Topic: The 2 stewardess that got their throats slit by the terroris
NSACLASSIFIED's photo
Tue 05/08/07 11:35 AM
Terrorists who hijacked American Airlines Flight 11 out of Boston on
Tuesday morning slit the throats of two female flight attendants who
tried to bar them from entering the ****pit.

The terrorists then forced their way into the locked ****pit and
commandeered the Boeing 767 to New York, where they slammed it into one
of the World Trade Center towers. The flight, carrying 81 passengers,
was bound for Los Angeles.

A third stewardess aboard the nine-crew flight – Madeline Amy Sweeney –
used her cellphone, or possibly the plane phone, to alert Michael
Woodward, her superviser back at Logan International Airport, about the
hijacking and murders. The terrorists were armed with razor-tipped
knives that looked like box cutters, she relayed.

"That was just horrific to all of us when we heard about it at about
8:15" yesterday morning, said the senior American Airlines employee, who
works at Logan and said goodbye to the crew at the gate around 7:30 a.m.
"We were, like, 'Oh my God, these poor girls are trying to save their
captain and their plane.'"

The plane left the gate at about 7:45 a.m. and took off at about 7:55
a.m. Sweeney made her call around 8:10 a.m. or 8:15 a.m., the source
says. At about 8:25 a.m., the jet turned sharply off its planned
westbound flight path and headed south toward Manhattan. The jet crashed
into the north World Trade Center tower at about 8:45 a.m. About 15
minutes later, a United Airlines jet sliced through the south tower.

According to the American source, the American captain, John Ogonowski,
managed to key the ****pit mike, apparently without the terrorists
knowing, allowing air-traffic controllers to briefly pick up their
****pit conversations. The terrorists turned off the plane's
transponder, the equipment that identifies the plane and provides other
information – such as whether it's been hijacked – to air-traffic
controllers tracking it by radar. Ogonowski flew the plane with his
first officer, Tom McGuinness.

"They were trying to clue in the tower," the airline source said.

The crew was very close, having flown the Boston-Los Angeles run
together regularly, the source said.

"This was a senior crew," she said. "They've been around. A lot of them
usually do that flight – go out on Flight 11 and come back on Flight 12
[from Los Angeles]. We all knew them really well."

In fact, a couple of the stewardesses were married to American gate
agents at Logan, she says.

"You know, I said goodbye to that crew at the gate," the American
employee said. "I was up there talking to the girls who were doing the
flight, and the crew walks by and gives us all a wave. They said, 'See
you later, we're coming back on [Flight] 12.'"

"Everyone was just stunned," she said, when they learned some 90 minutes
later of their ultimate fate in Manhattan.

As part of their investigation, FBI agents and Massachusetts state
troopers have interviewed American Airlines employees and Logan airport
workers, including custodians working the morning shift, to rule out an
inside job and establish a record of all the people who were at the
terminal that morning.

"It was pretty intense," said the American worker.