane, it is obvious that one of the first investigative steps taken by such authorities is to find out who was on the plane.

This is not a difficult thing to do. Airlines keep well organized records of everybody on any particular flight. The apparent ID of anyone on that flight - regardless of whether they used a true or false ID - should be immediately available to authorities.

Unless authorities decide that disclosure of such information may jeopardize the investigation, it should also be easily available to the media. It should be as simple as an exchange of faxes or emails between the media and either the airline involved or one of the relevant authorities to which the airline has released the information. Or possibly printed copies handed out at a press conference.

In relation to the alleged AA11, there has never been any indication that such information has been withheld for security reasons. We have been given the clear impression that the information relating to exactly who was on that plane has been made available to us via the media - which presumably sourced it in the manner suggested above. If the information had been withheld, one would expect that to be known.

Supporters of the official story seem to support this view. In the face of mounting evidence that none of the Sept 11 crashes were actually caused by the planes alleged to have been involved (some of this evidence is linked at the conclusion of this article), supporters of the official story will often reply with a demand to know exactly what happened to the alleged passengers, illogically imagining the lack of a specific answer to represent a flaw in the no planes/substitute planes argument. Implicit in this demand is the belief that there is solid documentation of who the passengers were.

Anybody can put up a website, do an interview or send an email, claiming to be family or friend of a plane victim. But the only credible, official source for such information is the airline passenger list, and the only credible source for obtaining this information is the airline itself, or authorities and media to which the airline makes it available. One can't demand an explanation of what happened to particular people alleged to be on the flight unless one can prove that they were on the flight. Implicit in the official story is the assumption that such information has been established in the public domain by the media.

It is therefore incumbent upon any serious investigator to properly examine such passenger lists and ensure that they match with other alleged facts we have been given, and with the processes by which one would expect the information to have been sourced.

In this context, the following statement by "USA Today" in relation to its published passenger lists is of some concern.

"Partial lists of passengers and crew killed in Tuesday's terrorist attacks, according to family members, friends, co-workers and local law enforcement."
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2001/09/11/victims-list.htm

This is a very strange way to source such information. Why not get it from American Airlines or the FBI? If neither of these were consulted, how did USAT know who's "family members, friends, co-workers" to go looking for? Or if AA and the FBI were the first source of inquiry, why a partial list from hearsay sources?
Why "local law enforcement" rather than the feds, who would surely have any complete database of the victims? This statement appears to make no sense at all, except to confirm that the obvious sources where any media outlet should be looking - American Airlines and the FBI - seem to have been left out of the process. And it gets more ridiculous.
At http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2001/09/12/victim-capsule-flight11.htm
USAT gives the following bio of one of the alleged victims.

"Tom McGuinness, of Portsmouth, N.H., was co-pilot of American Airlines Flight 11, an official at his church confirmed...He said church pastors were with his wife when she was notified Tuesday morning. "

Surely American Airlines, the FAA or the FBI would be the most reliable sources of who was co-piloting the plane. A family member, who's ID can be verified would be a reasonably good unofficial source, but first one needs to find out which family one is looking for. In the process of ascertaining that, one should have already received official confirmation. This source is someone who claims to know such a family member - a second hand attribution to a source which is not official anyway, and should be subject to confirmation from AA, The FAA or the FBI.

Why does USAT cite the church administrator as the source, indeed the confirmation of the information, when they can't have found out anything about how to find the church administrator without first consulting the official source, which could comfirm it far more authoritively ? The indications are that the church administrator contacted USAT with this claim, and USAT accepted this hearsay at face value. If so, this is very poor journalism.

One can't be certain of the exact processes employed by USAT, but its fair to say that there are strong indications that its passenger list is based on hearsay, because they had some kind of problem in obtaining the routine documentation which one would expect to be available, but failed to give a direct disclosure of what that problem was.

By contrast, CNN, introducing its passenger list, says
http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2001/trade.center/victims/main.html

"authorities from American Airlines, United Airlines, the Department of Defense, the New York City Medical Examiners Office and the New York City Fire Department, have released partial lists. They are linked below."

This is a clear indication that CNN claims to have sourced its passenger information as one would expect.

The first list passenger list for AA11 which I studied was that presented by CNN.

http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2001/trade.center/victims/AA11.victims.html

It says that there were 92 people aboard, but if you count the names listed there are 87 - and no Arabic names. On the surface, this seems reasonable. One can speculate that CNN has published the names of all 87 innocent victims, and deleted the names of the 5 hijackers for sensitivity reasons.

If so, why is said that American Airlines released a "partial list" ?

For the moment, lets give CNN the benefit of the doubt and assume this to be a complete list (in contradiction to what they wrote) of the 87 innocents alleged to be on board - a list sourced from AA, whether directly, or indirectly via a law enforcement agency. A reading of the names suggests that the CNN list may actually represent only 86 people - one name duplicated with different spelling.

Robin Caplin and Robin Kaplan are listed as two different people. There is a brief bio for Kaplan, but nothing for Caplin, except the home town.

Perhaps this is just an enormous co-incidence and two people with such names actually were on the flight ? Lets suspend judgment for the moment, while we investigate further.

I then checked the passenger list provided by USA Today.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2001/09/11/victims-list.htm
Again, it is described as a partial list. It contains 86 names. - one less than the 87 which should represent a complete list. Robin Caplin is missing. However, two other names from the CNN list - Jude Larson and Natalie Larson - are also missing, and the list contains two names which are not on the CNN list.

Kelly Booms and Pendyala Vamsikrishna.

Lets think through the possibilities.
1) Two of the names from the collective passenger lists are fictitious.
2) Neither list is complete, and the complete list of innocents only emerges from a collective viewing of the lists - as strongly implied by the term "partial list" used in relation to both lists. If so, then we have 89 innocents. If this is the case, there can't be 5 hijackers for a total of 92 people. And yet nobody seems to dispute these two figures.

At http://www.boston.com/news/daily/12/victims_list.htm

We find a list of AA 11 victims published on Sept 13 2001, which, judging by the introduction, may have come from exactly same the source as that used by USAT today. It begins thus.

"By The Associated Press. Partial list of those killed in Tuesday's terrorist attacks, according to family members, friends, co-workers and law enforcement. "

Compare it with the introduction to the USAT list.

"Partial lists of passengers and crew killed in Tuesday's terrorist attacks, according to family members, friends, co-workers and local law enforcement."

However this list is quite different to that published by USAT - or CNN . While not giving any summation, it contains the names of 89 alleged innocents and introduces two new names - Robert Jalbert and James Roux. Vamsikrishna and Booms are the two names not included from the collective CNN and USAT lists. Since it publishes 89 names as a "partial list " this implies a minimum of 90 innocents aboard the plane.
From the three combined lists, we now have 91 alleged innocents and 5 hijackers for an apparently undisputed summation of 92. The Boston Daily list ,in isolation, implies a minimum of 95 aboard, while the collective lists imply 96 - if one is to believe in 5 hijackers. Alternatively, there must be four fictitious innocents.

This Boston Daily list also contains "Heath Smith", which would appear to be a substitute for "Heather Smith" named on the previous two lists.

A year later, the Boston Daily published a very different list, seemingly without acknowledging any previous error.

http://www.boston.com/news/packages/sept11/anniversary/victims/flight11.htm

It contains only 87 names. Jalbert ,Roux,Caplin and the two Larsons have been dropped for Booms,Vamsikrishna and another new name - Waleed Iskander - who is not alleged to be one of the terrorists. Heath Smith has become Heather Lee Smith. A person named on every other list as Antonio Montoya has become Antonio Jesus Montoya Valdes. Peter Hashem has been replaced by Peter el-Hachem.From the bio, it appears to be a different name for the same person While the odd spelling discrepancy or missing hyphen is quite plausible, this much of a name change is stretching the credibility a little. I can believe that "Green" could become "Greene" or "Catherine" become "Katherine", but "Hashem" becoming "el- Hachem" - from an official passenger list - is more difficult to accept.

This is most unsatisfactory. The combined lists now name 92 innocents, so if one is to believe in 92 aboard, 5 of which were hijackers, we now have 5 fictitious innocents.
We have three major mainstream media outlets, publishing 4 lists which all contradict each other about who was on board, when this information should have ultimately come from one official,well organized source.

I checked another list - from the Guardian dated sept 13 ,2001
http://www.guardian.co.uk/wtccrash/story/0,1300,551423,00.html

This also claims 92 people aboard. It published only 75 names, saying

"This is a preliminary, partial list of passengers aboard the flight whose next of kin have been notified. Some families asked the airline not to include their loved ones' names: these do not appear. "

Fair enough. So this list is unable to be fully tested for consistency with either of the other four conflicting lists. However, it does agree on the number of people aboard. 92. This creates a real headache for the official story. Is the figure of 92 correct? Should it be really be 97 - the 92 collectively listed innocents plus 5 hijackers? If so, why is everyone saying 92 ? Or were there no hijackers? If so, why is everybody saying 5 ? Or are 5 of these names fictitious ? If so,why ?

The Guardian list also has Heath Smith instead of Heather Smith, and Hashem rather than el-Hachem.

There's another problem. If AA released only 75 names on Sept 13, how did the Boston Daily mange to publish 89 on the same day ? Where did they get the extra names that the airline was still withholding ?

Now the list from NBC
http://www.msnbc.com/modules/wtc/victims/default.asp?p=5

It lists 87 names for a summation of 92, and is the same as the USAT list, except for the addition of Iskander. That is - the same as the anniversary list from the Boston Daily.

I checked another mainstream media source - PBS

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/terrorism/sept11/victims/aa11.html

which entitles its list " One year later. Remembering the victims."

This agrees with the NBC and Boston anniversary lists.

Lets review the problems so far.

From five mainstream media outlets we have four conflicting lists.

Robin Caplin and Robin Kaplan on the same flight is difficult to believe, especially as Caplin is one of the frequently missing names.

The lists can't agree on the correct names for three of the passengers - Hashem/el- Hachem, Heath/Heather Smith, and Antonio Montoya/Valdez .

There are collectively 92 innocents and 5 hijackers for a total of 92 aboard.

So these are the possibilities
a) 5 of the innocents are fictitious
b)There were no hijackers
c) Some of these people were the real hijackers
d) There were 97 people aboard.

At this point, I will clarify what I mean by "fictitious". It may be that the extra names represent real people, who are missing and presumed dead. It may be that they have family and friends who honestly believe that the missing person boarded a flight called American Airlines 11. That's a matter for further research. But for five of these individuals who have been listed, (although we can't at this stage specify who ) the belief that they were on AA11 is proven to be false - unless one is to accept one of the other possibilities above.

The Washington Post from Sept 12
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A18970-2001Sep12

Introduces its list as

"American Airlines partial passenger lists"

and then lists 89 names, (no hijackers) implying a minimum of 95 aboard. Once again, how did it get 89 names on Sept 12, if AA was still withholding some of them on Sept 13 ?

Those missing are Iskander, Vamsikrihna and Jalbert. This doesn't even agree with the missing three from the Boston Daily's first list of 89, published the day after. The missing names there were Iskander, Vamsikrishna and Booms. So even if it were to be argued that the Boston Daily and the Washington Post somehow found a source of which the Guardian was unaware, their lists still don't match.

Fox news
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,34223,00.html

lists only 81 names. It gives no summation and introduces the list as

"Confirmed on board American Airlines Flight 11 Boston to Los Angeles: "

perhaps implying that this is only a preliminary list and that a complete list is still awaiting confirmation. The problem is that this report is dated Sept 20, 2001. Why does it take more than 9 days to achieve the simple task of obtaining an official passenger list? Perhaps the story about AA only releasing 75 names on Sept 12 is true, and that by Sept 20, this had risen to 81. If so, then those who were publishing 89 names on Sept 12 and 13 have some explaining to do. But if they were telling the truth, then the Guardian has some explaining to do, and so does Fox in relation to why it was only able to confirm 81 names more than a week later. And yet, even those who were ...


PEOPLE KILLED IN PLANE ATTACKS

by USA Today http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2001/09/11/victims-list.htm

9/25/01

Partial lists of passengers and crew killed in Tuesday's terrorist attacks, according to family members, friends, co-workers and local law enforcement.

American Airlines Flight 11: A Boeing 767 en route from Boston to Los Angeles. The plane, carrying 81 passengers, nine flight attendants and two pilots, crashed into a tower of New York's World Trade Center about 8:45 a.m. ET.

Crew:

  • Barbara Arestegui, 38, Marstons Mills, Mass., flight attendant
  • Jeffrey Collman, 41, Novato, Calif., flight attendant
  • Sara Low, 28, Batesville, Ark., flight attendant
  • Karen Martin, 40, Danvers, Mass., flight attendant
  • Thomas McGuinness, 42, Portsmouth, N.H., first officer
  • Kathleen Nicosia, flight attendant
  • John Ogonowski, 52, Dracut, Mass., captain
  • Betty Ong, 45, Andover, Mass., flight attendant
  • Jean Roger, 24, Longmeadow, Mass., flight attendant
  • Dianne Snyder, 42, Westport, Mass., flight attendant
  • Madeline Sweeney, 35, Acton, Mass., flight attendant

Passengers:

