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![]() "Retro Empire Deities" wrote in message ... In article , Laura Bush murdered her boy friend wrote: Well "vaporized" is what he said and he's the expert, not you. And how is a funeral director an expert on plane crashes? He doesn't claim to be an "expert" on "plane crashes". He states what he saw at the crash site, offers up some tidbits regarding his experiences during the identification process, and hypothesizes that "we'll never know who really stormed the cockpit". Why are some of you so unnerved by this article that you're going out of your way to derail the conversation? Funny how you "Bush apologist-types" all crawl outta the woodwork every time reasonable queries and articles about Flight 93 show up in these newsgroups. One would think the very subject makes you exceedingly nervous. You do realize that the more you do it, the more I'm gonna re-post the original article. Think of all that extra exposure you're helping it get! mellstrr--nah, that wouldn't have occurred to you--too simple... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sept. 11 crash remains shrouded in mystery, Pennsylvania coroner says TIFFANY CRAWFORD Canadian Press Monday, March 29, 2004 VANCOUVER (CP) - The fate of United Airlines Flight 93, the last of the four hijacked planes to crash on Sept. 11, 2001 remains shrouded in mystery and controversy. The famous cell phone calls from brave passengers on the plane that crashed in a Pennsylvania field painted a heroic story of people storming the cockpit to sacrifice themselves for others. The chief coroner who investigated the crash scene recorded a less appealing different image. "There was, in my conclusion, no way we could ever know who they were that charged that cockpit," Wallace Miller told students at the B.C. Institute of Technology. The American coroner was spoke at the B.C. Institute of Technology in Burnaby Saturday. He detailed the grisly task he had recovering the remains of crash victims for their families. Miller, the director of a family-run funeral home and elected county coroner for Somerset, Pa., said only eight per cent of the wreckage was recovered. Everything else was vaporised, he said. "We found remains 50 feet deep," he said of the massive crater the plane left on impact. The debris field spanned about 2.5 square kilometres of wooded area. Victim recovery efforts were hampered because most of the salvageable human remains were in the treetops. snip http://www.canada.com/news/national/...0-4099-a9f4-e2 eeafa96b46 ------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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