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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Court hears Flight 93 cockpit recording


Investigators pore over the Shanksville, Pa., crash site of United Flight 93 in this Sept. 16, 2001, photo. Jurors and courtroom spectators on Wednesday heard the harrowing cockpit recording. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Richard A. Serrano Los Angeles Times

ALEXANDRIA, Va. – The government completed its case against Zacarias Moussaoui on Wednesday with its single most chilling piece of evidence – a tape from the cockpit of United Flight 93 that recorded the terrorists overwhelming the pilots on Sept. 11, 2001, slashing their throats and praising Allah before crashing the jet into a Pennsylvania field.

The 32-minute recording begins at 9:31 a.m. with terrorists forcing the two pilots at knifepoint to give up control of the aircraft. Apparently dragged outside the cockpit onto the flight deck, the pilots can be heard begging for their lives. “I don’t want to die!” one shouts.

Within two minutes, the pilots dead or dying, one of the hijackers proclaims, “Everything is fine. I finished.”

For the next 20 minutes, the plane, originally headed west to San Francisco, turns east on a flight path toward Washington and the U.S. Capitol.

Three minutes after 10 a.m., passengers seem to be breaking through the cockpit door, fighting with the hijackers in a futile effort to take back the throttle. “Go! Go!” they encourage one another. “Move! Move!” But the terrorists have flipped the plane upside down. They spin it downward.

“Shall we finish it off?” a hijacker asks in Arabic.

In its final plunge, the hijackers shout over and over: “Allah is the greatest! Allah is the greatest!”

The tape ends.

The alternately frantic, pleading and brutal voices from Flight 93, heard by the public for the first time, made for an emotionally draining morning of testimony as prosecutors sought the death penalty for Moussaoui, an al-Qaida member who has pleaded guilty to terrorism charges.

Prosecutors first showed jurors photos of the cockpit voice recorder. The red-and-white device was cracked but intact, embedded with much of the rest of the plane debris and human body parts along a line of trees near the mining community of Shanksville, Pa.

As the cockpit recorder played, the government also displayed a computer image on television monitors throughout the courtroom, synchronized with events on the tape. The images included the plane’s altitude measurements and flight path and a small, simulated image of the plane itself, sometimes rocking back and forth as the terrorists jerked on the controls to keep the passengers at bay.

The United Airlines flight had taken off about 50 minutes earlier from Newark, N.J. On board were the two pilots, 33 passengers and five flight attendants. Sitting among them were the man soon to be piloting the jet, identified as Ziad Jarrah, and three so-called muscle hijackers.

By the time they breached the cockpit at 9:31 a.m., two other hijacked planes had already slammed into the towers of the World Trade Center in New York. In Washington, the Pentagon was about to be hit by a third plane. In the air above eastern Ohio, the struggle was just beginning.

The first word of trouble was captured by two ground-control recordings that were played for jurors on Tuesday.

The pilots screamed, “Mayday!” four times, then yelled, “Get out of here! Get out of here!”

The cockpit voice recorder picked up from there at 9:31:57 a.m. with the plane apparently under the control of terrorist Jarrah. Speaking to passengers and flight attendants over the plane’s intercom system, he tells them in broken English to remain calm.

“Ladies and gentlemen,” Jarrah says. “Here the captain, please sit down; keep remaining seating. We have a bomb on board. So sit.”

He is followed by shouts apparently aimed at the pilots as the three muscle hijackers force them onto the floor of the flight deck just outside the cockpit.

“Don’t move. Shut up. … Come on, come. … Sit, sit, sit down.”

An air traffic controller interjects from somewhere on the ground, obviously confused over what he is hearing. “We just, we didn’t get it clear,” he says. “Is that United 93 calling?”

In Arabic comes this answer: “Jassim. … In the name of Allah, the most merciful, the most compassionate.”

There is more noise from the flight deck. It is all in English, a mixture of hijackers and the two United pilots.

“No,” pleads a pilot. “No, no, no, no.”

“Go ahead, lie down. Lie down. Down, down, down.”

“Please, please, please. … Please, please, don’t hurt me. … Oh God.”

There follow more demands. “Down, down, down. Sit down. Shut up.”

Then a pilot: “I don’t want to die.” And from the pilot again, or the other pilot: “I don’t want to die. I don’t want to die.”

The pilots are not heard again. Instead, in Arabic, someone yells, “That’s it. Go back. That’s it. Everything is fine. I finished.”

Many of the passengers and flight attendants start reaching for phones. In calls to emergency numbers and loved ones, they report that it appears the pilots’ throats have been cut, that they are dead or gravely wounded on the floor up front.

Some say the hijackers are armed with knives. They say the men are wearing red bandanas. They say one professes to have a bomb strapped around his waist.

The cockpit recorder picks up again. It is now 9:39:11, at least eight minutes into the hijacking.

“Ah,” says a man, apparently Jarrah, speaking in English to the passengers. “Here’s the captain; I would like to tell you all to remain seated. We have a bomb aboard, and we are going back to the airport, and we have our demands. So, please remain quiet.”

The hijackers, conversing in Arabic, consider bringing a pilot who might still be alive back into the cockpit to talk to ground control. It now appears the hijackers too are growing confused and worried about the passengers. “In the name of Allah,” shouts one, “I bear witness that there is no other god but Allah.”

They consider moving all three of the muscle hijackers into the cockpit with Jarrah, to keep it secure from the passengers. Apparently referring to the ax routinely stored in cockpits, they debate using an “ax … so everyone will be scared.” Outside the cockpit door, someone says in Arabic, “Is there something?”

“A fight?”

“Yeah?”

Then, “Let’s go guys. Allah is greatest. Allah is greatest. Oh guys. Allah is greatest.”

About 20 minutes after the plane is commandeered, the passengers are attacking. There are sounds of “ugh,” of shoving and fighting. Terrorists are shouting for the passengers to “stay back.” They cry, “Oh Allah. Oh Allah. Oh the most gracious.”

A small band of passengers is nearing. They shout, “In the cockpit. In the cockpit.” A muscle hijacker shouts back to Jarrah, “They want to get in there. Hold, hold from the inside. Hold from the inside. Hold.”

They are fighting at the cockpit door.

“Hold the door.”

“Stop him.”

The passengers are almost there, the voices louder. “Let’s get them,” someone screams.

In the cockpit, Jarrah and another hijacker debate in Arabic whether it is time to simply ditch the plane.

“Shall we finish it off?”

“No. Not yet.”

“When they all come, we finish it off.”

Now the passengers seem almost upon them. A passenger yells, “In the cockpit. If we don’t, we’ll die.”

At 10:00:42, Jarrah begins to roll the plane to knock the passengers off balance. Four times they shout in Arabic, apparently to subdue the passengers: “Cut off the oxygen!”

The passengers are almost there, shouting “Go! Go! … Move! Move!”

One hijacker tells another, “Down, down. Pull it down. Pull it down.” It appears he means the throttle, to crash the plane.

Another hijacker, perhaps Jarrah trying to get back at the controls, shouts, “Hey. Hey. Give it to me. Give it to me.” Five shouts rise up in Arabic: “Allah is the greatest!” In English someone cries, “No!” But his cry is drowned by four more shouts, louder now: “Allah is the greatest.”

At 10:03:09, the tape went dead.

The courtroom fell silent, and jurors sat back in their seats. A few more government witnesses testified, and then the prosecution rested its case.

The defense begins its case today. Moussaoui is expected to testify.