The FBI interviewed the various people who had received a phone call when the from their relatives on the planes during the 911 attack. And their reports tell a different story than our news and government told us.
Government 911 Attack Official Report 1: One of the reports reads, “starting at approximately 6.30 Pacific Standard Time, which is 9.30 New York time, Dina Burnett received a series from three to five cell phone calls from her husband, Thomas Burnett.” Burnett was able to determine her husband was using his own cell phone because the caller ID showed his number. Only one of the calls did not show the caller ID as she was on the line with another call. According to the government official documentation, Thomas Burnett made a total of three calls. One at 9.30, one at 9.37, and one at 9.44. This means that at least two of these calls, if not all three, were made from Burnett’s cell phone. At 9.30, the plane was flying at 32,000 feet and climbing. At 9.37, it had reached 36,000 feet and was still climbing. At 9.44, it had descended to 22,000 feet, while it accelerated until reaching a ground speed of almost 400 miles per hour. None of these calls seems to have been possible with a cell phone from that airplane.
Government 911 Attack Official Report 2: According to another report, United 93 passenger Jeremy Glick saw hijackers on the plane, used a cell phone, and called Makeley, his stepmother, to report the hijacking. He then asked to talk to his wife, Lisbeth. And he was on the phone and he had told me that his plane had been hijacked. According to the FBI, Glick’s wife, Lisbeth, could not hear any unusual sounds in the background of the call, and the connection was extremely clear, as if he was calling from the next room. Cell phone communication was lost at 9.55. Glick placed the call at 9.37, which means the communication lasted uninterrupted for 18 minutes, while the plane was flying between 39,000 and 10,000 feet at an average speed of almost 400 miles per hour. Only a miracle could have kept that connection open for all that time had the call truly been placed from the airplane in flight. Lauren Grancolas possessed a cell phone and is believed to have allowed another passenger, Honor Wainio, to use the cell phone. Wainio placed one call to her parents at 9.53, when the plane was at about 10,000 feet, traveling close to 400 miles per hour.
Government 911 Attack Official Report 3: Elsa Strong received a cell phone call from her sister, Lisa Gronlund, a passenger on United 93. Gronlund made the call to her sister at 9.46, when the plane was at 17,000 feet and traveling at almost 400 miles per hour.
Government 911 Attack Official Report 4: Marion Britton was also a passenger on United 93. Britton’s live-in boyfriend received a cell phone call from Britton during the hijacking. Britton told Fiomano, her boyfriend, that she had borrowed a cell phone from another passenger. Britton’s call to Fiomano took place at 9.49, when United 93 was flying beyond 13,000 feet at a speed of 420 miles per hour. Peter Hanson, a passenger on United 175, contacted his mother on cell phone and said the flight had been hijacked.
