I know the yakkers hand up when the subway train goes into the tunnel and don't resume until they get out of it. But ne'er the less these rooms are shielded. Even your Super Phone wouldn't work there.
It's not a super phone. Just a regular Nokia.
Now if you would, tell me a few things:
1). How are you so sure that the building at the National Archives is shielded to prevent cell phone calls?
2. What do you make of the report that Sandy Berger diverted the attention of the Archive employees by telling them he had to make a sensitive phone call?
3). If it is as you say, don't you think they would know he would not be able to make a call? 4). Does a camera cell phone take pictures without having to transmit them?
5). Are you by any chance Sandy Berger? You seem awfully quick to come up with explanations as to why it could not be possible to take pictures with a camera cell phone or to make a call from the Archive building.
6). The question remains unanswered as to what type of phone Sandy Berger took into the building with him. Just what kind of a phone do you have?
Camera phones can store a goodly number of images. Berger would not have had to transmit the document images while inside the room, unless he was had to acquire a lerge number of images.