Thursday, June 30, 2005

TIME: FBI office in Saudi Arabia shredded 9/11 investigation documents

According to several former employees of the U.S. embassy in Riyadh, the FBI legal attaché’s office housed within the embassy was often in disarray during the months that followed 9/11. When an FBI supervisor arrived to clean up the mess, she found a mountain of paper and, for security reasons, ordered wholesale shredding that resulted in the destruction of unprocessed documents relating to the 9/11 investigations. A letter obtained by TIME confirms that the Senate Judiciary Committee is investigating the matter.
In 2001, the FBI’s Saudi office comprised a secretary and two agents -- Wilfred Rattigan and his lieutenant, Egyptian-American Gamal Abdel-Hafiz. They also oversaw six nearby countries. The FBI sent reinforcements within two weeks of 9/11, but it appears that the bureau’s team never got on top of the thousands of leads flowing in from the U.S. and Saudi governments. In a June 6 letter to FBI Director Robert Mueller, the Senate Judiciary Committee renewed a request for information about allegations that the FBI’s Riyadh office was “delinquent in pursuing thousands of leads” related to 9/11, TIME reports.

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