NEW YORK - The former police and fire
chiefs who were lionized after the World Trade Center attack came
under harsh criticism Tuesday from the Sept. 11 commission, with one
member saying the departments' lack of cooperation was scandalous
and "not worthy of the Boy Scouts."
Commission members, in New York for an emotional two-day hearing,
focused on how leaders of the two departments failed to share
information effectively in the early frantic moments after two
hijacked planes slammed into the World Trade Center.
Former fire commissioner Thomas Von Essen and former police chief
Bernard Kerik shot back with infuriated responses to commissioner
John Lehman's questions, the strongest of a series of pointed
statements from the panel.
"I couldn't disagree with you more strongly," Von Essen replied.
"I think it's outrageous that you make a statement like that."
Outside the hearing, he called the questioning "despicable."
Families of Sept. 11 victims applauded the tough questioning and
shook their heads sadly as the panel enumerated a litany of
communication breakdowns between the departments. Family members
sporadically mocked and booed Von Essen, Kerik and Richard Sheirer,
former Office of Emergency Management commissioner, and they wept
earlier in the day as they watched videotape of the buildings
collapsing.
As Von Essen testified, Sally Regenhard - who lost her
firefighter son - held up a piece of paper reading: "LIES."
The 10-member bipartisan panel has been holding hearings over the
last year, including high-profile meetings in Washington last month
about intelligence failures, to examine what led to the attacks and
determine ways to avoid future attacks. The panel will issue its
final report July 26.
Former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani was scheduled to testify at the
second day of hearings Wednesday.
While the New York hearings - held 1 1/2 miles from ground zero -
were meant to examine problems in the city's emergency response
system, officials also were asked about what they knew about
terrorism threats in the months before Sept. 11.
The former director of the World Trade Center told the commission
that he knew nothing of Osama bin Laden's terror network until the
summer before the attacks, and was never privy to FBI intelligence
that Islamic terrorists might hijack U.S. planes.
Alan Reiss said he first heard about bin Laden's al-Qaida network
when ex-FBI agent John O'Neill was hired in the summer of 2001 as
head of security at the trade center. O'Neill, who had hunted bin
Laden for years, was one of the 2,749 people killed in the
attack.
"I was aware of the plot against some of the other Port Authority
tunnels and the U.N.," Reiss testified. "But we were never briefed"
by the FBI.
Reiss also said he was more focused on fending off possible
bioterrorism attacks such as anthrax, spending more than $100,000 to
protect the building from such an assault.
"We felt this (anthrax) was the next coming wave," he said. "We
had developed plans on how to isolate the air conditioning system
and shut it down but never did we have a thought of what happened on
9-11."
Reiss bristled under questioning from commission member Bob
Kerrey, who asked him if he is angry that "things might have been
different had they (FBI) trusted you enough" to deliver important
intelligence.
Reiss said he was not angry at the FBI, but rather at "19 people
in an airplane," referring to the hijackers.
Kerrey said he shared Reiss' anger. "These 19 people ... defeated
the INS, they defeated the Customs (Department), they defeated the
FBI, they defeated the CIA," the former Nebraska senator said as
family members of the victims chimed in with the loudest applause of
the morning.
But Kerrey said he was more concerned that "we may not be
delivering the key intelligence, the facts, the information" to the
first responders.
Later, the miscommunication was termed "a scandal" by Lehman, who
then complained it was "not worthy of the Boy Scouts, let alone this
great city."
Family members cheered when commission member Slade Gorton
launched an aggressive line of questioning about the city's 911
emergency system to Kerik, Von Essen and Sheirer.
When the agency heads tried to defer to their successors, Gorton
refused to let them. "I'm asking ... what was going on Sept. 11,"
Gorton said to applause from the families.
Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly was asked if the city was
prepared to handle a chemical attack with 10,000 injuries. "I would
say no," he replied.
For some family members, it was a day for reflection rather than
protest. Terry McGovern, whose mother died in the south tower, said
she came away with an understanding of what happened that day.
"For me, it was reliving what my mother heard, what she saw, what
her last moments were," McGovern said.
The hearing began with a commission report recounting how city
officials were forced to make life-and-death decisions based on
incomplete communications, leading to some of the deaths in the twin
110-story buildings.
The communication problems resulted in incidents such as the
deaths of Port Authority workers told to wait for help on the 64th
floor of one tower. Many of them died when the building
collapsed.
Communications breakdowns also prevented announcements to
evacuate from reaching civilians in one of the buildings. One
survivor recounted calling 911 from the 44th floor of the south
tower, only to be placed on hold twice.
That was not a surprise, since emergency operators had a "lack of
awareness" about what was happening at the twin towers and were
overwhelmed by the sheer volume of calls, said commission staffer
Sam Casperson.
(Associated Press Writers Sara Kugler and Michael Weissenstein
contributed to this report.)
On the Web:
http://www.9-11commission.gov/