
	by Wayne Madsen
	
	Online Journal Contributing Writer
	Mar 16, 2010
	
	from
	
	OnLineJournal Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
		
			| 
			Previously published in the 
			Wayne Madsen Report (WMR).Wayne Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and 
			nationally-distributed columnist. He is the editor and publisher of 
			the Wayne Madsen Report .
 | 
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	(WMR) 
	-- WMR has learned from two El Al sources who worked for the Israeli airline 
	at New York’s John F. Kennedy airport that
	on 
	9/11, hours after the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) 
	grounded all civilian domestic and international incoming and outgoing 
	flights to and from the United States, a full El Al Boeing 747 took off 
	from JFK bound for Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion International Airport.
	
	The two El Al employee sources are not Israeli nationals but legal 
	immigrants from Ecuador who were working in the United States for the 
	airline.
	
	The flight departed JFK at 4:11 pm and its departure was, according to the 
	El Al sources, authorized by the direct intervention of the U.S. 
	Department of Defense. 
	
	 
	
	U.S. military officials were on the scene 
	at JFK and were personally involved with the airport and air traffic control 
	authorities to clear the flight for take-off.
	
	According to the 9/11 Commission report, Transportation Secretary Norman 
	Mineta ordered all civilian flights to be grounded at 9:45 am on 
	September 11.
	
	The New York Air Traffic control center’s audio tape of recollections of air 
	traffic controllers made an hour and a half after the 9/11 attacks were 
	destroyed by an air traffic control manager who did not face criminal 
	charges for destroying physical evidence on the worst terrorist attack in 
	American history. 
	
	 
	
	The Transportation Department later claimed the 
	destruction of the tape was the result of mere “poor judgment.”
	
		
			- 
			
			The El Al flight took off two days 
			before commercial flights were permitted to resume on September 
			13.  
- 
			
			Private flights were only permitted to 
			resume on September 14.  
- 
			
			On September 13, a chartered Lear jet 
			flew three Saudis, including a member of the Saudi royal family, 
			from Tampa to Lexington, Kentucky.  
- 
			
			On September 14, a chartered Northstar 
			Aviation flight flew four Saudis from Providence, Rhode Island to 
			Paris. 
	
	On
	
	August 22, 2005, WMR reported: 
	
		
		“Four Americans flew with ‘Air Bin Laden’ 
		flight transporting Bin Laden family members to Saudi Arabia and 
		Europe nine days after 911. The post-911 domestic flights of Bin Laden 
		family members out of the United States with the sanction of
		
		the Bush White House were not the only 
		instances where Americans have flown with the family that spawned “Al 
		Qaeda” leader Osama Bin Laden. 
		 
		
		WMR has obtained a passenger list from a 
		September 20, 2001, Aero Services private charter flight from Le Bourget 
		Airport, north of Paris, to Geneva, and on to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (King 
		Abdulaziz International Airport-OEJN). On the list are a number of Bin 
		Ladens, as well as four Americans, including a Los Angeles Police 
		Department officer named Jason Blum who flew to Le Bourget from 
		Los Angeles. 
		 
		
		A previous list provided to Sen. Frank 
		Lautenberg showed Mr. Blum departing from the Bin Laden party in 
		Boston. The newly obtained list shows he accompanied the Bin Ladens to 
		Paris Le Bourget. 
		 
		
		The other three Americans on the passenger 
		list are:
		
			
				- 
				
				J.P. Buonono 
- 
				
				Joseph Allen Wyka  
- 
				
				Ricardo V. Pascetta.” 
	
	
	Although much has been written about the “Bin 
	Laden” and other Saudi flights in the days after 9/11, the El Al 
	flight on the afternoon of September 11 is the first instance of 
	Israelis departing the United States while commercial traffic was grounded.
	
	There have also been reports that the FBI seized FAA records 
	concerning the events of 9/11 from the New York
	
	Air Route Traffic Control Center in Islip, 
	Long Island. 
	
	 
	
	The ARTCC has responsibility for flights out of 
	JFK.