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To: Eroteme; kattracks
Compare this slowly unfolding revelation of flight 297 with a previous incident on a flight in 2004.

Annie Jacobsen was on Northwest Flight 327 on June 29, 2004 -- her account is "Terror in the Skies -- Again?:

As we sat waiting for the plane to finish boarding, we noticed another large group of Middle Eastern men boarding. The first man wore a dark suit and sunglasses. He sat in first class in seat 1A, the seat second-closet to the cockpit door. The other seven men walked into the coach cabin.

As "aware" Americans, my husband and I exchanged glances, and then continued to get comfortable. I noticed some of the other passengers paying attention to the situation as well. As boarding continued, we watched as, one by one, most of the Middle Eastern men made eye contact with each other. They continued to look at each other and nod, as if they were all in agreement about something. I could tell that my husband was beginning to feel "anxious."

The take-off was uneventful. But once we were in the air and the seatbelt sign was turned off, the unusual activity began. The man in the yellow T-shirt got out of his seat and went to the lavatory at the front of coach -- taking his full McDonald's bag with him. When he came out of the lavatory he still had the McDonald's bag, but it was now almost empty. He walked down the aisle to the back of the plane, still holding the bag. When he passed two of the men sitting mid-cabin, he gave a thumbs-up sign. When he returned to his seat, he no longer had the McDonald's bag.

Then another man from the group stood up and took something from his carry-on in the overhead bin. It was about a foot long and was rolled in cloth. He headed toward the back of the cabin with the object. Five minutes later, several more of the Middle Eastern men began using the forward lavatory consecutively. In the back, several of the men stood up and used the back lavatory consecutively as well.

For the next hour, the men congregated in groups of two and three at the back of the plane for varying periods of time. Meanwhile, in the first class cabin, just a foot or so from the cockpit door, the man with the dark suit – still wearing sunglasses – was also standing. Not one of the flight crew members suggested that any of these men take their seats.

When she got home, she was unable to find info... she was mocked and told she was a bigot. The air marshal on the flight said she'd "overreacted".

A month later, on July 30, 2004, a second passenger corroborated Jacobsen's account:

Government officials are questioning a passenger's account of alarming and suspicious behavior by Syrian musicians aboard a recent flight to Los Angeles, although a second passenger has corroborated the events.

The second passenger, a frequent business traveler who asked not to be identified, provided a copy of her itinerary confirming she was on the June 29 Northwest Airlines Detroit-to-Los Angeles Flight 327, which was disrupted by 14 Syrian passengers later identified as musicians.

The passenger, who was riding in first class, said the constant foot traffic and strange behavior she witnessed in the front cabin frightened her as much as it did Annie Jacobsen, the first passenger who publicly reported the incident.

"I thought I was going to die," the second passenger told The Washington Times. "And that makes me furious because that's the whole point of terrorism, to make people afraid. It makes me mad that they achieved that. But I'm not letting it stop me from taking other trips."

For YEARS she was ridiculed, but didn't back down (again, right person for that time and place). That account persists at Snopes to this day.

Despite the years of media and public pressure, when the report for the Department of Homeland Security was finally released, it showed she was spot on.

It would seem that the only reason we have a new view of what happened on Flight 327 is due to Ms. Jacobsen's tenacity and the ability to get the word out in the alternative media.

Documentation of how Northwest flight 327 facts dribbled out over time despite official denials is preserved on FR: http://www.freerepublic.com/tag/flight327/index

I thank God for FR and its archives.

78 posted on 12/07/2009 1:37:26 PM PST by cyn (“Courage is not the absence of fear, but the mastery of it." Mark Twain)
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To: cyn

I followed Annie Jacobsen’s ordeal closely at the time, and agree with you. She was the right person at the right time. Brave woman.

The orchestrated effort to discredit witnesses to AirTran 297 and bury the story is as familar as it is despicable. And so is the rush to jump to conclusions. It took a month for another corroborating witness to come forward to back Ms. Jacobson—then years for the whole truth to dribble out. Yet half the people on this forum are impatient to dismiss this latest AirTran event.

This story is barely a few days old, resurrected from a tiny, unremarkable mention in the local newspapers about a minor incident involving a single non-English speaking passenger and his cell phone. Whether challenging the official version or supporting it, it’s not going to be cake walk for anyone who comes forward. They’ve seen what happens. This is not like stepping up to oppose a zoning ordinance. People know full well what lies ahead for them at the hands of people who have their minds already made up, regardless of which side of the story their account supports. No doubt, there’s some soul searching going on as we speak, and quiet family discussions about duty to country vs. family. I don’t envy them.

Whatever the truth is, it’s worth being told.


79 posted on 12/07/2009 2:21:06 PM PST by Eroteme
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