Statement For The Record
FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence website
September 26, 2002
What I, have just provided is an overview of what we have learned about the U.S. activities of the hijackers before and during the attacks.
Clearly, these 19 terrorists were not supermen using extraordinarily sophisticated techniques. They came armed with simple box cutters. But they also came armed with sophisticated knowledge about how to plan these attacks abroad without discovery, how to finance their activities from overseas without alarm, how to communicate both here and abroad without detection, and how to exploit the vulnerabilities inherent in our free society.
There were no slip ups. Discipline never broke down. They gave no hint to those around them what they were about. They came lawfully. They lived lawfully. They trained lawfully. They boarded the aircraft lawfully. They simply relied upon everything from the vastness of the Internet to the openness of our society to do what they wanted to do without detection.
http://www.unansweredquestions.org/timeline/2002/senatecommittee092602.htmlLet us take another look at the guy who just fingered
19 Saudi Arabian men and one Osama bin Laden.
The Herald reported that the committee had concluded that this represented “one of the greatest failures in the history of federal law enforcement.”
From 1984 to 1990, FBI Director Mueller served in the office of the U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts, beginning as chief of the Criminal Division and ending as the U.S. Attorney. This has raised questions about what he knew about the Salvati case and suspicions that the stonewalling of the committee’s requests for documents may be to protect him.
http://www.aim.org/publications/aim_report/2003/7.htmlThat's odd.
They are stonewalling
the committee’s requests for documents
concerning September 11 as well.

Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm