| The jubilant Israeli intelligence agents caught photographing the attacks on the World Trade Centre were allowed to return to Israel where they divulged the purpose of their mission on a radio program: "Our purpose was to document
the event."
The explosive story of the 5 suspicious Israelis seen celebrating while filming the attacks on the World Trade Centre (WTC) was first reported nationally in American Free Press shortly after 11 September 2001. ABC News recently reported on this story and added a comment that deserves attention.
The Forward, a respected Jewish newspaper in New York, reported that at least two of the men were Israeli intelligence (Mossad) agents. The Israeli agents were first seen filming the attack on the WTC while kneeling
on the roof of a white van in the parking lot of a New Jersey apartment building across the river from lower Manhattan.
"They seemed to be taking a movie," the resident who noticed them said. "The men were taking video or photos of themselves with the World Trade Centre burning in the background," she said. What struck her were the expressions
on the men's faces. "They were like happy, you know. They didn't look shocked to me. I thought it was very strange," she said.
She found the behaviour so suspicious that she wrote down the license plate number of the van and called the police. The FBI was soon on the scene and a statewide bulletin was issued on the van.
The van belonged to a Mossad front company called Urban Moving Systems. Around 4 p.m. on 11th September, the van was pulled over, and five Israelis: Sivan and Paul Kurzberg, Yaron Shmuel, Oded Ellner and Omer Marmari, all between 22 and 27 years old, were arrested at gunpoint. One had $4,700 in cash hidden in his sock while another carried two foreign passports. Box cutters were found in the van.
According to the police report, one of the men said they had been on the West Side Highway in Manhattan "during the incident" - referring to the WTC attack. Sivan Kurzberg, the driver, said, "We are Israeli. We are not your problem. Your problems are our problems. The Palestinians are the problem."
The case was turned over to the FBI's Foreign Counter-Intelligence Section because the FBI believed Urban Moving Systems was a "cover for an Israeli intelligence operation," ABC reported.
While the FBI searched the company's Weehawken, New Jersey, offices, removing boxes of documents and a dozen computer hard drives, the owner of the company, Dominic Suter, was allowed to flee the country. When FBI agents tried to interview Suter a second time they discovered that he had cleared out of his New Jersey home and fled to Israel.
When ABC reporters visited Urban Moving Systems, "it looked as if it had been shut down in a big hurry. Cell phones were lying around; office phones were still connected; and the property of dozens of clients remained
in the warehouse."
The Israelis had been held at the Metropolitan Detention Centre in Brooklyn, for overstaying their tourist visas and working in the United States illegally. Two weeks after their arrest, an immigration judge ordered them to be deported. However, FBI and CIA officials in Washington put a hold on the case, according to ABC.
The five men were held in detention for more than two months. Some of them were placed in solitary confinement for 40 days and given as many as seven lie-detector tests. One of them, Paul Kurzberg, refused to take a lie-detector test for 10 weeks and then failed it, according to his lawyer.
A deal was struck between Israeli and U.S. government officials after 71 days and the five Israelis were put on a plane, and deported to Ezra-hell (the area of Palestine illegally occupied by the Israeli terrorist regime).
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