9/11 C*B*S - WTC demolition man from Nuclear OST Departement with construction helmet in WTC-7 lobby
Published on Jan 27, 2013 by Dimitri Khalezov
OST, Office of Secure Transportation: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_of_Secure_Transportation
NIST FOIA Raw C*B*S 9/11 WTC Footage (05.26 - 09.19 from the footage / 10.16 - 10.19 real 9/11 time).
15 minutes after the first Twin Tower's collapse, C*B*S camera-man runs into the building 7's lobby. The alarm sound here is distinctly different from alarms of fire-engines and ambulances heard outside. I think it was the WTC nuclear demolition alarm. A "certain" alarm system existed in the WTC-7 and transmitted "certain" signals towards the rest of the WTC complex. The transmission of it was turned off at 6.47 AM September 11, 2001, and this was due to last 8 hours. (Source: NIST, "Interim Findings And Accomplishments", in Progress Report on the Federal Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World Trade Center, Vol.1.,28.).
The C*B*S reporter encounters a certain Mr. Bennette who wears a VRU hood (the VRU hood is intended as a means of breath protection against bio- and chemical- hazards and could be as well used for protection against radioactive dust and radioactive vapor).
Mr. Bennette in a remarkably calm and composed manner (considering the unprecedented collapse of the South Tower only 15 minutes ago that supposed to horrify everyone, servicemen inclusive) urges the man to leave and says that everyone has already gone from the building 7 and only he remained there to control that nobody goes "downstairs" (since he urges the CBS man to leave the WTC-7 and the way to leave it is apparently downstairs, it should be presumed that by saying "that nobody goes downstairs" Mr. Bennette obviously means some underground premises, not simply the way down out of the WTC-7 lobby).
Mr. Bennette refuses to elaborate, but tells the CBS reporter his surname and admits to be from the Secret Service's "OST".
The Office of Secure Transportation (OST), however, is by no means the part of the U.S. Secret Service. In reality, the OST is managed by the National Nuclear Security Administration within the U.S. Department of Energy; this organization is known to being responsible for transporting and safe-guarding of nuclear charges.
You could guess what the man from the organization that was primarily responsible for nuclear charges was doing at that moment in the abandoned lobby of the WTC building 7.
The most incriminating thing, however, is that in his left hand Mr. Bennette holds a typical construction helmet -- a highly unusual thing to be worn by the Secret Service's or by the OST's personnel (especially considering that the supposedly "unexpected" collapse of the South Tower has occurred only 15 minutes ago, while the collapse of the North Tower was yet to happen). The Secret Service or OST folks could, perhaps, wear steel combat helmets, in a certain situation, but not the plastic contraction helmets...
Published on Jan 27, 2013 by Dimitri Khalezov
OST, Office of Secure Transportation: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_of_Secure_Transportation
NIST FOIA Raw C*B*S 9/11 WTC Footage (05.26 - 09.19 from the footage / 10.16 - 10.19 real 9/11 time).
15 minutes after the first Twin Tower's collapse, C*B*S camera-man runs into the building 7's lobby. The alarm sound here is distinctly different from alarms of fire-engines and ambulances heard outside. I think it was the WTC nuclear demolition alarm. A "certain" alarm system existed in the WTC-7 and transmitted "certain" signals towards the rest of the WTC complex. The transmission of it was turned off at 6.47 AM September 11, 2001, and this was due to last 8 hours. (Source: NIST, "Interim Findings And Accomplishments", in Progress Report on the Federal Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World Trade Center, Vol.1.,28.).
The C*B*S reporter encounters a certain Mr. Bennette who wears a VRU hood (the VRU hood is intended as a means of breath protection against bio- and chemical- hazards and could be as well used for protection against radioactive dust and radioactive vapor).
Mr. Bennette in a remarkably calm and composed manner (considering the unprecedented collapse of the South Tower only 15 minutes ago that supposed to horrify everyone, servicemen inclusive) urges the man to leave and says that everyone has already gone from the building 7 and only he remained there to control that nobody goes "downstairs" (since he urges the CBS man to leave the WTC-7 and the way to leave it is apparently downstairs, it should be presumed that by saying "that nobody goes downstairs" Mr. Bennette obviously means some underground premises, not simply the way down out of the WTC-7 lobby).
Mr. Bennette refuses to elaborate, but tells the CBS reporter his surname and admits to be from the Secret Service's "OST".
The Office of Secure Transportation (OST), however, is by no means the part of the U.S. Secret Service. In reality, the OST is managed by the National Nuclear Security Administration within the U.S. Department of Energy; this organization is known to being responsible for transporting and safe-guarding of nuclear charges.
You could guess what the man from the organization that was primarily responsible for nuclear charges was doing at that moment in the abandoned lobby of the WTC building 7.
The most incriminating thing, however, is that in his left hand Mr. Bennette holds a typical construction helmet -- a highly unusual thing to be worn by the Secret Service's or by the OST's personnel (especially considering that the supposedly "unexpected" collapse of the South Tower has occurred only 15 minutes ago, while the collapse of the North Tower was yet to happen). The Secret Service or OST folks could, perhaps, wear steel combat helmets, in a certain situation, but not the plastic contraction helmets...
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