  • Anna Williams Allison, 48, Stoneham, Mass., founder, A2 Software Solutions
  • David Angell, 54, Pasadena, Calif., executive producer, NBC's ''Frasier''
  • Lynn Angell, Pasadena, Calif.
  • Seima Aoyama
  • Myra Aronson, 52, Charlestown, Mass., press and analyst relations manager
  • Christine Barbuto, 32, Brookline, Mass., TJX Co.
  • Carolyn Beug, 48, Los Angeles, Calif.
  • Kelly Booms, 24, Boston, Mass., PricewaterhouseCoopers
  • Carol Bouchard, 43, Warwick, R.I., emergency room secretary, Kent County Hospital
  • Neilie Casey, 32, Wellesley, Mass., TJX Co.
  • Jeffrey Coombs, 42, Abington, Mass., security analyst, Compaq
  • Tara Creamer, 30, Worcester, Mass.
  • Thelma Cuccinello, 71, Wilmot, N.H.
  • Patrick Currivan
  • Brian Dale, 43, Warren, N.J.
  • David DiMeglio, Wakefield, Mass.
  • Donald Ditullio, 49, Peabody, Mass., Smith and Nephew
  • Albert Dominguez, 65, Sydney, Australia
  • Alex Filipov, 70, Concord, Mass., electrical engineer
  • Carol Flyzik, 40, Plaistow, N.H.
  • Paul Friedman
  • Karleton D.B. Fyfe, 31, Brookline, Mass., John Hancock
  • Peter Gay, 54, Tewksbury, Mass., plant manager, Raytheon Co.
  • Linda George, 27, Westboro, Mass., TJX Co.
  • Edmund Glazer, 41, Los Angeles, Calif., chief financial officer, MRV Communications
  • Lisa Fenn Gordenstein, 41, Needham, Mass., TJX Co.
  • Andrew Curry Green, 34, Los Angeles, Calif., director of business development, eLogic
  • Paige Farley Hackel, 46, Newton, Mass., spiritual counselor
  • Peter Hashem, 40, Tewksbury, Mass., salesman
  • Robert Hayes, 37, Amesbury, Mass., sales engineer, Netstal
  • Ted Hennessey, 35, Belmont, Mass., consultant
  • John Hofer
  • Cora Holland, 52, Sudbury, Mass., Sudbury Food Pantry at Our Lady of Fatima Church
  • Nicholas Humber, 60, Newton, Mass., owner, Brae Burn Management
  • John Jenkins, 45, Cambridge, Mass., corporate office services manager, Charles River Associates
  • Charles Jones, 48, Bedford, Mass., computer programmer
  • Robin Kaplan, 33, Westboro, Mass., TJX Co.
  • Barbara Keating, 72, Palm Springs, Calif.
  • David Kovalcin, 42, Hudson, N.H.
  • Judy Larocque, 50, Framingham, Mass., founder and CEO, Market Perspectives
  • N. Janis Lasden, 46, Peabody, Mass., General Electric
  • Daniel John Lee, 34, Los Angeles, Calif.
  • Daniel C. Lewin, 31, co-founder, Akamai Technologies
  • Susan MacKay, 44, Westford, Mass., TJX Co.
  • Chris Mello, 25, Boston, Mass., analyst
  • Jeff Mladenik, 43, Hinsdale, Ill., interim president, E-Logic
  • Antonio Montoya, 46, East Boston, Mass., housekeeping worker, Boston Harbor Hotel
  • Carlos Montoya
  • Laura Lee Morabito, 34, Framingham, Mass., national sales manager, Qantas Airways
  • Mildred Naiman, Andover, Mass.
  • Laurie Neira
  • Renee Newell, 37, Cranston, R.I., customer service agent, American Airlines
  • Jacqueline Norton, 60, Lubec, Maine, retiree
  • Robert Norton, 82, Lubec, Maine, retiree
  • Jane Orth, 49, Haverhill, Mass., retiree, Lucent Technologies
  • Thomas Pecorelli, 31, Los Angeles, Calif., cameraman, Fox Sports and E! Entertainment Television
  • Berry Berenson Perkins, 53, Wellfleet, Mass., actress and photographer
  • Sonia Morales Puopolo, 58, Dover, Mass., former ballet dancer
  • David Retik, Needham, Mass.
  • Philip Rosenzweig, Acton, Mass., executive, Sun Microsystems
  • Richard Ross, 58, Newton, Mass., Ross Group
  • Jessica Sachs, 22, Billerica, Mass., accountant, PricewaterhouseCoopers
  • Rahma Salie, 28, Boston, Mass.
  • Heather Smith, 30, Boston, Mass., Beacon Capital Partners
  • Douglas Stone, 54, Dover, N.H.
  • Xavier Suarez
  • Michael Theodoridis, 32, Boston, Mass., consultant
  • James Trentini, 65, Everett, Mass., retired teacher and assistant principal
  • Mary Trentini, 67, Everett, Mass., retired secretary
  • Pendyala Vamsikrishna, 30, Los Angeles, Calif., project manager for consulting firm, DTI
  • Mary Wahlstrom, 75, Kaysville, Utah
  • Kenneth Waldie, 46, Methuen, Mass., Raytheon Co.
  • John Wenckus, 46, Torrance, Calif., tax consultant
  • Candace Lee Williams, 20, Danbury, Conn., student
  • Christopher Zarba, 47, Hopkinton, Mass., software engineer, Concord Communications

United Airlines Flight 175: A Boeing 767 bound from Boston to Los Angeles. The plane was carrying 56 passengers, two pilots and seven flight attendants. It crashed into the other tower of the World Trade Center shortly after 9 a.m.

Crew:

  • Robert Fangman, 33, Claymont, Del., flight attendant
  • Michael Horrocks, 38, Glen Mills, Pa., first officer
  • Amy Jarret, 28, North Smithfield, R.I., flight attendant
  • Amy King, 29, Stafford Springs, Conn.,flight attendant
  • Kathryn LaBorie, flight attendant
  • Alfred Marchand, 44, Alamogordo, N.M., flight attendant
  • Victor J. Saracini, 51, Lower Makefield Township, Pa., captain
  • Michael Tarrou, 38, Stafford Springs, Conn., flight attendant
  • Alicia N. Titus, 28, San Francisco, flight attendant

Passengers:

  • Alona Avraham, 30, Ashdod, Israel
  • Garnet ''Ace'' Bailey, 53, Lynnfield, Mass., pro hockey scouting director, Los Angeles Kings
  • Mark Bavis, 31, West Newton, Mass., pro hockey scout, Los Angeles Kings
  • Graham Berkeley, 37, Wellesley, Mass.
  • Touri Bolourchi, 69, Beverly Hills, Calif.
  • Klaus Bothe, 31, chief of development, BCT Technology AG (Germany)
  • Daniel Brandhorst, 42, Los Angeles, Calif., lawyer, PricewaterhouseCoopers
  • David Brandhorst, 3, Los Angeles, Calif.
  • John Cahill, 56, Wellesley, Mass., senior executive, Xerox
  • Christoffer Carstanjen, 33, Turner Falls, Mass., computer research specialist, University of Massachusetts
  • John ''Jay'' Corcoran, 44, Norwell, Mass., merchant marine
  • Gloria de Barrera, 49, El Salvador, exporter
  • Dorothy Dearaujo, 82, Long Beach, Calif.
  • Lisa Frost, 22, Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif., sales and marketing associate
  • Ronald Gamboa, 33, Los Angeles, Calif., store manager, The Gap
  • Lynn Goodchild, 25, Attleboro, Mass., Putnam Investments
  • Francis Grogan, 76, Easton, Mass., priest, Holy Cross Church
  • Carl Hammond, 37, Boston, Mass.
  • Christine Hanson, 3, Groton, Mass.
  • Peter Hanson, 32, Groton, Mass., software salesman
  • Susan Hanson, 35, Groton, Mass., student
  • Gerald F. Hardacre, 62, Carlsbad, Calif.
  • Eric Hartono, 20, Boston, Mass.
  • James E. Hayden, 47, Westford, Mass., chief financial officer, Netegrity Inc.
  • Herbert Homer, 48, Milford, Mass., corporate executive, Raytheon Co.
  • Robert Jalbert, 61, Swampscott, Mass., salesman
  • Ralph Kershaw, 52, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass., marine surveyor
  • Heinrich Kimmig, 43, chairman, BCT Technology AG (Germany)
  • Brian Kinney, 29, Lowell, Mass., auditor, PricewaterhouseCoopers
  • Robert LeBlanc, 70, Lee, N.H., professor emeritus of geography, University of New Hampshire
  • Maclovio ''Joe'' Lopez Jr., 41, Norwalk, Calif.
  • Marianne MacFarlane, 34, Revere, Mass., customer service representative,
  • Louis Neil Mariani, 59, Derry, N.H.
  • Juliana Valentine McCourt, 4, New London, Conn.
  • Ruth McCourt, 45, New London, Conn., founder, Clifford Classique
  • Wolfgang Menzel, 60, personnel manager, BCT Technology AG (Germany)
  • Shawn Nassaney, 25, Pawtucket, R.I., American Power Conversion
  • Marie Pappalardo
  • Patrick Quigley, 40, Wellesley, Mass., partner, PricewaterhouseCoopers
  • Frederick Rimmele, Marblehead, Mass., physician
  • James M. Roux, 43, Portland, Maine, lawyer
  • Jesus Sanchez, 45, Hudson, Mass., off-duty flight attendant
  • Kathleen Shearer, Dover, N.H.
  • Robert Shearer, Dover, N.H.
  • Jane Simpkin, 35, Wayland, Mass.
  • Brian D. Sweeney, 38, Barnstable, Mass., business consultant
  • Timothy Ward, 38, San Diego, Calif., information technology project manager, Rubio's Restaurants
  • William Weems, 46, Marblehead, Mass., commercial producer
American Airlines Flight 77: A Boeing 757 en route from Dulles Airport near Washington to Los Angeles. The plane was carrying 58 passengers, four flight attendants and two pilots. It crashed into the Pentagon about 9:40 a.m.

Crew:

  • Charles Burlingame, 51, Va., captain
  • David Charlebois, Washington, D.C., first officer
  • Michele Heidenberger, 57, Chevy Chase, Md., flight attendant
  • Jennifer Lewis, 38, Culpeper, Va., flight attendant
  • Kenneth Lewis, 49, Culpeper, Va., flight attendant
  • Renee May, 39, Baltimore, flight attendant

Passengers:

  • Paul Ambrose, 32, physician
  • Yeneneh Betru, 35, Burbank, Calif., director of medical affairs, IPC
  • MJ Booth
  • Bernard Brown, 11, student, Leckie Elementary School (Washington)
  • Suzanne Calley, 42, San Martin, Calif., Cisco Systems Inc.
  • William E. Caswell, 54, Silver Spring, Md., physicist, U.S. Navy
  • Sarah Clark, 65, Columbia, Md., sixth-grade teacher, Backus Middle School (Washington)
  • Zandra Cooper, Annandale, Va.
  • Asia Cottom, 11, student, Backus Middle School (Washington)
  • James Debeuneure, 58, Upper Marlboro, Md., fifth-grade teacher, Ketcham Elementary School (Washington)
  • Rodney Dickens, 11, student, Ketcham Elementary School (Washington)
  • Eddie Dillard
  • Charles Droz, 52, Springfield, Va., vice president for software development, EM Solutions Inc.
  • Barbara G. Edwards, 58, Las Vegas, Nev., teacher, Palo Verde High School in Las Vegas
  • Charles S. Falkenberg, 45, University Park, Md., research director, ECOlogic Corp.
  • Dana Falkenberg, 3, University Park, Md.
  • Zoe Falkenberg, 8, University Park, Md.
  • James Joe Ferguson, 39, Washington, D.C., educational outreach director, National Geographic Society
  • Darlene ''Dee'' Flagg, 63, Millwood, Va.
  • Wilson ''Bud'' Flagg, 63, Millwood, Va., retired Navy Admiral and pilot, American Airlines
  • Richard P. Gabriel Sr., 54, Great Falls, Va., founder, Stratin Consulting
  • Ian Gray, 55, Washington, D.C., healthcare consulting firm president
  • Stanley Hall, 68, Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif.
  • Bryan Jack, 48, Alexandria, Va., senior executive, Defense Department
  • Steven D. ''Jake'' Jacoby, 43, Alexandria, Va., chief operating officer, Metrocall Inc.
  • Ann Judge, 49, Great Falls, Va., travel officer manager, National Geographic Society
  • Chandler Keller, 29, El Segundo, Calif., propulsion engineer, Boeing Co.
  • Yvonne Kennedy
  • Norma Khan, 45, Reston, Va., nonprofit organization manager,
  • Karen A. Kincaid, 40, lawyer, Wiley Rein & Fielding in Washington
  • Dong Lee, 48, Leesburg, Va., engineer, Boeing Co.
  • Dora Menchaca, 45, Santa Monica, Calif., associate director of clinical research for biotech firm
  • Christopher Newton, 38, Ashburn, Va., executive, WorkLife Benefits
  • Barbara Olson, 45, TV commentator and lawyer
  • Ruben Ornedo, 39, Los Angeles, Calif., propulsion engineer, Boeing Co.
  • Robert Penniger, 63, Poway, Calif., electrical engineer, BAE Systems
  • Robert R. Ploger III, 59, Annandale, Va., software architect, Lockheed Martin Corp.
  • Lisa J. Raines, 42, Great Falls, Va., senior vice president, Genzyme Corp.
  • Todd Reuben, 40, Potomac, Md., tax and business lawyer
  • John Sammartino, 37, Annandale, Va., technical manager, XonTech Inc.
  • Yang Shuyin, 61, Beijing, China
  • Diane Simmons
  • George Simmons
  • Mari-Rae Sopper, 35, Santa Barbara, Calif., women's gymnastics coach, UC Santa Barbara
  • Robert Speisman, 47, Irvington, N.Y., diamond industry salesman
  • Norma Lang Steuerle, 54, Alexandria, Va.
     
  • Hilda Taylor, sixth grade teacher at Leckie Elementary School in Washington
  • Leonard Taylor, 44, Reston, Va., technical group manager, XonTech Inc.
  • Sandra Teague, 31, physical therapist, Georgetown University Hospital
     
  • Leslie A. Whittington, 45, University Park, Md., professor, Georgetown University
  • John Yamnicky, 71, Waldorf, Md.
  • Vicki Yancey, 44, Springfield, Va., Vredenburg
  • Zheng Yuguang, 65, Beijing, China
United Airlines Flight 93: A Boeing 757 en route from Newark, N.J., to San Francisco. The plane was carrying 37 passengers, two pilots and five flight attendants. It crashed southeast of Pittsburgh around 10 a.m ET Tuesday.

Crew:

  • Lorraine Bay, Hightstown, N.J., flight attendant
  • Sandra Bradshaw, 38, Greensboro, N.C., flight attendant
  • Jason Dahl, 43, Denver, captain
  • Wanda Green, 49, Linden, N.J., flight attendant
  • LeRoy Homer, 36, Marlton, N.J., first officer
  • CeeCee Lyles, Fort Myers, Fla., flight attendant
  • Deborah Welsh, 49, New York, N.Y., flight attendant

Passengers:

  • Christian Adams, 37, Biebelsheim, Germany, foreign sales manager, German Wine Fund
  • Todd Beamer, 32, of Cranbury, N.J., account manager, Oracle Corp.
  • Alan Beaven, 48, Oakland, Calif., environmental lawyer
  • Mark Bingham, 31, San Francisco, public relations firm owner
  • Deora Bodley, 20, Santa Clara, Calif., university student
  • Marion Britton, 53, assistant regional director, U.S. Census Bureau
  • Thomas E. Burnett Jr., 38, San Ramon, Calif., senior executive of medical research company
  • William Cashman
  • Georgine Rose Corrigan, antiques and collectibles dealer
  • Joseph Deluca
  • Patrick Driscoll
  • Edward Felt, 41, Matawan, N.J.
  • Colleen Fraser, 51, Elizabeth, N.J., chairwoman, New Jersey Developmental Disabilities Council
  • Andrew Garcia, 62, Portola Valley, Calif.
  • Jeremy Glick, 31, West Milford, N.J.
  • Kristin Gould
  • Lauren Grandcolas, 38, San Rafael, Calif., sales worker, Good Housekeeping magazine
  • Donald F. Greene, 52, Greenwich, Conn.
  • Linda Gronlund, 46, Warwick, N. Y., environmental compliance, BMW
  • Richard Guadagno, 38, Eureka, Calif., Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge manager, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  • Toshiya Kuge, 20, Tokyo, Japan, student
  • Hilda Marcin, 79, Budd Lake, N.J., retired teacher's aide
  • Waleska Martinez, 37, automation specialist, U.S. Census Bureau
  • Nicole Miller, 21, San Jose, student, West Valley College
  • Louis J. Nacke, 42, New Hope, Pa., distribution center director, Key-Bee Toys
  • Donald A. Peterson, 66, Spring Lake, N.J., retired president, Continental Electric Co.
  • Jean Hoadley Peterson, 55, Spring Lake, N.J.
  • Mark Rothenberg, Scotch Plains, N.J., owner, MDR Global Resources
  • Christine Snyder, 32, Kailua, Hawaii, arborist, Outdoor Circle
  • John Talignani, 72, Staten Island, N.Y., retired restaurant worker
  • Honor Elizabeth Wainio, 27, Watchung, N.J., district manager, Discovery Channel stores

AMERICAN AIRLINES FLIGHT MANIFEST

by Boston Globe September, 2001


LISTS OF VICTIMS

by CNN.com http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2001/trade.center/victims/main.html

In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York, the Pentagon near Washington, D.C., and the crash of United Airlines flight 93, officials across the country are working to piece together lists of victims.

