Eyewitness: "I Never Heard the Word 'Bomb'"
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			 
"Harry Krause"  wrote in message 
... 
 Eyewitness: "I Never Heard the Word 'Bomb'" 
 A passenger on Flight 924 gives his account of the shooting and says 
 Rigoberto Alpizar never claimed to have a bomb 
 By SIOBHAN MORRISSEY/MIAMI 
 (Time Magazine) 
 Posted Thursday, Dec. 08, 2005 
 At least one passenger aboard American Airlines Flight 924 maintains 
 the federal air marshals were a little too quick on the draw when they 
 shot and killed Rigoberto Alpizar as he frantically attempted to run 
 off the airplane shortly before take-off. 
 
 "I don't think they needed to use deadly force with the guy," says John 
 McAlhany, a 44-year-old construction worker from Sebastian, Fla. "He 
 was getting off the plane." McAlhany also maintains that Alpizar never 
 mentioned having a bomb. 
 
 "I never heard the word 'bomb' on the plane," McAlhany told TIME in a 
 telephone interview. "I never heard the word bomb until the FBI asked 
 me did you hear the word bomb. That is ridiculous." Even the 
 authorities didn't come out and say bomb, McAlhany says. "They asked, 
 'Did you hear anything about the b-word?'" he says. "That's what they 
 called it." 
 
 When the incident began McAlhany was in seat 24C, in the middle of the 
 plane. "[Alpizar] was in the back," McAlhany says, "a few seats from 
 the back bathroom. He sat down." Then, McAlhany says, "I heard an 
 argument with his wife. He was saying 'I have to get off the plane.' 
 She said, 'Calm down.'" 
 
 Alpizar took off running down the aisle, with his wife close behind 
 him. "She was running behind him saying, 'He's sick. He's sick. He's 
 ill. He's got a disorder," McAlhany recalls. "I don't know if she said 
 bipolar disorder [as one witness has alleged]. She was trying to 
 explain to the marshals that he was ill. He just wanted to get off the 
 plane." 
 
 
 McAlhany described Alpizar as carrying a big backpack and wearing a 
 fanny pack in front. He says it would have been impossible for Alpizar 
 to lie flat on the floor of the plane, as marshals ordered him to do, 
 with the fanny pack on. "You can't get on the ground with a fanny 
 pack," he says. "You have to move it to the side." 
 
 By the time Alpizar made it to the front of the airplane, the crew had 
 ordered the rest of the passengers to get down between the seats. "I 
 didn't see him get shot," he says. "They kept telling me to get down. I 
 heard about five shots." 
 
 McAlhany says he tried to see what was happening just in case he needed 
 to take evasive action. "I wanted to make sure if anything was coming 
 toward me and they were killing passengers I would have a chance to 
 break somebody's neck," he says. "I was looking through the seats 
 because I wanted to see what was coming. 
 
 "I was on the phone with my brother. Somebody came down the aisle and 
 put a shotgun to the back of my head and said put your hands on the 
 seat in front of you. I got my cell phone karate chopped out of my 
 hand. Then I realized it was an official." 
 
 In the ensuing events, many of the passengers began crying in fear, he 
 recalls. "They were pointing the guns directly at us instead of 
 pointing them to the ground," he says "One little girl was crying. 
 There was a lady crying all the way to the hotel." 
 
 McAlhany said he saw Alpizar before the flight and is absolutely 
 stunned by what unfolded on the airplane. He says he saw Alpizar eating 
 a sandwich in the boarding area before getting on the plane. He looked 
 normal at that time, McAlhany says. He thinks the whole thing was a 
 mistake: "I don't believe he should be dead right now." 
 -- 
 Cheney, Dick=The greater of two evils. 
 
And maybe he was 25 rows away.  And maybe he is another cop hater. 
 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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