glenn1
Lifer
Story link
MIAMI, April 9 ? Nearly seven months after Ziad al-Jarrah seized United Airlines Flight 93 and crashed it into a field in southwestern Pennsylvania, the Federal Aviation Administration continues to include Mr. Jarrah on its mailing list and has been sending pilot correspondence to him at an apartment in southern Florida that he rented last summer.
Last month, the agency sent a newsletter to Mr. Jarrah at the apartment in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea in Broward County that he shared with another hijacker, Ahmed Alhaznawi, while attending nearby flight schools. Three months after the attacks, correspondence reminding Mr. Jarrah that the F.A.A. required that pilots have regular physical examinations arrived at the apartment, the building owner said today.
MIAMI, April 9 ? Nearly seven months after Ziad al-Jarrah seized United Airlines Flight 93 and crashed it into a field in southwestern Pennsylvania, the Federal Aviation Administration continues to include Mr. Jarrah on its mailing list and has been sending pilot correspondence to him at an apartment in southern Florida that he rented last summer.
Last month, the agency sent a newsletter to Mr. Jarrah at the apartment in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea in Broward County that he shared with another hijacker, Ahmed Alhaznawi, while attending nearby flight schools. Three months after the attacks, correspondence reminding Mr. Jarrah that the F.A.A. required that pilots have regular physical examinations arrived at the apartment, the building owner said today.