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- World Trade Center’s Infamous 91st-Floor Israeli ‘Art Student’ Project
Buried and apparently long forgotten is this 2002 Daily Mail story about the U S arresting and deporting 200 Israelis, some of whom posed as “art students,” for spying and espionage activities in the lead up to 9 11
- Ketchams Story - CounterPunch. org
Indeed, it was in May of 2002 that Salon featured on its site a 9,000-word story by Ketcham on the so-called Israeli “art students” whose curious activities before 9 11 2001 around U S
- THE ISRAELI ART STUDENTS AND MOVERS STORY - Archive. org
The presence in the United States of a number of young Israelis, most of whom had specialized military and intelligence backgrounds, in the months prior to 911 is a subject that has received inadequate attention from the major U S media and government investigators
- The Israeli “art student” mystery - Salon. com
For almost two years, hundreds of young Israelis falsely claiming to be art students haunted federal offices -- in particular, the DEA No one knows why -- and no one seems to want to find
- Five Israelis were seen filming as jet liners ploughed into the Twin . . .
More than a third of the Israeli "art students" claimed residence in Florida Two other Israelis connected to the art ring showed up in Fort Lauderdale
- THE ISRAELI ART STUDENTS AND MOVERS STORY - UK Indymedia
The DEA report on the activities of Israeli "art students" cited a case in which the Federal Protective Service arrested two Israeli art students in Plantation, Florida for possession of fake Social Security cards
- Cheering Movers and Art Student Spies: Was Israel Tracking the . . .
The article highlights various interconnected stories: the five Israeli “movers” who witnesses say were cheering after the first plane struck the World Trade Center; the so-called Israeli art
- 9 11 Conspiracy - The Israeli Art Students - Albert Jack Books
In January 2001 the U S Drug Enforcement Agency started receiving unusual reports from its field offices all over America Young Israelis, it was being submitted, were claiming to be art students and touring the country offering their work for sale
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