While the official number of those missing and dead will inevitably rise over the next few weeks, authorities from American Airlines, United Airlines, the Department of Defense, the New York City Medical Examiners Office and the New York City Fire Department, have released partial lists. They are linked below.

"AMERICAN AIRLINES FLIGHT 11
American Airlines Flight 11, from Boston, Massachusetts, to Los Angeles, California, crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center with 92 people on board.

CREW

John Ogonowski, 52, of Dracut, Massachusetts, was the pilot of Flight 11. He lived on a 150-acre farm north of Boston. He is survived by his wife, Margaret, and three daughters, Laura, 16; Caroline, 14; and Mary, 11. A lifelong aviation buff, he joined the Air Force after graduating from college and flew planes at the close of the Vietnam War. He joined American Airlines in 1979.

First Officer Thomas McGuinness, 42, of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, was Flight 11's co-pilot. He is survived by his wife, Cheryl, and a 14-year-old son and 16-year-old daughter. He was active in Bethany Church in Greenland, New Hampshire, friends and neighbors told The Boston Globe. Rick DeKoven, a church administrator, described him as "a devoted family man."

Barbara Arestegui, 38, was a flight attendant from Marstons Mills, Massachusetts.

Jeffrey Collman was a flight attendant.

Sara Low, 28, was a flight attendant from Batesville, Arkansas.

Karen Martin was a flight attendant.

Kathleen Nicosia was a flight attendant.

Betty Ong, 45, was a flight attendant from Andover, Massachusetts.

Jean Roger, 24, was a flight attendant from Longmeadow, Massachusetts.

Dianne Snyder, 42, was a flight attendant from Westport, Massachusetts.

Madeline Sweeney, 35, was a flight attendant from Acton, Massachusetts.

PASSENGERS

Anna Williams Allison, 48, of Stoneham, Massachusetts, was the founder of A2 Software Solutions, a firm that assists companies in software development. Allison had more than 19 years' experience in the software development industry and was a frequent speaker and trainer at national and local conferences.

David Angell, 54, of Pasadena, California, was the creator and executive producer of the hit NBC sitcom "Frasier." A native of West Barrington, Rhode Island, Angell entered the Army after graduating from college and served at the Pentagon until 1972. He worked in insurance and engineering before selling a script for a TV series in 1977. In 1983, he joined the TV series "Cheers" as a staff writer and began working with co-supervising producers Peter Casey and David Lee. This team formed a production company, creating and producing "Wings" in 1990 and "Frasier" in 1993. The trio won 24 Emmys.

Lynn Angell, 45, of Pasadena, California, was the wife of "Frasier" creator and executive producer David Angell. The Angells were returning from a wedding on the East Coast to attend the Emmy Awards.

Seima Aoyama

Myra Aronson, 52, of Charlestown, Massachusetts, was a press and analyst relations manager for Compuware Corp.

Christine Barbuto, 32, of Brookline, Massachusetts, was a buyer for TJX Cos., the off-price retailer of apparel and home fashions. She was on her way to California on a buying trip. Barbuto is survived her father and two sisters. She had worked for TJX for five years.

Berry Berenson, 53, of Los Angeles, California, was an actress and photographer. She was the widow of actor Anthony Perkins, who died in 1992, and sister of actress and model Marisa Berenson. She is survived by two sons, Osgood, an actor, and Elvis. Born into an aristocratic family, Berenson appeared in the movies "Cat People" (1982), "Winter Kills" (1979) and "Remember My Name" (1978).

Carolyn Beug, 48, of Los Angeles, California, was traveling with her mother, Mary Wahlstrom. They had gone to Boston to drop off relatives at a nearby college and were returning home.

Carol Bouchard, 43, of Warwick, Rhode Island, was a Kent County Hospital emergency room secretary.

Robin Caplin was from Natick, Massachusetts.

Neilie Casey, 32, of Wellesley, Massachusetts, was a merchandise planning manager for TJX Cos., the off-price retailer of apparel and home fashions. She worked for TJX for eight years. Casey is survived by her husband and a 7-month-old daughter.

Jeffrey Coombs, 42, of Abington, Massachusetts, was a security analyst for Compaq Computer. He is survived by his wife, Christie, and three children, Meagan, 10; Julia, 7; and Matt, 12.

Tara Creamer, 30, of Worcester, Massachusetts, was a merchandise planning manager for TJX Cos., the off-price retailer of apparel and home fashions. She had worked for TJX for eight years. Creamer is survived by her husband, John, and two children, Colin, 4, and Nora, 1.

Thelma Cuccinello, 71, was a Wilmot, New Hampshire, resident with 10 grandchildren. She was on her way to visit a sister in California. Daughter Cheryl O'Brien gave her mom a ride to catch a bus to Logan International Airport in Boston. "I was the last one to see her," O'Brien said. "I got to kiss her and say 'I love you' and 'Have a nice trip.' "

Patrick Currivan

Andrew Curry Green was from Chelmsford, Massachusetts.

Brian Dale, 43, of Warren, New Jersey, was an accountant and attorney with Blue Capital Management. He was married and the father of three.

David DiMeglio was from Wakefield, Massachusetts.

Donald Ditullio, 49, was from Peabody, Massachusetts.

Albert Dominguez, 66, was a baggage handler for Qantas Airways in Sydney, Australia. He was traveling on holiday at the time of his death. He was married with four children.

Alex Filipov, 70, was an electrical engineer from Concord, Massachusetts.

Carol Flyzik, 40, was from Plaistow, New Hampshire.

Paul Friedman, 45, from Belmont, Massachusetts, was a consultant for Emergence Consulting.

Karleton D.B. Fyfe, 31, of Brookline, Massachusetts, was a senior investment analyst for John Hancock.

Peter Gay, 54, of Tewksbury, Massachusetts, was a Raytheon Co. vice president of operations for electronic systems based in Andover, Massachusetts. He had worked for Raytheon for more than 28 years.

Linda George, 27, of Westboro, Massachusetts, was a buyer for TJX Cos., the off-price retailer of apparel and home fashions. She was on her way to California on a buying trip. George is survived by her father, mother, sister and brother. She was engaged to be married.

Edmund Glazer, 41, of Los Angeles, California, was the chief financial officer and vice president of finance and administration of MRV Communications, a Chatsworth, California, firm that focuses on optical components and network infrastructure systems. Glazer was survived by his wife, Candy, and son, Nathan.

Lisa Fenn Gordenstein, 41, of Needham, Massachusetts, was an assistant vice president, merchandise manager, for TJX Cos., the off-price retailer of apparel and home fashions. She was on her way to California on a buying trip. Gordenstein is survived by her husband and two children.

Paige Farley Hackel, 46, was a spiritual adviser from Newton, Massachusetts.

Peter Hashem, 40, was an engineer from Tewksbury, Massachusetts.

Robert Hayes, 37, from Amesbury, Massachusetts was a sales engineer with Netstal.

Ted Hennessy, 35, was a consultant for Emergence Consulting in Belmont, Massachusetts.

John Hofer

Cora Holland, 52, of Sudbury, Massachusetts, was with Sudbury Food Pantry, an interdenominational program that assisted needy families, at Our Lady of Fatima Church.

Nicholas Humber, 60, of Newton, Massachusetts, was the owner of Brae Burn Management.

John Jenkins

Charles Jones, 48, was a computer programmer from Bedford, Massachusetts.

Robin Kaplan, 33, of Westboro, Massachusetts, was a senior store equipment specialist for TJX Cos., the off-price retailer of apparel and home fashions. She was on her way to California to help prepare for a new T.J. Maxx store opening. Kaplan had returned to work this year after battling Crohn's disease, a life-threatening inflammatory illness of the gastrointestinal tract. She is survived by her father, Edward Kaplan, and mother, Francine.

Barbara Keating, 72, was from Palm Springs, California.

David Kovalcin, 42, of Hudson, New Hampshire, was a Raytheon Co. senior mechanical engineer for electronic systems in Tewksbury, Massachusetts. He had worked for Raytheon for 15 years.

Judy Larocque, 50, of Framingham, Massachusetts, was the founder and CEO of Market Perspectives, a research firm that offers online and on-site surveys. Before founding the company in 1993, she was the principal of Emergent Marketing, an executive marketing consulting firm.

Jude Larson, 31, was from Los Angeles, California.

Natalie Larson was from Los Angeles, California.

N. Janis Lasden, 46, of General Electric was from Peabody, Massachusetts.

Daniel John Lee, 34, was from Los Angeles, California.

Daniel C. Lewin, 31, was the co-founder and chief technology officer at Akamai Technologies Inc., a Cambridge, Massachusetts, company that produces technology equipment to facilitate online content delivery. He is survived by his wife and two sons. He founded Akamai in 1998 with scientist Tom Leighton and a group of Massachusetts Institute of Technology scientists and business professionals. Lewin was responsible for the company's research and development strategy.

Susan MacKay, 44, of Westford, Massachusetts, was an employee of TJX Cos., the off-price retailer of apparel and home fashions.

Chris Mello, 25, was a financial analyst with Alta Communications from Boston. He graduated from Princeton University with a degree in psychology. He is survived by his parents, Douglas and Ellen Mello of Rye, New York; a brother, John Douglas Mello of New York City; and his paternal grandmother, Alice Mello, of Barefoot Bay, Florida.

Jeff Mladenik, 43, of Hinsdale, Illinois, was the interim president at E-Logic.

Antonio Montoya

Carlos Montoya

Laura Lee Morabito, 34, was the Qantas Airways area sales manager in Boston. She lived in Framingham, Massachusetts, with her husband. She was traveling on company business at the time of her death.

Mildred Naiman was from Andover, Massachusetts.

Laurie Neira

Renee Newell, 37, of Cranston, Rhode Island, was a customer service agent with American Airlines.

Jacqueline Norton, 60, was a retiree from Lubec, Maine. She was traveling with her husband, Robert Norton.

Robert Norton, 82, was a retiree from Lubec, Maine. He was traveling with his wife, Jacqueline Norton.

Jane Orth, 49, of Haverhill, Massachusetts, was retired from Lucent Technology.

Thomas Pecorelli, 31, of Los Angeles, California, was a cameraman for Fox Sports and E! Entertainment Television.

Sonia Morales Puopolo, 58, of Dover, Massachusetts, was a retired ballet dancer.

David Retik was from Needham, Massachusetts. He was a general partner and founding member of Alta Communications, a Boston-based investment firm specializing in communication industries. Retik graduated from Colgate University and received a master's in accounting from New York University. He is survived by his wife, Susan and their two children, Ben and Molly.

Philip Rosenzweig of Acton, Massachusetts, was an executive with Sun Microsystems.

Richard Ross, 58, of Newton, Massachusetts, headed his own management consulting company, the Ross Group.

Jessica Sachs, 22, of Billerica, Massachusetts was an accountant with PricewaterhouseCoopers.

Rahma Salie, 28, was from Boston.

Heather Smith, 30, of Beacon Capital Partners was from Boston.

Douglas Stone, 54, was from Dover, New Hampshire.

Xavier Suarez

Michael Theodoridis, 32, was a consultant from Boston.

James Trentini, 65, was a retired teacher and assistant principal from Everett, Massachusetts.

Mary Trentini, 67, was a retired secretary from Everett, Massachusetts.

Mary Wahlstrom, 75, of Kaysville, Utah, was traveling with her daughter, Carolyn Beug. They had gone to Boston to drop off relatives at a nearby college and were returning home.

Kenneth Waldie, 46, of Methuen, Massachusetts, was a Raytheon Co. senior quality control engineer for electronic systems in Tewksbury, Massachusetts. He had worked for Raytheon for 17 years.

John Wenckus, 46, was a tax consultant from Torrance, California.

Candace Lee Williams, 20, was a student from Danbury, Connecticut.

Christopher Zarba, 47, of Hopkinton, Massachusetts, was a software engineer at Concord Communications. He leaves behind a wife and family. He would have been 48 on September 15.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

AMERICAN AIRLINES FLIGHT 77
American Airlines Flight 77, from Washington to Los Angeles, crashed into the Pentagon with 64 people aboard.

CREW

Charles Burlingame of Herndon, Virginia, was the plane's captain. He is survived by a wife, a daughter and a grandson. He had more than 20 years of experience flying with American Airlines and was a former U.S. Navy pilot.

David Charlebois, who lived in Washington's Dupont Circle neighborhood, was the first officer on the flight. "He was handsome and happy and very centered," his neighbor Travis White, told The Washington Post. "His life was the kind of life I wanted to have some day."

Michele Heidenberger of Chevy Chase, Maryland, was a flight attendant for 30 years. She left behind a husband, a pilot, and a daughter and son.

Flight attendant Jennifer Lewis, 38, of Culpeper, Virginia, was the wife of flight attendant Kenneth Lewis.

Flight attendant Kenneth Lewis, 49, of Culpeper, Virginia, was the husband of flight attendant Jennifer Lewis.

Renee May, 39, of Baltimore, Maryland, was a flight attendant.

PASSENGERS

Paul Ambrose, 32, of Washington, was a physician who worked with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the surgeon general to address racial and ethnic disparities in health. A 1995 graduate of Marshall University School of Medicine, Ambrose last year was named the Luther Terry Fellow of the Association of Teachers of Preventative Medicine.

Yeneneh Betru, 35, was from Burbank, California.

M.J. Booth

Bernard Brown, 11, was a student at Leckie Elementary School in Washington. He was embarking on an educational trip to the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary near Santa Barbara, California, as part of a program funded by the National Geographic Society.

Suzanne Calley, 42, of San Martin, California, was an employee of Cisco Systems Inc.

William Caswell

Sarah Clark, 65, of Columbia, Maryland, was a sixth-grade teacher at Backus Middle School in Washington. She was accompanying a student on an educational trip to the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary near Santa Barbara, California, as part of a program funded by the National Geographic Society.

Asia Cottom, 11, was a student at Backus Middle School in Washington. Asia was embarking on an educational trip to the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary near Santa Barbara, California, as part of a program funded by the National Geographic Society.

James Debeuneure, 58, of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, was a fifth-grade teacher at Ketcham Elementary School in Washington. He was accompanying a student on an educational trip to the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary near Santa Barbara, California, as part of a program funded by the National Geographic Society.

Rodney Dickens, 11, was a student at Leckie Elementary School in Washington. He was embarking on an educational trip to the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary near Santa Barbara, California, as part of a program funded by the National Geographic Society.

Eddie Dillard

Charles Droz

Barbara Edwards, 58, of Las Vegas, Nevada, was a teacher at Palo Verde High School in Las Vegas.

Charles S. Falkenberg, 45, of University Park, Maryland, was the director of research at ECOlogic Corp., a software engineering firm. He worked on data systems for NASA and also developed data systems for the study of global and regional environmental issues. Falkenburg was traveling with his wife, Leslie Whittingham, and their two daughters, Zoe, 8, and Dana, 3.

Zoe Falkenberg, 8, of University Park, Maryland, was the daughter of Charles Falkenberg and Leslie Whittingham.

Dana Falkenberg, 3, of University Park, Maryland, was the daughter of Charles Falkenberg and Leslie Whittingham.

Joe Ferguson was the director of the National Geographic Society's geography education outreach program in Washington. He was accompanying a group of students and teachers on an educational trip to the Channel Islands in California. A Mississippi native, he joined the society in 1987. "Joe Feguson's final hours at the Geographic reveal the depth of his commitment to one of the things he really loved," said John Fahey Jr., the society's president. "Joe was here at the office until late Monday evening preparing for this trip. It was his goal to make this trip perfect in every way."

