26 February 1993 A.D. World Trade Center Bombed
26 February 1993 A.D. World Trade Center Bombed
World Trade Center is bombed
Editors. “World Trade Center is
bombed.” History Channel. N.d. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/world-trade-center-is-bombed. Accessed 25 Feb 2015.
World Trade Center is bombed
A bomb explodes in the parking
garage beneath the World Trade Center
in New York City
on this day in 1993. Six people died and 1,000 were injured by the powerful
blast, which also caused the evacuation of thousands of people from
the Twin Towers.
An informant later
identified a group of Serbians in New York as the culprits. However, when the FBI
conducted surveillance of the gang they found not terrorists but jewel thieves,
putting an end to a major diamond-laundering operation.
Fortunately, investigators at
the bomb scene found a section of a van frame that had been at the center of
the blast. The van's vehicle identification number was still visible, leading
detectives to the Ryder Rental Agency in Jersey City, New Jersey. Their records indicated that Mohammed Salameh
had rented the van and reported it stolen on February 25.
Salameh was already in the
FBI's database as a potential terrorist, so agents knew that they had probably
found their man. Salameh compounded his mistake by insisting that Ryder return
his $400 deposit. When he returned to collect it, the FBI arrested him. A
search of his home and records led to two other suspects.
Meanwhile, the owner of a
storage facility in Jersey City came forward to say that he had seen four men
loading a Ryder van on February 25. When this storage space was checked, they
found enough chemicals, including very unstable nitroglycerin, to make another
massive bomb. Investigators also found videotapes with instructions on bomb
making that led to the arrest of a fourth suspect.
Other evidence showed that one
of the terrorists had bought hydrogen tanks from AGL Welding Supply in New
Jersey. In the wreckage under the World Trade Center, three tanks marked
"AGL Welding" were found. In addition, the terrorists had sent a
letter to the New York Times claiming responsibility for the blast.
Portions of this letter were found on a computer desk taken from a
suspect's office. Finally, DNA analysis of saliva on the envelope matched that
of the suspect.
The wealth of evidence
resulted in easy convictions, and each of the men was sentenced to 240 years in
prison.
On September
11, 2001, the World Trade Center was again
attacked, when terrorists linked to Osama bin Ladin and al-Qaida hijacked and
flew one jetliner into each tower. Within hours, both towers had collapsed,
killing almost 3,000 people. A third jet was crashed into the Pentagon, killing almost two hundred people, including
those on board the plane. A fourth hijacked jet, apparently bound for a second
target in Washington, D.C., crashed into a field in Pennsylvania after passengers--aware of the attacks in New
York and at the Pentagon--attempted to wrest control of the plane from the
hijackers. All aboard were killed.
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