Let's add these links to go with the article you posted, STARWISE.
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ON THE NET...
http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&q=%22school%20bus%22&btnG=Google+Search&sa=N&tab=wn
http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&tab=wn&ie=UTF-8&ncl=http://www.sptimes.com/2006/05/20/Hillsborough/School_bus_ride_takes.shtml
http://www.foxnews.com
http://www.cnn.com
http://www.wtop.com
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UNRELATED TO ARTICLE ABOVE and ON THE NET...
http://www.pressconnects.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060521/NEWS01/605210371/1006
NEWS
"Bus 'hijacking' a learning experience
Students assist emergency personnel in drill"
By Liz Hacken
Press & Sun-Bulletin
ARTICLE SNIPPET: "OWEGO -- Concerned on-lookers watched from bleachers as firefighters nimbly crawled into the shattered windows of an overturned school bus, rescuing victims who needed medical treatment. Emergency medical technicians were on hand to treat their injuries, even if the most severe wounds were only a few smears of red paint.
Although the exercise Saturday for Tioga County emergency responders was just a drill, the preparation and lessons were real."
ARTICLE SNIPPET #2: ""School buses are soft targets," Quaranta said. "You can have problems of this magnitude at any time.""
Related?
September 5, 2003 (CBS News)
FBI Hunts 4 Terror Suspects
(CBS/AP) The FBI issued a bulletin Friday announcing a worldwide search for four men in connection with possible terrorist threats against the United States.
One of the four is a Saudi with family ties in South Florida, who has previously been described as a possible al Qaeda operative in the mold of Mohammed Atta, ringleader of the 9-11 attackers.
The FBI posted the bulletin on its Web site and circulated it among law enforcement agencies after recent intelligence indicated the four could be involved in an unspecified plot against U.S. interests, said a law enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The FBI had been seeking information about all four two Saudis, a Moroccan and a Tunisian for months, but the new information led officials to intensify the search, said a second official, also on condition of anonymity.
"These individuals should be considered armed and dangerous," the FBI bulletin reads. None of the four are believed to be in the United States.
>>>>The two apparently both lived in South Florida in the 1990s.<<<<
August 15, 2004 (Guardian Unlimited)
Countries Run Drills for Panama Attack
...
In April 2001, a suspected al-Qaida figure identified as Adnan Gulshair El Shukrijumah arrived in Panama legally from the United States and stayed for 10 days, said Panama's security council chief, Ramiro Jarvis.
Immigration records show that El Shukrijumah then apparently returned to the United States, Panama Interior Department spokesman David Salayandia said. Authorities have been looking for him since.
Last year, the FBI said it wanted to question El Shukrijumah on suspicion of involvement in plotting al-Qaida attacks on the United States or its interests abroad. But he faces no formal charges, officials said.
U.S. authorities said they are investigating whether there are any links between El Shukrijumah and other terror suspects, including Jose Padilla, an American arrested in 2002 for allegedly plotting to detonate a radioactive bomb. The two apparently both lived in South Florida in the 1990s.
Panama has taken steps to ensure that the canal is protected. In May, it signed an agreement allowing U.S. officials to board Panamanian flagships and search them for weapons of mass destruction.
EXCERPT, more at link
Al Qaeda seeks tie to local gangs
This Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles flier shows Adnan G. El Shukrijumah, a Saudi national who may be plotting terrorist attacks as part of al-Qaida. By Jerry Seper THE WASHINGTON TIMES
A top al Qaeda lieutenant has met with leaders of a violent Salvadoran criminal gang with roots in Mexico and the United States including a stronghold in the Washington area in an effort by the terrorist network to seek help infiltrating the U.S.-Mexico border, law enforcement authorities said.
Adnan G. El Shukrijumah, a key al Qaeda cell leader for whom the U.S. government has offered a $5 million reward, was spotted in July in Honduras meeting with leaders of El Salvador's notorious Mara Salvatrucha gang, which immigration officials said has smuggled hundreds of Central and South Americans mostly gang members into the United States. Although they are actively involved in alien, drug and weapons smuggling, Mara Salvatrucha members in America also have been tied to numerous killings, robberies, burglaries, carjackings, extortions, rapes and aggravated assaults including at least seven killings in Virginia and a machete attack on a 16-year-old in Alexandria that severely mutilated his hands. The Salvadoran gang, known to law enforcement authorities as MS-13 because many members identify themselves with tattoos of the number 13, is thought to have established a major smuggling center in Matamoros, Mexico, just south of Brownsville, Texas, from where it has arranged to bring illegal aliens from countries other than Mexico into the United States. Authorities said al Qaeda terrorists hope to take advantage of a lack of detention space within the Department of Homeland Security that has forced immigration officials to release non-Mexican illegal aliens back into the United States, rather than return them to their home countries. Less than 15 percent of those released appear for immigration hearings. Nearly 60,000 illegal aliens designated as other-than-Mexican, or OTMs, were detained last year along the U.S.-Mexico border.
El Shukrijumah, born in Saudi Arabia but thought to be a Yemen national, was spotted in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, in July, having crossed the border illegally from Nicaragua after a stay in Panama. U.S. authorities said al Qaeda operatives have been in Tegucigalpa planning attacks against British, Spanish and U.S. embassies. Known to carry passports from Saudi Arabia, Trinidad, Guyana and Canada, El Shukrijumah had sought meetings with the Mara Salvatrucha gang leaders who control alien-smuggling routes through Mexico and into the United States. El Shukrijumah, 29, who authorities said was in Canada last year looking for nuclear material for a so-called "dirty bomb" and reportedly has family members in Guyana, was named in a March 2003 material-witness arrest warrant by federal prosecutors in Northern Virginia, where U.S. Attorney Paul J. McNulty said he is sought in connection with potential terrorist threats against the United States. A former southern Florida resident and pilot thought to have helped plan the September 11 attacks, El Shukrijumah was among seven suspected al Qaeda operatives identified in May by Attorney General John Ashcroft as being involved in plans to strike new targets in the United States. Citing "credible intelligence from multiple sources," Mr. Ashcroft said at the time that El Shukrijumah posed "a clear and present danger to America."