Wilson "Bud" Flagg of Millwood, Virginia, was a retired Navy admiral and retired American Airlines pilot.

Dee Flagg

Richard Gabriel

Ian Gray, 55, of Washington was the president of a health-care consulting firm.

Stanley Hall, 68, was from Rancho Palos Verdes, California.

Bryan Jack, 48, of Alexandria, Virginia, was a senior executive at the Defense Department.

Steven D. "Jake" Jacoby, 43, of Alexandria, Virginia, was the chief operating officer of Metrocall Inc., a wireless data and messaging company.

Ann Judge, 49, of Virginia was the travel office manager for the National Geographic Society. She was accompanying a group of students and teachers on an educational trip to the Channel Islands in California. Society President John Fahey Jr. said one of his fondest memories of Judge is a voice mail she and a colleague once left him while they were rafting the Monkey River in Belize. "This was quintessential Ann -- living life to the fullest and wanting to share it with others," he said.

Chandler Keller, 29, was a Boeing propulsion engineer from El Segundo, California.

Yvonne Kennedy

Norma Khan, 45, from Reston, Virginia was a nonprofit organization manager.

Karen A. Kincaid, 40, was a lawyer with the Washington firm of Wiley Rein & Fielding. She joined the firm in 1993 and was part of the its telecommunications practice. She was married to Peter Batacan.

Norma Langsteuerle

Dong Lee

Dora Menchaca, 45, of Santa Monica, California, was the associate director of clinical research for a biotech firm.

Christopher Newton, 38, of Anaheim, California, was president and chief executive officer of Work-Life Benefits, a consultation and referral service. He was married and had two children. Newton was on his way back to Orange County to retrieve his family's yellow Labrador, who had been left behind until they could settle into their new home in Arlington, Virginia.

Barbara Olson, 45, was a conservative commentator who often appeared on CNN and was married to U.S. Solicitor General Theodore Olson. She twice called her husband as the plane was being hijacked and described some details, including that the attackers were armed with knives. She had planned to take a different flight, but she changed it at the last minute so that she could be with her husband on his birthday. She worked as an investigator for the House Government Reform Committee in the mid-1990s and later worked on the staff of Senate Minority Whip Don Nickles.

Ruben Ornedo, 39, of Los Angeles, California, was a Boeing propulsion engineer.

Robert Penniger, 63, of Poway, California, was an electrical engineer with BAE Systems.

Lisa Raines, 42, was senior vice president for government relations at the Washington office of Genzyme, a biotechnology firm. She was from Great Falls, Virginia, and was married to Stephen Push. She worked with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on developing a new policy governing cellular therapies, announced in 1997. She also worked on other major health-care legislation.

Todd Reuben, 40, of Potomac, Maryland, was a tax and business lawyer.

John Sammartino

Diane Simmons

George Simmons

Mari-Rae Sopper of Santa Barbara, California, was a women's gymnastics coach at the University of California at Santa Barbara. She had just gotten the post August 31 and was making the trip to California to start work.

Bob Speisman, 47, was from Irvington, New York.

Hilda Taylor was a sixth-grade teacher at Leckie Elementary School in Washington. She was accompanying a student on an educational trip to the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary near Santa Barbara, California, as part of a program funded by the National Geographic Society.

Leonard Taylor was from Reston, Virginia.

Leslie A. Whittington, 45, was from University Park, Maryland. The professor of public policy at Georgetown University in Washington was traveling with her husband, Charles Falkenberg, 45, and their two daughters, Zoe, 8, and Dana, 3. They were traveling to Los Angeles to catch a connection to Australia. Whittington had been named a visiting fellow at Australian National University in Canberra.

John Yamnicky, 71, was from Waldorf, Maryland.

Vicki Yancey

Shuyin Yang

Yuguag Zheng

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

UNITED AIRLINES FLIGHT 175

United Airlines Flight 175, from Boston, Massachusetts, to Los Angeles, California, was the second hijacked plane to strike the World Trade Center, plowing into the south tower. Two pilots, seven flight attendants and 56 passengers were on board.

CREW

Capt. Victor Saracini, 51, of Lower Makefield Township, Pennsylvania, was a Navy veteran. He is survived by his wife and two children.

Michael Horrocks was first officer.

Robert J. Fangman was a flight attendant.

Amy N. Jarret, 28, of North Smithfield, Rhode Island, was a flight attendant.

Amy R. King was a flight attendant.

Kathryn L. Laborie was a flight attendant.

Alfred G. Marchand of Alamogordo, New Mexico, was a flight attendant.

Michael C. Tarrou was a flight attendant.

Alicia N. Titus was a flight atteandant.

PASSENGERS

Alona Avraham, 30, was from Ashdot, Israel.

Garnet "Ace" Bailey, 53, of Lynnfield, Massachusetts, was director of pro scouting for the Los Angeles Kings hockey team. Bailey was entering his 33rd season as a player or scout in the National Hockey League and his eighth with the Kings. Before joining the Kings, he spent 13 years as a scout for the Edmonton Oilers, a team that won five Stanley Cups during that time. As a player, Bailey spent five years with the Boston Bruins and was a member of Stanley Cup championship teams in 1969-70 and 1971-72. Bailey also spent parts of two seasons each with the Detroit Red Wings and St. Louis Blues, and three years with the Washington Capitals. He is survived by his wife, Katherine, and son, Todd.

Mark Bavis, 31, of West Newton, Massachusetts, was entering his second season as an amateur scout for the Los Angeles Kings. A Boston native, he played four years on Boston University's hockey team, where his twin brother, Michael, is an assistant coach. In addition to his twin brother, Bavis is survived by his mother, Mary; two other brothers, Pat and Johnny; and three sisters, Kelly, Mary Ellen and Kathy. The Bavis family lost a brother 15 years ago, and Bavis' father died 10 years ago.

Graham Berkeley, 37, of Xerox Corp. was from Wellesley, Massachusetts.

Touri Bolourchi, 69, was from Beverly Hills, California.

Klaus Bothe, 31, of Germany was on a business trip with BCT Technology AG's chief executive officer and another executive. Bothe joined the company in 1994 and was its director of development. He is survived by his wife and one child.

Daniel Brandhorst, of Los Angeles, California, was a lawyer for PriceWaterhouse.

David Brandhorst, 3, was from Los Angeles.

John Cahill was from Wellesley, Massachusetts.

Christoffer Carstanjen, 33, of Turner Falls, Massachusetts, was staff assistant in the office of information technology at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst.

John Corcoran "Jay" Corcoran, 44, of Norwell, Massachusetts, was a merchant marine.

Dorothy Dearaujo, 82, was from Long Beach, California.

Gloria Debarrera

Lisa Frost, 22, of Rancho Santa Margarita, California, graduated from Boston University this year, with degrees in communications and business hospitality. She is survived by her father, mother and brother.

Ronald Gamboa, 33, of Los Angeles, California, was a Gap store manager.

Lynn Goodchild, 25, was from Attleboro, Massachusetts.

The Rev. Francis E. Grogan, 76, of Easton, Massachusetts, was a priest at Holy Cross Church in Easton. A veteran of World War II, Grogan served as a parish priest, a chaplain and teacher at Holy Cross schools.

Carl Hammond, 37, was from Boston, Massachusetts.

Peter Hanson, 32, of Groton, Massachusetts, was a software salesman.

Susan Hanson, 35, of Groton, Massachusetts, was a student.

Christine Hanson, 3, was from Groton, Massachusetts.

Gerald Hardacre

Eric Hartono

James E. Hayden, 47, of Westford, Massachusetts, was the chief financial officer of Netegrity Inc. Hayden is survived by his wife, Gail, and their two children.

Herbert Homer,48, of Milford, Massachusetts, worked for Raytheon Co.

Robert Jalbert, 61, of Swampscott, Massachusetts, was a salesman.

Ralph Kershaw, 52, of Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts, was a marine surveyor.

Heinrich Kimmig, 43, chairman and chief executive officer of BCT Technology Ag, of Germany was on a business trip involving contract negotiations with U.S. partners along with two other BCT execs, the company said in a statement. Kimmig studied mechanical engineering in college. After an internship, he became the design manager at Badische Stahl Engineering, and shortly after, he founded BSE Computer-Technologie GmbH, originally a locally operating software company. In 1999, this company became BCT Technology AG. Kimmig is survived by his wife and two children.

Brian Kinney, 29, of Lowell, Massachusetts, was an auditor for PriceWaterhouse Cooper.

Robert LeBlanc, 70, of Lee, New Hampshire, was a professor emeritus of geography at the University of New Hampshire. After earning his doctorate at the University of Minnesota, LeBlanc joined the University of New Hampshire's faculty in 1963 as a cultural geographer. With a specialty in Canadian studies, he looked at the Franco-American communities in New England's mill towns. He was acting chair and chair of the geography department for nearly 10 years, retiring in 1999.

Maclovio "Joe" Lopez Jr., 41, was from Norwalk, California.

Marianne MacFarlane

Louis Neil Mariani, 59, was from Derry, New Hampshire.

Juliana Valentine McCourt, 4, was from New London, Connecticut.

Ruth McCourt, 24, was from Westford, Massachusetts.

Wolfgang Menzel, 60, of Germany joined BCT Technology AG in 2000 as director of human resources. He is survived by his wife and one child. Menzel had planned to retire in six months.

Shawn Nassaney, 25, was from Pawtucket, Rhode Island.

Patrick Quigley, 40, of Wellesley, Massachusetts, was a partner at PriceWaterhouse Cooper.

Frederick Rimmele was a physician from Marblehead, Massachusetts.

James M. Roux, 42, was from Portland, Maine.

Jesus Sanchez, 45, was an off-duty flight attendant from Hudson, Massachusetts.

Kathleen Shearer was from Dover, New Hampshire.

Robert Shearer was from Dover, New Hampshire.

Jane Simpkin, 35, was from Wayland, Massachusetts.

Brian D. Sweeney, 38, was from Barnstable, Massachusetts.

Timothy Ward, 38, of San Diego, California, worked at the Carlsbad, California-based Rubio's Restaurants Inc. A 14-year veteran of the company, he opened its second restaurant in San Diego and most recently worked in the information technology department.

William Weems of Marblehead, Massachusetts, was a commercial producer.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

UNITED AIRLINES FLIGHT 93
United Airlines Flight 93, from Newark, New Jersey, to San Francisco, California, crashed in rural southwest Pennsylvania, with 45 people on board.

CREW

Jason Dahl, 43, from Denver, Colorado, was the plane's captain. He had a wife and son. Dahl had a lifelong interest in flying, said his aunt, Maxine Atkinson, of Waterloo, Iowa.

Leroy Homer, 36, from Marlton, New Jersey, was the first officer on board. He was married and had a daughter.

Lorraine Bay was a flight attendant.

Sandra Bradshaw, 38, of Greensboro, North Carolina, was a flight attendant.

Wanda Green was a flight attendant.

CeeCee Lyles of Fort Myers, Florida, was a flight attendant. She reached her husband, Lorne, by cell phone to tell him that she loved him and their children before the plane went down. The couple between them had four children.

Deborah Welsh was a flight attendant.

PASSENGERS

Christian Adams

Todd Beamer, 32, was from Cranbury, New Jersey.

Alan Beaven, 48, of Oakland, California, was an environmental lawyer.

Mark Bingham, 31, of San Francisco owned a public relations firm, the Bingham Group. He called his mother, Alice Hoglan, 15 minutes before the plane crashed and told her that the plane had been taken over by three men who claimed to have a bomb. Hoglan said her son told her that some passengers planned to try to regain control of the plane. "He said, 'I love you very, very much, ' " Hoglan said.

Deora Bodley, 20, of Santa Clara, California, was a university student.

Marion Britton

Thomas E. Burnett Jr., 38, of San Ramon, California, was a senior vice president and chief operating officer of Thoratec Corp., a medical research and development company, and the father of three. He made four calls to his wife, Deena, from the plane. Deena Burnett said that her husband told her that one passenger had been stabbed and that "a group of us are going to do something." He also told her that the people on board knew about the attack on the World Trade Center, apparently through other phone calls.

William Cashman

Georgine Corrigan

Joseph Deluca

Patrick Driscoll

Edward Felt, 41, was from Matawan, New Jersey.

Colleen Fraser

Andrew Garcia

Jeremy Glick, 31, from West Milford, New Jersey, called his wife, Liz, and in-laws in New York on a cell phone to tell them the plane had been hijacked, Joanne Makely, Glick's mother-in-law, told CNN. Glick said that one of the hijackers "had a red box he said was a bomb, and one had a knife of some nature," Makely said. Glick asked Makely if the reports about the attacks on the World Trade Center were true, and she told him they were. He left the phone for a while, returning to say, "The men voted to attack the terrorists," Makely said.

Lauren Grandcolas of San Rafael, California, was a sales worker at Good Housekeeping magazine.

Donald F. Green, 52, was from Greenwich, Connecticut.

Linda Gronlund

Richard Guadagno, 38, of Eureka, California, was the manager of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge.

Toshiya Kuge

Waleska Martinez

Nicole Miller

Mark Rothenberg

Christine Snyder, 32, was from Kailua, Hawaii. She was an arborist for the Outdoor Circle and was returning from a conference in Washington. She had been married less than a year.

John Talignani

Honor Wainio

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


VICTIM'S LIST

by Boston.com http://www.boston.com/news/daily/12/victims_list.htm

MASS. BOSTON KENNEDY MASSACHUSETTS R,A,7 - BC-ATTACKS-VICTIMSLIST,1STLD-WRITETHRU A0507 09-13 2216 - ,----- BC-Attacks-Victims List, 1st Ld-Writethru, a0507,2217 Partial list of people killed in Tuesday's terrorist attacks Eds: UPDATES throughout. By The Associated Press

Partial list of those killed in Tuesday's terrorist attacks, according to family members, friends, co-workers and law enforcement.

American Airlines Flight 11, Boston to Los Angeles, crashed into World Trade Center

CREW: - John Ogonowski, 52, Dracut, Mass., captain - Thomas McGuinness, 42, Portsmouth, N.H., first officer - Barbara Arestegui, 38, Marstons Mills, Mass., flight attendant - Jeffrey Collman, flight attendant - Sara Low, 28, Batesville, Ark., flight attendant - Karen Martin, flight attendant - Kathleen Nicosia, flight attendant - Betty Ong, 45, Andover, Mass., flight attendant - Jean Roger, 24, Longmeadow, Mass., flight attendant - Dianne Snyder, 42, Westport, Mass., flight attendant - Madeline Sweeney, 35, Acton, Mass., flight attendant PASSENGERS: - Anna Williams Allison, 48, Stoneham, Mass., founder A2 Software Solutions - David Angell, 54, Pasadena, Calif., executive producer, NBC's ``Frasier'' - Lynn Angell, Pasadena, Calif. - Seima Aoyama - Myra Aronson, 52, Charlestown, Mass., press and analyst relations manager - Christine Barbuto, 32, Brookline, Mass., TJX Co. - Berry Berenson, 53, Los Angeles, actress and photographer - Carolyn Beug, 48, Los Angeles - Carol Bouchard, 43, Warwick, R.I., Kent County Hospital emergency room secretary - Robin Caplin, Natick, Mass. - Neilie Casey, 32, Wellesley, Mass., TJX Co. - Jeffrey Coombs, 42, Abington, Mass., security analyst for Compaq - Tara Creamer, 30, Worcester, Mass. - Thelma Cuccinello, 71, Wilmot, N.H. - Patrick Currivan - Andrew Curry Green, Chelmsford, Mass. - Brian Dale, 43, Warren, N.J. - David DiMeglio, Wakefield, Mass. - Donald Ditullio, 49, Peabody, Mass., Smith and Nephew - Albert Dominguez - Alex Filipov, 70, Concord, Mass. - Carol Flyzik, 40, Plaistow, N.H. - Paul Friedman - Karleton D.B. Fyfe, 31, Brookline, Mass., John Hancock - Peter Gay, 54, Tewksbury, Mass., Raytheon Co. plant manager - Linda George, 27, Westboro, Mass., TJX Co. - Edmund Glazer, 41, Los Angeles, chief financial officer, MRV Communications - Lisa Fenn Gordenstein, 41, Needham, Mass., TJX Co. - Paige Farley Hackel, 46, Newton, Mass., spiritual counselor - Peter Hashem, 40, Tweksbury, Mass., salesman - Robert Hayes - Ted Hennessey, 35, Belmont, Mass., consultant - John Hofer - Cora Holland, 52, Sudbury, Mass., Sudbury Food Pantry at Our Lady of Fatima Church - Nicholas Humber, 60, Newton, Mass., owner of Brae Burn Management - Robert Jalbert, 61, Swampscott, Mass. - John Jenkins - Charles Jones, 48, Bedford, Mass., computer programmer - Robin Kaplan, 33, Westboro, Mass., TJX Co. - Barbara Keating, 72, Palm Springs, Calif. - David Kovalcin, 42, Hudson, N.H. - Judy Larocque, 50, Framingham, Mass., founder and CEO of research firm Market Perspectives - Jude Larson, 31, Los Angeles - Natalie Larson, Los Angeles - N. Janis Lasden, 46, Peabody, Mass., General Electric - Daniel John Lee, 34, Los Angeles - Daniel C. Lewin, 31, co-founder of Akamai Technologies - Susan MacKay, 44, Westford, Mass., TJX Co. - Chris Mello, 25, Boston, analyst - Jeff Mladenik, 43, Hinsdale, Ill. interim president at E-Logic - Antonio Montoya - Carlos Montoya - Laura Lee Morabito, 34, Framingham, Mass., national sales manager for Qantas Airways - Mildred Naiman, Andover, Mass. - Laurie Neira - Renee Newell, 37, Cranston, R.I., American Airlines customer service agent - Jacqueline Norton, 60, Lubec, Maine, retiree - Robert Norton, 82, Lubec, Maine, retiree - Jane Orth, 49, Haverhill, Mass., retired from Lucent Technology - Thomas Pecorelli, 31, Los Angeles, cameraman for Fox Sports and E! Entertainment Television - Bernthia Perkins, 53, Wellfleet, Mass., actress and photographer - Sonia Morales Puopolo, 58, Dover, Mass., former ballet dancer - David Retik, Needham, Mass. - Philip Rosenzweig, Acton, Mass., executive with Sun Microsystems - Richard Ross, 58, Newton, Mass. the Ross Group - James Roux, 43, Portland, Maine, attorney - Jessica Sachs, 22, Billerica, Mass., accountant with PricewaterhouseCoopers - Rahma Salie, 28, Boston - Heath Smith - Douglas Stone, 54, Dover, N.H. - Xavier Suarez - Michael Theodoridis, 32, Boston, consultant - James Trentini, 65, Everett, Mass., retired teacher and assistant principal - Mary Trentini, 67, Everett, Mass., retired secretary - Mary Wahlstrom, 75, Kaysville, Utah - Kenneth Waldie, 46, Methuen, Mass., Raytheon Co. - John Wenckus, 46, Torrance, Calif., tax consultant - Candace Lee Williams, 20, Danbury, Conn., student - Christopher Zarba, 47, Hopkinton, Mass., software engineer at Concord Communications

United Airlines Flight 175, Boston to Los Angeles, crashed into World Trade Center

CREW: - Victor J. Saracini, 51, Lower Makefield Township, Pa., captain - Michael Horrocks, first officer - Robert Fangman, flight attendant - Amy Jarret, 28, North Smithfield, R.I., flight attendant - Amy King, flight attendant - Kathryn Laborie, flight attendant - Alfred Marchand, 44, Alamogordo, N.M., flight attendant - Michael Tarrou, flight attendant - Alicia N. Titus, 28, San Francisco, flight attendant PASSENGERS: - Alona Abraham, 30, Ashdot, Israel - Garnet ``Ace'' Bailey, 53, Lynnfield, Mass., director of pro scouting, Los Angeles Kings - Mark Bavis, 31, West Newton, Mass., Los Angeles Kings scout - Graham Berkeley, 37, Wellesley, mass., Xerox Corp. - Touri Bolourchi, 69, Beverly Hills, Calif. - Klaus Bothe, 31, chief of development, BCT Technology AG, Germany - Daniel Brandhorst, Los Angeles, PriceWaterhouse lawyer - David Brandhorst, 3, Los Angeles - John Cahill, Wellesley, Mass. - Christoffer Carstanjen, 33, Turner Falls, Mass., computer research specialist at University of Massachusetts - John ``Jay'' Corcoran, 44, Norwell, Mass., merchant marine - Dorothy Dearaujo, 82, Long Beach, Calif. - Gloria de Barrera - Lisa Frost, 22, Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif., sales and marketing associate - Ronald Gamboa, 33, Los Angeles, Gap store manager - Lynn Goodchild, 25, Attleboro, Mass., Putnam Investments - Francis Grogan, 76, Easton, Mass., priest at Holy Cross Church - Carl Hammond, 37, Boston - Peter Hanson, 32, Groton, Mass., software salesman - Susan Hanson, 35, Groton, Mass., student - Christine Hanson, 3, Groton, Mass. - Gerald Hardacre - Eric Hartono - James E. Hayden, 47, Westford, Mass., chief financial officer of Netegrity Inc. - Robert Jalbert, 61, Swampscott, Mass., salesman - Ralph Kershaw, 52, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass., marine surveyor - Heinrich Kimmig, 43, chairman of BCT Technology AG, Germany - Brian Kinney, 29, Lowell, Mass., PriceWaterhouse Cooper auditor - Robert LeBlanc, 70, Lee, N.H., professor emeritus of geography, University of New Hampshire - Maclovio ``Joe'' Lopez Jr., 41, Norwalk, Calif. - Marianne MacFarlane - Louis Neil Mariani, 59, Derry, N.H. - Juliana Valentine McCourt, 4, New London, Conn. - Ruth McCourt, 45, New London, Conn. - Wolfgang Menzel, 60, personnel manager, BCT Technology AG, Germany - Shawn Nassaney, 25, Pawtucket, R.I., American Power Conversion - Patrick Quigley, 40, Wellesley, Mass., partner at PriceWaterhouse Cooper - Frederick Rimmele, Marblehead, Mass., physician - James M. Roux, 42, Portland, Maine - Jesus Sanchez, 45, Hudson, Mass., off-duty flight attendant - Kathleen Shearer, Dover, N.H. - Robert Shearer, Dover, N.H. - Jane Simpkin, 35, Wayland, Mass. - Brian D. Sweeney, 38, Barnstable, Mass., business consultant - Timothy Ward, 38, San Diego, Rubio's Restaurants executive - William Weems, 46, Marblehead, Mass., commercial producer

American Airlines Flight 77, Washington to Los Angeles, crashed into Pentagon

CREW: - Charles Burlingame, captain - David Charlebois, Washington, first officer - Michele Heidenberger, 57, Chevy Chase, Md., flight attendant - Jennifer Lewis, 38, Culpeper, Va., flight attendant - Kenneth Lewis, 49, Culpeper, Va., flight attendant - Renee May, 39, Baltimore, flight attendant PASSENGERS: - Dr. Paul Ambrose, 32, physician - Yeneneh Betru, 35, Burbank, Calif. - MJ Booth - Bernard Brown, 11, student, Leckie Elementary School in Washington - Suzanne Calley, 42, San Martin, Calif., employee of Cisco Systems Inc. - William Caswell - Sarah Clark, 65, Columbia, Md., sixth-grade teacher, Backus Middle School in Washington - Asia Cottom, 11, student, Backus Middle School in Washington - James Debeuneure, 58, Upper Marlboro, Md., fifth-grade teacher, Ketcham Elementary School in Washington - Rodney Dickens, 11, student, Leckie Elementary School in Washington - Eddie Dillard - Charles Droz - Barbara G. Edwards, 58, Las Vegas, teacher, Palo Verde High School in Las Vegas - Charles S. Falkenberg, 45, University Park, Md., director of research at ECOlogic Corp. - Zoe Falkenberg, 8, University Park, Md. - Dana Falkenberg, 3, University Park, Md. - James Ferguson - Wilson ``Bud'' Flagg, Millwood, Va., retired Navy admiral and retired American Airlines pilot - Darlene ``Dee'' Flagg, Millwood, Va. - Richard Gabriel - Ian Gray, 55, Washington, president of healthcare consulting firm - Stanley Hall, 68, Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif. - Bryan Jack, 48, Alexandria, Va., senior executive at Defense Department - Steven D. ``Jake'' Jacoby, 43, Alexandria, Va., chief operating officer, Metrocall Inc. - Ann Judge, 49, Virginia, National Geographic Society travel office manager - Chandler Keller, 29, Boeing propulsion engineer in El Segundo, Calif. - Yvonne Kennedy - Norma Khan - Karen A. Kincaid, 40, lawyer with Wiley Rein & Fielding in Washington - Norma Langsteuerle - Dong Lee - Dora Menchaca, 45, Santa Monica, Calif., associate director of clinical research for biotech firm - Christopher Newton, 38, Arlington, Va., executive, Work Life Benefits - Barbara Olson, 45, TV commentator and lawyer - Ruben Ornedo, 39, Los Angeles, Boeing propulsion engineer - Lisa Raines, 42, senior vice president of biotechnology firm - Todd Reuben, 40, Potomac, Md., tax and business lawyer - John Sammartino - Yang Shuyin - Diane Simmons - George Simmons - Mari-Rae Sopper, Santa Barbara, Calif., women's gymnastics coash, UC-Santa Barbara - Robert Speisman, 47, Irvington, N.Y. - Hilda Taylor, sixth grade teacher at Leckie Elementary School in Washington - Leonard Taylor, Reston, Va. - Sandra Teague - Leslie A. Whittington, 45, University Park, Md., Georgetown University professor - John Yamnicky, 71, Waldorf, Md. - Vicki Yancey - Zheng Yuguang

United Airlines Flight 93, Newark, N.J., to San Francisco, crashed in rural southwest Pennsylvania

CREW: - Jason Dahl, 43, Denver, captain - Leroy Homer, Marlton, N.J., first officer - Lorraine Bay, flight attendant - Sandra Bradshaw, 38, Greensboro, N.C., flight attendant - Wanda Green, flight attendant - CeeCee Lyles, Fort Myers, Fla., flight attendant - Deborah Welsh, flight attendant PASSENGERS: - Christian Adams - Todd Beamer, 32, of Cranbury, N.J. - Alan Beaven, 48, Oakland, Calif., environmental lawyer - Mark Bingham, 31, San Francisco, public relations firm owner - Deora Bodley, 20, Santa Clara, Calif., university student - Marion Britton - Thomas E. Burnett Jr., 38, San Ramon, Calif., senior executive of medical research and development company - William Cashman - Georgine Corrigan - Joseph Deluca - Patrick Driscoll - Edward Felt, 41, Matawan, N.J. - Colleen Fraser - Andrew Garcia - Jeremy Glick, 31, West Milford, N.J. - Lauren Grandcolas, San Rafael, Calif., sales worker at Good Housekeeping magazine - Donald F. Greene, 52, Greenwich, Conn. - Linda Gronlund - Richard Guadagno, 38, Eureka, Calif., U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge manager - Toshiya Kuge - Waleska Martinez - Nicole Miller - Mark Rothenberg - Christine Snyder, 32, Kailua, Hawaii - John Talignani - Honor Wainio World Trade Center: - Ray Downey, New York firefighter, chief of special operations command - William Feehan, First Deputy Commissioner of Fire Department - Peter Ganci, Fire Department chief - The Rev. Mychal Judge, Fire Department chaplain - Yamel Merino, 24, Yonkers, N.Y., emergency medical technician Pentagon: - Terry Lynch, consultant for New York's Booz-Allen & Hamilton and former Congressional staffer


AMERICAN AIRLINES FLIGHT 11

by Boston.com http://www.boston.com/news/packages/sept11/anniversary/victims/flight11.htm

American Airlines Flight 11

Flight 11, flying from Boston to Los Angeles, crashed into the World Trade Center.

Confirmed dead

Name Age Home Job Employer
Crew
Barbara Jean Ares Tegui 38 Marstons Mills, Mass. flight attendant American Airlines
Jeffrey Dwayne Collman 41 Novato, Calif. flight attendant American Airlines
Sara Elizabeth Low 28 Boston, Mass. flight attendant American Airlines
Karen A. Martin 40 Danvers, Mass. flight attendant American Airlines
Thomas F. McGuinness Jr. 42 Portsmouth, N.H. first officer American Airlines
Kathleen Ann Nicosia 54 Winthrop, Mass. flight attendant American Airlines
John Ogonowski 52 Dracut, Mass. captain American Airlines
Betty Ann Ong 45 Andover, Mass. flight attendant American Airlines
Jean Destrehan Roger 24 Longmeadow, Mass. flight attendant American Airlines
Dianne Bulls Snyder 42 Westport Point, Mass. flight attendant American Airlines
Madeline Amy Sweeney 35 Acton, Mass. flight attendant American Airlines
Passengers
Anna Williams Allison 49 Stoneham, Mass. founder A2 Software Solutions
David Lawrence Angell 54 Pasadena, Calif. executive producer NBC
Lynn Edwards Angell 52 Los Angeles, Calif. librarian
Seima Aoyama 48 Culver City, Calif. accountant Japanese
Myra Joy Aronson 50 Charlestown, Mass. press and analyst relations manager Compuware Corp.
Christine Barbuto 32 Brookline, Mass. buyer TJX Co.
Carolyn Mayer Beug 48 Santa Monica, Calif. filmmaker and video producer
Kelly Ann Booms 24 Brookline, Mass. accountant PricewaterhouseCoopers
Carol Marie Bouchard 43 Warwick, R.I. emergency room secretary Kent County Hospital
Neilie Anne Heffernan Casey 32 Wellesley, Mass. planning manager TJX Co.
Jeffrey W. Coombs 42 Abington, Mass. security analyst Compaq
Tara Kathleen Creamer 30 Worcester, Mass. planning manager TJX Co.
Thelma Cuccinello 71 Wilmot Flat, N.H. homemaker
Patrick Currivan 52 Winchester, Mass. vice president AtosEuronext
Brian P. Dale 43 Warren, N.J. partner Blue Capital Management
David DiMeglio 22 Wakefield, Mass. computer service
Donald Americo DiTullio 49 Peabody, Mass. endoscopy division Smith & Nephew Inc.
Alberto Dominguez 66 Lidcombe, New South Wales, Australia baggage handler Qantas Airways
Peter el-Hachem 40 Tewksbury, Mass. senior software engineering manager Teradyne
Paige Farley-Hackel 46 Newton, Mass. spiritual counselor
Alexander Milan Filipov 70 Concord, Mass. electrical engineer and church deacon
Carol Flyzik 40 Plaistow, N.H. marketing supervisor Meditech
Paul Friedman 45 Belmont, Mass. management consultant Emergence Consulting
Karleton D.B. Fyfe 31 Brookline, Mass. senior analyst John Hancock
Peter Alan Gay 54 Tewksbury, Mass. plant manager Raytheon Co.
Linda M. George 27 Westboro, Mass. buyer TJX Co.
Edmund Glazer 41 Wellesley, Mass. chief financial officer MRV Communications
Lisa Reinhart Fenn Gordenstein 41 Needham, Mass. assistant vice president and merchandise manager TJX Co.
Andrew Peter Charles Curry Green 34 Santa Monica, Calif. director of business development eLogic
Robert Jay Hayes 38 Amesbury, Mass. sales engineer Netstal
Edward (Ted) R. Hennessy Jr. 35 Belmont, Mass. partner Emergence Consulting
John A. Hofer 45 Los Angeles, Calif. owner John's Sharpening Center
Cora Hidalgo Holland 52 Sudbury, Mass. Sudbury Food Pantry at Our Lady of Fatima Church
John Nicholas Humber Jr. 60 Newton, Mass. owner Brae Burn Management
Waleed Iskandar 34 London, England chief of digital strategy for Europe Monitor Group
John Charles Jenkins 45 Cambridge, Mass. corporate office services manager Charles River Associates
Charles Edward Jones 48 Bedford, Mass. retired astronautical engineer and manager of space programs BAE Systems
Robin Kaplan 33 Westboro, Mass. senior store equipment specialist TJX Co.
Barbara Keating 72 Palm Springs, Calif. receptionist parish office, St. Theresa Catholic Church
David Kovalcin 42 Hudson, N.H. senior mechanical engineer Raytheon Co.
Judy Larocque 50 Framingham, Mass. founder and CEO Market Perspectives
Natalie Janis Lasden 46 Peabody, Mass. product testing team leader General Electric
Daniel John Lee 34 Van Nuys, Calif. road crew Backstreet Boys
Daniel C. Lewin 31 Charlestown, Mass. co-founder and chief technology officer Akamai Technologies
Susan A. MacKay 44 Westford, Mass. assistant vice president of merchandise planning and allocation TJX Co.
Christopher D. Mello 25 Boston, Mass. analyst Alta Communications
Jeffrey Peter Mladenik 43 Hinsdale, Ill. interim CEO eLogic
Carlos Alberto Montoya 36 Belmont, Mass. Colombian
Antonio Jesus Montoya Valdes 46 East Boston, Mass. housekeeping worker Boston Harbor Hotel
Laura Lee Morabito 34 Framingham, Mass. national sales manager Qantas Airways
Mildred Naiman 81 Andover, Mass. retired tester Western Electric Co.
Laurie Ann Neira 48 Los Angeles, Calif. transcriber Your Office Genie
Renee Lucille Newell 37 Cranston, R.I. customer service agent American Airlines
Jacqueline J. Norton 61 Lubec, Maine retiree
Robert Grant Norton 85 Lubec, Maine retiree
Jane M. Orth 49 Haverhill, Mass. retiree Lucent Technologies
Thomas Nicholas Pecorelli 30 Topanga, Calif. cameraman Fox Sports and E! Entertainment Television
Berinthia Berenson Perkins 53 Los Angeles, Calif. actress and photographer
Sonia Morales Puopolo 61 Dover, Mass. former ballet dancer
David E. Retik 33 Needham, Mass. general partner Alta Communications
Philip M. Rosenzweig 47 Acton, Mass. vice president Sun Microsystems
Richard Barry Ross 58 Newton, Mass. president and chief executive The Ross Group
Jessica Leigh Sachs 23 Billerica, Mass. accountant PricewaterhouseCoopers
Rahma Salie 28 Boston, Mass. chief operating officer Cinoni
Heather Lee Smith 30 Boston, Mass. financial analyst Beacon Capital Partners
Douglas J. Stone 54 Dover, N.H. co-owner Odyssey Press
Xavier Suarez 41 Chino Hills, Calif. civil engineer
Michael Theodoridis 32 Boston, Mass. technology consultant
James Anthony Trentini 65 Everett, Mass. retired teacher and assistant principal
Mary Barbara Trentini 67 Everett, Mass. retired secretary
Pendyala Vamsikrishna 30 Los Angeles, Calif. project manager for consulting firm DTI
Mary Alice Wahlstrom 78 Kaysville, Utah retired loan officer
Kenneth E. Waldie 46 Methuen, Mass. senior quality control engineer Raytheon Co.
John Wenckus 46 Torrance, Calif. tax consultant
Candace Lee Williams 20 Danbury, Conn. student Northeastern University
Christopher Rudolph Zarba Jr. 47 Hopkinton, Mass. software engineer Concord Communications

LIST OF CONFIRMED DEAD

by Guardian.co.uk http://www.guardian.co.uk/wtccrash/story/0,1300,551423,00.html

American Airlines flight 11

Some 81 passengers and 11 crew were on board when American Airlines flight AA11, en route from Boston to Los Angeles, crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Centre.

This is a preliminary, partial list of passengers aboard the flight whose next of kin have been notified. Some families asked the airline not to include their loved ones' names: these do not appear.

Crew
Captain John Ogonowski
First Officer Thomas McGuinness
Barbara Arestegui
Jeffrey Collman
Sara Low
Karen Martin
Kathleen Nicosia
Betty Ong
Jean Roger
Dianne Snyder
Madeline Sweeney

Passengers
Anna Allison
David Angell
Lynn Angell
Seima Aoyama
Myra Aronson
Christine Barbuto
Carol Bouchard
Neilie Casey
Jeffrey Coombs
Tara Creamer
Thelma Cuccinello
Patrick Currivan
Andrew Currygreen
Brian Dale
David Dimeglio
Donald Ditullio
Albert Dominguez
Al Filipov
Carol Flyzik
Paul Friedman
Karleton Fyfe
Peter Gay
Linda George
Edmund Glazer
Page Hackel Farley
Peter Hashem
Robert Hayes
Edward Hennessy
John Hofer
Cora Holland
Nicholas Humber
John Jenkins
Charles Jones
Robin Kaplan
Barbara Keating
David Kovalcin
N Janis Lasden
Danny Lee
Daniel Lewin
Jeff Mladenik
Antonio Montoya
Laura Morabito
Mildred Naiman
Laurie Neira
Renee Newell
Jacqueline Norton
Robert Norton
Jane Orth
Thomas Pecorelli
Bernthia Perkins
Sonia Puopolo
David Retik
Philip Rosenweig
Richard Ross
Heath Smith
Douglas Stone
Xavier Suarez
James Trentini
Mary Trentini
Mary Wahlstrom
Kenneth Waldie
John Wenckus
Candace Williams
Christopher Zarba


 

REMEMBERING THE VICTIMS ONE YEAR LATER

by PBS.org http://www.pbs.org/newshour/terrorism/sept11/victims/aa11.html

Online NewsHourThe web site of the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer
Remembering Sept. 11
REMEMBERING THE VICTIMS
Confirmed Dead: American Airlines Flight 11, Crashed Into World Trade Ctr.
Crew:
-- Barbara Jean Ares Tegui, 38, Marstons Mills, Mass., flight
attendant, American Airlines
-- Jeffrey Dwayne Collman, 41, Novato, Calif., flight attendant,
American Airlines
-- Sara Elizabeth Low, 28, Boston, Mass., flight attendant,
American Airlines
-- Karen A. Martin, 40, Danvers, Mass., flight attendant,
American Airlines
-- Thomas F. McGuinness Jr., 42, Portsmouth, N.H., first officer,
American Airlines
-- Kathleen Ann Nicosia, 54, Winthrop, Mass., flight attendant,
American Airlines
-- John Ogonowski, 52, Dracut, Mass., captain, American Airlines
-- Betty Ann Ong, 45, Andover, Mass., flight attendant, American
Airlines
-- Jean Destrehan Roger, 24, Longmeadow, Mass., flight attendant,
American Airlines
-- Dianne Bulls Snyder, 42, Westport Point, Mass., flight
attendant, American Airlines
-- Madeline Amy Sweeney, 35, Acton, Mass., flight attendant,
American Airlines
 

Passengers:
-- Anna Williams Allison, 49, Stoneham, Mass., founder, A2
Software Solutions
-- David Lawrence Angell, 54, Pasadena, Calif., executive
producer, NBC
-- Lynn Edwards Angell, 52, Los Angeles, Calif., librarian
-- Seima Aoyama, 48, Culver City, Calif., accountant, Japanese
-- Myra Joy Aronson, 50, Charlestown, Mass., press and analyst
relations manager, Compuware Corp.
-- Christine Barbuto, 32, Brookline, Mass., buyer, TJX Co.
-- Carolyn Mayer Beug, 48, Santa Monica, Calif., filmmaker and
video producer
-- Kelly Ann Booms, 24, Brookline, Mass., accountant,
PricewaterhouseCoopers
-- Carol Marie Bouchard, 43, Warwick, R.I., emergency room
secretary, Kent County Hospital
-- Neilie Anne Heffernan Casey, 32, Wellesley, Mass., planning
manager, TJX Co.
-- Jeffrey W. Coombs, 42, Abington, Mass., security analyst,
Compaq
-- Tara Kathleen Creamer, 30, Worcester, Mass., planning manager,
TJX Co.
-- Thelma Cuccinello, 71, Wilmot Flat, N.H., homemaker
-- Patrick Currivan, 52, Winchester, Mass., vice president,
AtosEuronext
-- Brian P. Dale, 43, Warren, N.J., partner, Blue Capital
Management
-- David DiMeglio, 22, Wakefield, Mass., computer service
-- Donald Americo DiTullio, 49, Peabody, Mass., endoscopy
division, Smith & Nephew Inc.
-- Alberto Dominguez, 66, Lidcombe, New South Wales, Australia,
baggage handler, Qantas Airways
-- Paige Farley-Hackel, 46, Newton, Mass., spiritual counselor
-- Alexander Milan Filipov, 70, Concord, Mass., electrical
engineer and church deacon
-- Carol Flyzik, 40, Plaistow, N.H., marketing supervisor,
Meditech
-- Paul Friedman, 45, Belmont, Mass., management consultant,
Emergence Consulting
-- Karleton D.B. Fyfe, 31, Brookline, Mass., senior analyst, John
Hancock
-- Peter Alan Gay, 54, Tewksbury, Mass., plant manager, Raytheon
Co.
-- Linda M. George, 27, Westboro, Mass., buyer, TJX Co.
-- Edmund Glazer, 41, Wellesley, Mass., chief financial officer,
MRV Communications
-- Lisa Reinhart Fenn Gordenstein, 41, Needham, Mass., assistant
vice president and merchandise manager, TJX Co.
-- Andrew Peter Charles Curry Green, 34, Santa Monica, Calif.,
director of business development, eLogic
-- Peter el-Hachem, 40, Tewksbury, Mass. Senior software engineering
manager, Teradyne.
-- Robert Jay Hayes, 38, Amesbury, Mass., sales engineer, Netstal
-- Edward (Ted) R. Hennessy Jr., 35, Belmont, Mass., partner,
Emergence Consulting
-- John A. Hofer, 45, Los Angeles, Calif., owner, John's
Sharpening Center
-- Cora Hidalgo Holland, 52, Sudbury, Mass., Sudbury Food Pantry
at Our Lady of Fatima Church
-- John Nicholas Humber Jr., 60, Newton, Mass., owner, Brae Burn
Management
-- Waleed Iskandar, 34, London, England, chief of digital
strategy for Europe, Monitor Group, Lebanese
-- John Charles Jenkins, 45, Cambridge, Mass., corporate office
services manager, Charles River Associates
-- Charles Edward Jones, 48, Bedford, Mass., retired
astronautical engineer and manager of space programs, BAE Systems
-- Robin Kaplan, 33, Westboro, Mass., senior store equipment
specialist, TJX Co.
-- Barbara Keating, 72, Palm Springs, Calif., receptionist,
parish office, St. Theresa Catholic Church
-- David Kovalcin, 42, Hudson, N.H., senior mechanical engineer,
Raytheon Co.
-- Judy Larocque, 50, Framingham, Mass., founder and CEO, Market
Perspectives
-- Natalie Janis Lasden, 46, Peabody, Mass., product testing team
leader, General Electric
-- Daniel John Lee, 34, Van Nuys, Calif., road crew, Backstreet
Boys
-- Daniel C. Lewin, 31, Charlestown, Mass., co-founder and chief
technology officer, Akamai Technologies
-- Susan A. MacKay, 44, Westford, Mass., assistant vice president
of merchandise planning and allocation, TJX Co.
-- Christopher D. Mello, 25, Boston, Mass., analyst, Alta
Communications
-- Jeffrey Peter Mladenik, 43, Hinsdale, Ill., interim CEO,
eLogic
-- Carlos Alberto Montoya, 36, Bellmont, Mass., Colombian
-- Antonio Jesus Montoya Valdes, 46, East Boston, Mass.,
housekeeping worker, Boston Harbor Hotel
-- Laura Lee Morabito, 34, Framingham, Mass., national sales
manager, Qantas Airways
-- Mildred Naiman, 81, Andover, Mass., retired tester, Western
Electric Co.
-- Laurie Ann Neira, 48, Los Angeles, Calif., transcriber, Your
Office Genie
-- Renee Lucille Newell, 37, Cranston, R.I., customer service
agent, American Airlines
-- Jacqueline J. Norton, 61, Lubec, Maine, retiree
-- Robert Grant Norton, 85, Lubec, Maine, retiree
-- Jane M. Orth, 49, Haverhill, Mass., retiree, Lucent
Technologies
-- Thomas Nicholas Pecorelli, 30, Topanga, Calif., cameraman, Fox
Sports and E! Entertainment Television
-- Berinthia Berenson Perkins, 53, Los Angeles, Calif., actress
and photographer
-- Sonia Morales Puopolo, 61, Dover, Mass., former ballet dancer
-- David E. Retik, 33, Needham, Mass., general partner, Alta
Communications
-- Philip M. Rosenzweig, 47, Acton, Mass., vice president, Sun
Microsystems
-- Richard Barry Ross, 58, Newton, Mass., president and chief
executive, The Ross Group
-- Jessica Leigh Sachs, 23, Billerica, Mass., accountant,
PricewaterhouseCoopers
-- Rahma Salie, 28, Boston, Mass., chief operating officer,
Cinoni
-- Heather Lee Smith, 30, Boston, Mass., financial analyst,
Beacon Capital Partners
-- Douglas J. Stone, 54, Dover, N.H., co-owner, Odyssey Press
-- Xavier Suarez, 41, Chino Hills, Calif., civil engineer
-- Michael Theodoridis, 32, Boston, Mass., technology consultant
-- James Anthony Trentini, 65, Everett, Mass., retired teacher
and assistant principal
-- Mary Barbara Trentini, 67, Everett, Mass., retired secretary
-- Pendyala Vamsikrishna, 30, Los Angeles, Calif., project
manager for consulting firm, DTI
-- Mary Alice Wahlstrom, 78, Kaysville, Utah, retired loan
officer
-- Kenneth E. Waldie, 46, Methuen, Mass., senior quality control
engineer, Raytheon Co.
-- John Wenckus, 46, Torrance, Calif., tax consultant
-- Candace Lee Williams, 20, Danbury, Conn., student,
Northeastern University
-- Christopher Rudolph Zarba Jr., 47, Hopkinton, Mass., software
engineer, Concord Communications
 


 

AMERICAN AIRLINES' PARTIAL PASSENGER LISTS

by Washingtonpost.com http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A18970-2001Sep12

Thursday, September 13, 2001; 4:44 PM

American Airlines Flight 77, bound from Dulles to Los Angeles, crashed into the Pentagon. Here is a nearly complete list of those killed, according to family members, friends, co-workers and law enforcement officials.

Crew:

Charles Burlingame, captain

David Charlebois, Washington, first officer

Michele Heidenberger, 57, Chevy Chase, Md., flight attendant

Jennifer Lewis, 38, Culpeper, Va., flight attendant

Kenneth Lewis, 49, Culpeper, Va., flight attendant

Renee May, 39, Baltimore, flight attendant

Passengers:

Dr. Paul Ambrose, 32, physician

Yeneneh Betru, 35, Burbank, Calif.

MJ Booth

Bernard Brown, 11, student, Leckie Elementary School in Washington

Suzanne Calley, 42, San Martin, Calif., employee of Cisco Systems Inc.

William Caswell

Sarah Clark, 65, Columbia, Md., sixth-grade teacher, Backus Middle School in Washington

Asia Cottom, 11, student, Backus Middle School in Washington

James Debeuneure, 58, Upper Marlboro, Md., fifth-grade teacher, Ketcham Elementary School in Washington

Rodney Dickens, 11, student, Ketcham Elementary School in Washington

Eddie Dillard

Charles Droz

Barbara G. Edwards, 58, Las Vegas, teacher, Palo Verde High School in Las Vegas

Charles S. Falkenberg, 45, University Park, Md., director of research at ECOlogic Corp.

Zoe Falkenberg, 8, University Park, Md.

Dana Falkenberg, 3, University Park, Md.

James Joe Ferguson, 39, District of Columbia, education outreach director of National Geographic Society

Wilson “Bud” Flagg, 63, Millwood, Va., retired Navy admiral and retired American Airlines pilot

Darlene “Dee” Flagg, 63, Millwood, Va.

Richard Gabriel

Ian Gray, 55, Washington, president of healthcare consulting firm

Stanley Hall, 68, Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif.

Bryan Jack, 48, Alexandria, Va., senior executive at Defense Department

Steven D. “Jake” Jacoby, 43, Alexandria, Va., chief operating officer, Metrocall Inc.

Ann Judge, 49, Virginia, National Geographic Society travel office manager

Chandler Keller, 29, Boeing propulsion engineer in El Segundo, Calif.

Yvonne Kennedy

Norma Khan

Karen A. Kincaid, 40, lawyer with Wiley Rein & Fielding in Washington

Norma Langsteuerle

Dong Lee

Dora Menchaca, 45, Santa Monica, Calif., associate director of clinical research for biotech firm

Christopher Newton, 38, Arlington, Va., executive, Work Life Benefits

Barbara Olson, 45, TV commentator and lawyer

Ruben Ornedo, 39, Los Angeles, Boeing propulsion engineer

Robert Penniger, 63, Poway, Calif., electrical engineer with BAE Systems

Lisa Raines, 42, senior vice president of biotechnology firm

Todd Reuben, 40, Potomac, Md., tax and business lawyer

John Sammartino

Yang Shuyin

Diane Simmons

George Simmons

Mari-Rae Sopper, 35, Santa Barbara, Calif., women’s gymnastics coash, UC-Santa Barbara

Robert Speisman, 47, Irvington, N.Y.

Hilda Taylor, sixth grade teacher at Leckie Elementary School in Washington

Leonard Taylor, Reston, Va.

Sandra Teague, 31

Leslie A. Whittington, 45, University Park, Md., Georgetown University professor

John Yamnicky, 71, Waldorf, Md.

Vicki Yancey

Zheng Yuguang

American Airlines Flight 11, bound from Boston to Los Angeles, crashed into the World Trade Center. Here is a partial list of those killed, according to family members, friends, co-workers and law enforcement officials.

Crew:

John Ogonowski, 52, Dracut, Mass., captain

Thomas McGuinness, 42, Portsmouth, N.H., first officer

Barbara Arestegui, 38, Marstons Mills, Mass., flight attendant

Jeffrey Collman, flight attendant

Sara Low, 28, Batesville, Ark., flight attendant

Karen Martin, flight attendant

Kathleen Nicosia, flight attendant

Betty Ong, 45, Andover, Mass., flight attendant

Jean Roger, 24, Longmeadow, Mass., flight attendant

Dianne Snyder, 42, Westport, Mass., flight attendant

Madeline Sweeney, 35, Acton, Mass., flight attendant

Passengers:

Anna Williams Allison, 48, Stoneham, Mass., founder A2 Software Solutions

David Angell, 54, Pasadena, Calif., executive producer, NBC’s “Frasier”

Lynn Angell, Pasadena, Calif.

Seima Aoyama

Myra Aronson, 52, Charlestown, Mass., press and analyst relations manager

Christine Barbuto, 32, Brookline, Mass., TJX Co.

Berry Berenson, 53, Los Angeles, actress and photographer

Carolyn Beug, 48, Los Angeles

Carol Bouchard, 43, Warwick, R.I., Kent County Hospital emergency room secretary

Robin Caplin, Natick, Mass.

Neilie Casey, 32, Wellesley, Mass., TJX Co.

Jeffrey Coombs, 42, Abington, Mass., security analyst for Compaq

Tara Creamer, 30, Worcester, Mass.

Thelma Cuccinello, 71, Wilmot, N.H.

Patrick Currivan

Andrew Curry Green, Chelmsford, Mass.

Brian Dale, 43, Warren, N.J.

David DiMeglio, Wakefield, Mass.

Donald Ditullio, 49, Peabody, Mass., Smith and Nephew

Albert Dominguez

Alex Filipov, 70, Concord, Mass.

Carol Flyzik, 40, Plaistow, N.H.

Paul Friedman

Karleton D.B. Fyfe, 31, Brookline, Mass., John Hancock

Peter Gay, 54, Tewksbury, Mass., Raytheon Co. plant manager

Linda George, 27, Westboro, Mass., TJX Co.

Edmund Glazer, 41, Los Angeles, chief financial officer, MRV Communications

Lisa Fenn Gordenstein, 41, Needham, Mass., TJX Co.

Paige Farley Hackel, 46, Newton, Mass., spiritual counselor

Peter Hashem, 40, Tweksbury, Mass., salesman

Robert Hayes

Ted Hennessey, 35, Belmont, Mass., consultant

John Hofer

Cora Holland, 52, Sudbury, Mass., Sudbury Food Pantry at Our Lady of Fatima Church

Nicholas Humber, 60, Newton, Mass., owner of Brae Burn Management

John Jenkins

Charles Jones, 48, Bedford, Mass., computer programmer

Robin Kaplan, 33, Westboro, Mass., TJX Co.

Barbara Keating, 72, Palm Springs, Calif.

David Kovalcin, 42, Hudson, N.H.

Judy Larocque, 50, Framingham, Mass., founder and CEO of research firm Market Perspectives

Jude Larson, 31, Los Angeles

Natalie Larson, Los Angeles

N. Janis Lasden, 46, Peabody, Mass., General Electric

Daniel John Lee, 34, Los Angeles

Daniel C. Lewin, 31, co-founder of Akamai Technologies

Susan MacKay, 44, Westford, Mass., TJX Co.

Chris Mello, 25, Boston, analyst

Jeff Mladenik, 43, Hinsdale, Ill., interim president at E-Logic

Antonio Montoya

Carlos Montoya

Laura Lee Morabito, 34, Framingham, Mass., national sales manager for Qantas Airways

Mildred Naiman, Andover, Mass.

Laurie Neira

Renee Newell, 37, Cranston, R.I., American Airlines customer service agent

Jacqueline Norton, 60, Lubec, Maine, retiree

Robert Norton, 82, Lubec, Maine, retiree

Jane Orth, 49, Haverhill, Mass., retired from Lucent Technology

Thomas Pecorelli, 31, Los Angeles, cameraman for Fox Sports and E! Entertainment Television

Bernthia Perkins, 53, Wellfleet, Mass., actress and photographer

Sonia Morales Puopolo, 58, Dover, Mass., former ballet dancer

David Retik, Needham, Mass.

Philip Rosenzweig, Acton, Mass., executive with Sun Microsystems

Richard Ross, 58, Newton, Mass. the Ross Group

James Roux, 43, Portland, Maine, attorney

Jessica Sachs, 22, Billerica, Mass., accountant with PricewaterhouseCoopers

Rahma Salie, 28, Boston

Heather Smith, 30, Boston, Beacon Capital Partners

Douglas Stone, 54, Dover, N.H.

Xavier Suarez

Michael Theodoridis, 32, Boston, consultant

James Trentini, 65, Everett, Mass., retired teacher and assistant principal

Mary Trentini, 67, Everett, Mass., retired secretary

Mary Wahlstrom, 75, Kaysville, Utah

Kenneth Waldie, 46, Methuen, Mass., Raytheon Co.

John Wenckus, 46, Torrance, Calif., tax consultant

Candace Lee Williams, 20, Danbury, Conn., student

Christopher Zarba, 47, Hopkinton, Mass., software engineer at Concord Communications

-- Associated Press


TERRORIST ATTACK VICTIMS

by FoxNews.com http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,34223,00.html

Confirmed on board American Airlines Flight 11 Boston to Los Angeles: 

CREW: 
? Captain John Ogonowski, 52, Dracut, Mass., pilot.
? Thomas McGuinness, 42, Portsmouth, N.H., co-pilot
? Sara Low, Batesville, Ark., flight attendant.
? Barbara Arestegui, 38, Marston Mills, Mass., flight attendant
? Jeffrey Collman, flight attendant
? Karen Martin, flight attendant
? Kathleen Nicosia, flight attendant
? Betty Ong, 45, Andover, Mass., flight attendant
? Jean Roger, 24, Longmeadow, Mass., flight attendant
? Dianne Snyder, 42, Westport, Mass., flight attendant
? Madeline Sweeney, 35, Acton, Mass., flight attendant 

PASSENGERS: 
? Anna Allison, 48, Stoneham, Mass., founder A2 Software Solutions
? David Angell, 54, Pasadena, Ca., executive producer of Frasier
? Lynn Angell, Pasadena, Ca.
? Seima Aoyama
? Myra Aronson, 52, Charlestown, Mass., press and analyst relations manager
? Christine Barbuto, 32, Brookline, Mass., TJX Co.
? Carol Bouchard, 43, Warwick, R.I., Kent County Hospital emergency room secretary
? Neilie Casey, 32, Wellesley, Mass., TJX Co.
? Jeffrey Coombs, 42, Abington, Mass.
? Tara Creamer, 30, Worcester, Mass.
? Thelma Cuccinello, 71, Wilmot,N.H.
? Patrick Currivan
? Andrew Curry Green, Chelmsford, Mass., Director of Business Development, eLogic
? Brian Dale, 43, Warren, N.J.
? David Dimeglio, Wakefield, Mass.
? Donald Ditullio, 49, Peabody, Mass.
? Albert Dominguez
? Al Filipov, 70, Concord, Mass.
? Carol Flyzik, 40, Plaistow, N.H.
? Paul Friedman
? Karle Fyfe, 31, Brookline, Mass., John Hancock
? Peter Gay, 54, Taunton, Mass., vice president and general manager, Raytheon Co. plant
? Linda George, 27, Westboro, Mass., TJX Co.
? Edmund Glazer, 41, Chatsworth, Calif., chief financial officer, MRV Communications, Inc.
? Page Hackel Farley, 46, Newton, Mass., spiritual counselor
? Peter Hashem, 40, Tweksbury, Mass., salesman
? Robert Hayes
? Edward Hennessey, 35, Belmont, Mass., consultant
? John Hofer
? Cora Holland, 52, Sudbury, Mass., Sudbury Food Pantry at Our Lady of Fatima Church
? Nicholas Humber, 60, Newton, Mass., owner of Brae Burn Management
? John Jenkins
? Charles Jones, 48, Bedford, Mass.
? Robin Kaplan, 33, Westboro, Mass., TJX Co.
? Barbara Keating, 72, Palm Springs, Calif.
? David Kovalcin, 42, Hudson, N.H.
? Judy Larocque, 50, Framingham, Mass., founder and CEO of research firm Market Perspectives
? N. Janis Lasden
? Danny John Lee, 34, Los Angeles
? Daniel Lewin, 31, chief technology officer, Akamai Technologies
? Jeff Mladenik, 43, Hinsdale, Ill. interim president at E-Logic
? Antonio Montoya
? Carlos Montoya
? Laura Morabito, 34, Framingham, Mass., national sales manager for Quantas Airways
? Mildred Naiman, Andover, Mass.
? Laurie Neira
? Renee Newell, 37, Cranston, R.I., American Airlines customer service agent
? Jacqueline Norton, 60, Lubec, Maine, retiree
? Robert Norton, 82, Lubec, Maine, retiree
? Jane Orth, 49, Haverhill, Mass., retiree, Lucent Technologies
? Thomas Pecorelli, 31, Los Angeles, cameraman for Fox Sports and E! Entertainment Television
? Berry Berenson Perkins, 53, Wellfleet, Mass., actress and photographer
? Sonia Puopolo
? David Retik, Needham, Mass.
? Philip Rosenweig, Acton, Mass., executive with Sun Microsystems
? Richard Ross, 58, Newton, Mass. the Ross Group
? James Roux, 43, Portland, Maine, attorney
? Jessica Sachs, 22, Billerica, Mass., accountant with PricewaterhouseCoopers
? Rahma Salie, 28, Boston
? Heath Smith, 30, Boston, Mass., Beacon Capital Partners
? Douglas Stone, 54, Dover, N.H.
? Xavier Suarez
? Michael Theodoridis, 32, Boston, consultant
? James Trentini, 65, Everett, Mass., retired teacher and assistant principal
? Mary Trentini, 67, Everett, Mass., retired secretary
? Mary Wahlstrom, 75, Kaysville, Utah
? Kenneth Waldie, 46, Methuen, Mass., Raytheon Co.
? John Wenckus, 46, Torrance, Calif., tax consultant
? Candace Williams,20, Danbury, Conn., student
? Christopher Zarba, 47, Hopkinton, Mass., software engineer at Concord Communications 

 Confirmed on board United Flight 175 Boston to Los Angeles: 

CREW: 
? Victor J. Saracini, 51, Lower Makefield Township, Pa., pilot.
? Michael Horrocks, co-pilot
? Robert Fangman, flight attendant
? Amy Jarret, 28, North Smithfield, R.I., flight attendant
? Amy King, flight attendant
? Kathryn Laborie, flight attendant
? Alfred Marchand, 44, Alamogordo, N.M., flight attendant.
? Michael Tarrou, flight attendant
? Alicia Titus, 28, flight attendant 

PASSENGERS: 
? Alona Avraham, 30, Ashdot, Israel
? Garnet Bailey, 53, Lynnfield, Mass., director of pro scouting, Los Angeles Kings
? Mark Bavis, 31, West Newton, Mass., Los Angeles Kings scout
? Graham Berkeley, 37, Wellesley, mass., Xerox Corp.
? Touri Bolourchi, 69, Beverly Hills, Ca.
? Klaus Bothe, 31, chief of development, BCT Technology AG, Germany
? Daniel Brandhorst, Los Angeles, PriceWaterhouse lawyer
? David Brandhorst, 3, Los Angeles
? John Cahill, Wellesley, Mass.
? Christopher Carstanjen, 33, Turner Falls, Mass., computer research specialist at University of Massachusetts
? John "Jay" Corcoran, 44, Norwell, Mass., merchant marine
? Dorothy Dearaujo, 82, Long Beach, Ca.
? Gloria Debarrera
? Lisa Frost, 22, Rancho Santa Margarita, Ca.
? Ronald Gamboa, 33, Los Angeles, Gap store manager
? Lynn Goodchild, 25, Attleboro, Mass., Putnam Investments
? Francis Grogan, 76, Easton, Mass., priest at Holy Cross Church
? Carl Hammond, 37, Boston
? Peter Hanson, 32, Groton, Mass., software salesman
? Susan Hanson, 35, Groton, Mass., student
? Christine Hanson, 3, Groton, Mass.
? Gerald Hardacre, 62, Carlsbad, Ca.
? Eric Hartono
? James Hayden, 47, Westford, Mass., chief financial officer of Netegrity Inc
? Herbert Homer, civilian employee, Department of Defense
? Robert Jalbert, 61, Swampscott, Mass., salesman
? Ralph Kershaw, 52, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass., marine surveyor
? Heinrich Kimmig, 43, chairman of BCT Technology AG, Germany
? Brian Kinney, 29, Lowell, Mass., PriceWaterhouse Cooper auditor
? Maclovia Lopez
? Marianne MacFarlane
? Louis Neil Mariani, 59, Derry, N.H.
? Juliana Valentine McCourt, 4, Westford, Mass.
? Ruth McCourt, 24, Westford, Mass.
? Wolfgang Menzel, 60, personnel manager, BCT Technology AG, Germany
? Shawn Nassaney, 25, Pawtucket, R.I. American Power Conversion
? Patrick Quigley, 40, Wellesley, Mass., partner at PriceWaterhouse Cooper
? Frederick Rimmele, Marblehead, Mass., physician
? James M. Roux, 42, Portland, Maine
? Jesus Sanchez, 45, Hudson, Mass., off-duty flight attendant.
? Kathleen Shearer, Dover, N.H.
? Robert Shearer, Dover, N.H.
? Jane Simpkin, 35, Wayland, Mass.
? Brian Sweeney, 38, Barnstable, Mass.
? Tim Ward, 38, San Diego, Rubio's Restaurants executive
? William Weems, 46, Marblehead, Mass., commercial producer 

Confirmed on board American Airlines Flight 77 Washington to Los Angeles: 

CREW:
?
 Charles Burlingame, pilot
? David Charlebois, co-pilot
? Jennifer Lewis, 38, flight attendant, Culpeper, Va.
? Kenneth Lewis, 49, flight attendant, Culpeper, Va.
? Renee May, 39, Baltimore, flight attendant
? Michelle Heidenberger, 57, Chevy Chase, Md., flight attendant 

PASSENGERS: 
? Paul Ambrose, 32, physician
? Yemen Betru, 35, Burbank, Ca.
? MJ Booth
? Bernard Brown, 11, student, Leckie Elementary School in Washington
? Suzanne Calley, 42, San Martin, Calif., employee of Cisco Systems Inc.
? William Caswell
? Sarah Clark, 65, Columbia, Md., sixth-grade teacher, Backus Middle School in Washington
? Asia Cottom, 11, student, Backus Middle School in Washington
? James Debeuneure, 58, Upper Marlboro, Md., fifth-grade teacher, Ketcham Elementary School in Washington
? Rodney Dickens, 11, student, Leckie Elementary School in Washington
? Eddie Dillard
? Charles Droz
? Barbara Edwards, 58, Las Vegas, teacher, Palo Verde High School in Las Vegas
? Charles Falkenberg, 45, University Park, Md., director of research at ECOlogic Corp.
? Zoe Falkenberg,, 8, University Park, Md.
? Dana Falkenberg, 3, University Park, Md.
? James Fergusson, 39, Washington, D.C., educational outreach director, National Geographic Society
? Wilson "Bud" Flagg, Millwood, Va., retired Navy admiral and retired American Airlines pilot
? Darlene "Dee" Flagg, Millwood, Va.
? Richard Gabriel, 54, Great Falls, Va., founder, Stratin Consulting
? Ian Gray, 55, Washington, president of healthcare consulting firm
? Stanley Hall, 68, Rancho Palos Verdes, Ca.
? Bryan Jack, 48, Alexandria, Va., senior executive at Defense Department
? Steven D. "Jake" Jacoby, 43, Alexandria, Va., chief operating officer, Metrocall Inc.
? Ann Judge, 49, Virginia, National Geographic Society travel office manager
? Chandler Keller, 29, Boeing propulsion engineer in El Segundo, Calif.
? Yvonne Kennedy
? Norma Khan, 45, Reston, Va., nonprofit organization manager
? Karen A. Kincaid, 40, Washington, D.C., lawyer, Wiley Rein & Fielding.
? Norma Lang-Steurele
? Dong Lee, 48, Leesburg, Va., engineer, Boeing Co.
? Dora Menchaca, 45, Santa Monica, Calif., associate director of clinical research for biotech firm
? Christopher Newton, 38, Arlington, Va., executive, Work Life Benefits
? Barbara Olson, 45, television commentator & attorney
? Ruben Ornedo, 39, Los Angeles, Boeing propulsion engineer
? Lisa Raines, 42, senior vice president of biotechnology firm
? Todd Reuben, 40, Potomac, Md., tax and business lawyer
? John Sammartino
? Diane Simmons
? George Simmons
? Mari Rae Sopper, Santa Barbara, Calif., women's gymnastics coash, UC-Santa Barbara
? Robert Speisman, 47, Irvington, NY
? Hilda Taylor, sixth grade teacher at Leckie Elementary School in Washington
? Leonard Taylor, Reston, Va.
? Sandra Teague, 31, physical therapist, Georgetown University Hospital
? Leslie A. Whittington, 45, University Park, Md., Georgetown University professor.
? John Yamnicky, 71, Waldorf, Md.
? Vicki Yancey, 44, Springfield, Va.
? Shuyin Yang, 61, Beijing, China
? Yuguag Zheng 

Confirmed on board United Flight 93 Newark, N.J., to San Francisco: 

CREW:
 ? Lorraine Bay, Hightstown, N.J., flight attendant, United Airlines
? Sandra Bradshaw, 38, Greensboro, N.C., flight attendant, United Airlines
? Jason Dahl, 43, Denver, Colo., captain, United Airlines
? Wanda Green, 49, Linden, N.J., flight attendant, United Airlines
? LeRoy Homer, 36, Marlton, N.J., first officer, United Airlines
? CeeCee Lyles, Fort Myers, Fla., flight attendant, United Airlines
? Deborah Welsh, 49, N.Y., N.Y., flight attendant, United Airlines

PASSENGERS 
? Christian Adams, 37, Biebelsheim, Germany, foreign sales manager, German Wine Fund
? Todd Beamer, 32, Cranbury, N.J., account manager, Oracle Corp.
? Alan Beaven, 48, Oakland, Calif., environmental lawyer
? Mark Bingham, 31, San Francisco, Calif., public relations firm owner
? Deora Bodley, 20, Santa Clara, Calif., university student
? Marion Britton, 53, assistant regional director, U.S. Census Bureau
? Thomas E. Burnett Jr., 38, San Ramon, Calif., medical research senior executive
? William Cashman ? Georgine Rose Corrigan, antiques and collectibles dealer
? Joseph Deluca ? Patrick Driscoll ? Edward Felt, 41, Matawan, N.J.
? Colleen Fraser, 51, Elizabeth, N.J., chairwoman, New Jersey Developmental Disabilities Council
? Andrew Garcia, 62, Portola Valley, Calif.
? Jeremy Glick, 31, West Milford, N.J.
? Kristin Gould
? Lauren Grandcolas, 38, San Rafael, Calif., sales worker, Good Housekeeping magazine
? Donald F. Greene, 52, Greenwich, Conn.
? Linda Gronlund, 46, Warwick, N. Y., environmental compliance, BMW
? Richard Guadagno, 38, Eureka, Calif., manager, Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge
? Toshiya Kuge, 20, Tokyo, Japan, student ? Hilda Marcin, 79, Budd Lake, N.J., retired teacher's aide
? Waleska Martinez, 37, automation specialist, U.S. Census Bureau
? Nicole Miller, 21, San Jose, Calif., student, West Valley College
? Louis J. Nacke, 42, New Hope, Pa., distribution center director, Kaybee Toys
? Mark Rothenberg, Scotch Plains, N.J., owner, MDR Global Resources
? Christine Snyder, 32, Kailua, Hawaii, arborist, Outdoor Circle
? John Talignani, 72, Staten Island, N.Y., retired restaurant worker 
? Honor Wainio

At the request of the families, some of the names have not been released.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

 


FLIGHT 11 MANIFEST

by FBI

FLIGHT 77 MANIFEST

by FBI

FLIGHT 93 MANIFEST

by FBI

FLIGHT 175 MANIFEST

by FBI

 


United States v. Zacarias Moussaoui
Criminal No. 01-455-A
Prosecution Trial Exhibits
Exhibit Number Description
P200055 Summary from Flight 93 depicting: the identity of pilots and flight attendants, seat assignments of passengers, and telephone calls from the flight [Listener discretion is advised. This exhibit also includes information about the other three flights hijacked on September 11]

 


Official Pilots

by 911Review.org

Here is the official info about these "hijackers". Many of the real identities are still alive. The FBI ignored these facts during 2001-2002 and never updated their suspect list.

"Official Pilots":

1) Waleed Alshehri, AA11, North Tower WTC. Name not on passenger list. Believed to be a pilot, though first reports said, his brother might have been a pilot, too. CNN reported on him: Possible confused identity with the son of a Saudi Arabian diplomat

Father Mohammad Alsheri said in a "20-20"- interview, Waleed had no flying experience. Then he left for the first time in his live his town for a trip to Medina. His father said, he had a strong sense of humour, was live loving, in contact with his father and called him in January 2001, 8 months before 911, he would be "on his way home". He never called back. His father never got an official visit by the FBI and learned from his son's death from the news and local newspapers. Saudi Authorities told him, that they had no hard evidence, that his son was involved in the hijack.

2) Mohammad Atta, AA 11, North Tower WTC. Name not on passenger list. Believed to be the pilot of that plane. Instead of thinking about committing suicide only, he officially applied for a student visa, together with Marwan Al-Shehhi. These visas arrived after a "bureaucratic backlog" in March 2001 at Al-Shehhi's flight school, Huffmann Aviation, by Rudi Dekkers. Author Daniel Hopsicker linked Huffmann Aviation to the CIA connected company. For odd reasons an AP story said, "On the form, filled out by a Huffman assistant, Atta's name is spelled "Mohomed." Due to local reports Dekkers' assistant who filled these visas out, Nicole Antini, was just then being sexually harassed by Rudi Dekkers, her beefy middle-aged boss, according to a lawsuit for sexual harassment which Dekker's was forced to settle recently for an undisclosed sum. In 2001, the Mossad observed various Muslim students, who trained at military flight schools, including Mohammad Atta, and warned the CIA twice of a possible terrorist attack. Leaked to the European press in late 2002, early 2003, it came out, that Mohammad Atta was even observed since 1998 by German intelligence, regarding his contacts (See Mamoun Darkanzali). This fits with other articles on Darkanzali, who was in contact with some Spanish suspects, which telephone had been tapped. In another article it was reported, that the CIA tried to hire Darkanzali as an informant.

3) Hani Hanjour, AA77, Pentagon. Name not on passenger list. Believed to be the pilot of that plane. It was said, he held a commercial pilot's license that expired in October, 1999. It was stated, that Lotfi Raissi was his flying teacher. But Raissi, who was arrested in September 2001 in United Kingdom, was plead unguilty in February 2002 and is free again.

4) Marwan Al-Shehhi, UA 175, South Tower WTC. Name not on passenger list. Believed to be the pilot of that plane. Instead of thinking about committing suicide only, he officially applied for a student visa. These visas arrived after a "bureaucratic backlog" in March 2001 at Al-Shehhi's flight school Huffmann Aviation. Author Daniel Hopsicker linked Huffmann Aviation to a CIA connected company

The accomplices:

5) Saeed Alghamdi, UA93, Pennsylvania. Name not on passenger list. CNN reported on him: "Identity is disputed" The real Saeed Alghamdi said to newspaper Asharq Al Awsat, he is still alive and pilot for Saudi Airlines. Saudi Airlines said once it was considering legal action against the FBI for seriously damaging its reputation and that of its pilots.

6) Ahmad Ibrahim A. Al Haznawi, UA93, Pennsylvania. Name not on passenger list.

7) Ahmed Alnami UA93, Pennsylvania. Name not on passenger list. Father Abdullah Alnami said to "20/20" (Barbara Walters) his son left home for the first time in his life -- six months before the attacks, and believes, he is innocent. Another Abdullah Alnami said (before the photos had been released!), he is administrative supervisor with Saudi Arabian Airlines and was in Riyadh when the terrorists struck.

8) Ziad Samir Jarrah, UA93, Pennsylvania. Name not on passenger list. Believed to be the pilot of that plane.

9) Fayez Rashid Ahmed Hassan Al Qadi Banihammad, UA 175, South Tower WTC. Name not on passenger list.

10) Wail M. Alshehri, AA11, North Tower WTC. Name not on passenger list. CNN reported on him: Possible confused identity with the son of a Saudi Arabian diplomat. Father thinks, he and his brother are innocent.

11) Satam M.A. Al Suqami, AA11, North Tower WTC. Name not on passenger list.

12) Abdulaziz Alomari, AA11, North Tower WTC. Name not on passenger list. CNN reported on Alomari: "Identity is in dispute." The real Abdulaziz Alomari is alive and an engineer with Saudi Telecoms and claims, his passport was once stolen in Denver. Another Abdulaziz Al Omari is pilot for Saudi Arabian Airlines.

13) Khalid Almihdhar, AA77, Pentagon. Name not on passenger list. CNN reported on him: "May be an assumed name; there are reports he is still alive." The real Khalid Al Midhar in fact said, he is alive.

14) Majed Moqed, AA77, Pentagon. Name not on passenger list.

15) Nawaf Alhazmi,AA77, Pentagon. Name not on passenger list.

16) Salem Alhazmi, AA77, Pentagon. Name not on passenger list. CNN reported on him: "May be a a stolen identity"

The real Al-Hamzi is 26. In September 2001 he had just returned to work at a petrochemical complex in the industrial eastern city of Yanbou.

17) Ahmed Alghamdi, UA 175, South Tower WTC. Name not on passenger list. CNN reported on him: "Lost his driver's license in 1995 for failing to pay a traffic fine, ... Bought plane ticket on August 29 through the Internet using a Mailboxes Etc. address."

18) Hamza Alghamdi, UA 175, South Tower WTC. Name not on passenger list.

19) Mohand Alshehri, UA 175, South Tower WTC. Name not on passenger list. CNN reported on Alsheri: "Saudi Embassy has named Alshehri as a victim of mistaken identity" It is claimed, that he communicated with other hijack plotters. He once asked to use the Internet at a public library in Delray Beach, Florida.

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