-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://citypaper.net/articles/101801/sl.howcol.shtml
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Date with Destiny?</A>
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October 18–25, 2001
pretzel logic

Date with Destiny?

by Howard Altman

It is a matter of public record that the bin Laden family has vociferously
disavowed their wayward 17th child. And who could blame them?

No mere wanton wastrel, the world’s most wanted man has brought great shame
upon this wealthy family. Even worse than shame, though, Osama’s actions have
endangered the clan’s coffers.

So it is not surprising that the bin Ladens have cut ties to "the evildoer,"
as George Dubya likes to refer to him.

Or did they?

A web domain registered to the Saudi Binladin Group (the megabucks
corporation uses the alternate spelling of the family name) raises questions
about what role, if any, the family has played in the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks.

The domain was registered on Sept. 11, 2000, with a preset expiration date of
Sept. 11, 2001, according to a technician with VeriSign, an Internet domain
registry service formerly known as Network Solutions.

Coincidence?

Or was this website set up to start the countdown on the most devastating
attack in U.S. history?

Like a lot of information that has been pouring in to me since shortly before
9 a.m. Sept. 11, the tidbit about www.saudi-binladin-group.com was amazingly
tantalizing.

Unlike a lot of the tidbits, however, this morsel, delivered last week by an
anonymous source I will refer to as Deep Spore, has a paper trail attached to
it.

The paper trail began with a web search of the Binladin Group that revealed
the aforementioned website. A check of that site showed that it no longer
existed. A quick "whois" check on VeriSign’s website — which lists who set up
a particular site and when — showed that, unlike Binladin-related sites that
were taken down right after the attacks on New York and Washington,
saudi-binladin-group.com expired on the day of the attacks.

This was no accident, according to a VeriSign technician in Mountainview,
Calif.

"This was timed so it would expire on that date," says the technician, who
identified herself only by her first name, Antonette, and by her employee
number, 001. Antonette also verified that the information listed in the whois
search was accurate and not tampered with by an outside party.
Antonette added that VeriSign had already been contacted by law enforcement
about other attack-related domain names the company had registered.

"I had a call from the L.A. police," she said. "He was also asking about a
domain name that expired on Sept. 11. I can’t remember the name of it, but it
had something to do with the WTC."

The Binladin website was created by a company called Arq Limited, a U.K. web
design firm. The administrative, technical and billing contact listed on the
whois search is a man named Philip Lumsden.

After several calls to the U.K., I learned that Arq Limited went out of
business, replaced by a company called Active 8 Solutions, which shares the
same Bath, England, mailing address and a telephone number that is only one
digit off from Arq Limited’s old number.

I learned one more interesting thing.

"Mr. Lumsden left a week ago," said a man who answered the phone at Active 8
Solutions. "I am not aware of why he left."

The man, who would not give his name, added that he had "no clue" about the
saudi-binladin-group.com website.


A half-dozen odd calls Tuesday, October 15, to the Saudi Binladin Group’s
headquarters in Jedda, Saudi Arabia, turned up little other than assurances
that if I called back in 20 minutes or a half-hour, then somebody would be
able to give me some information about the website.

Each time I called, I explained that I wanted to ask somebody at the company
why the website expired on Sept. 11, 2001, a rather significant date in world
history. Each time I was told to call back until, finally, I spoke with
someone who could answer my questions.

But not for long.

"You can check with VeriSign," said a man who did not identify himself.
"VeriSign has all the details."


The man then asked me to hold on because he had to take another call. Then I
was disconnected. I called back, only to be disconnected again. When I called
back a third time, another man answering the phone asked if I could send an
e-mail listing my questions.
"It is already after 6 p.m. here," said the man. "Nobody is in anymore."

The next day, I called again and again was told to call back later. By
deadline, neither of the two emails I sent seeking comment were answered.


If the attackers did use this website, the FBI, which is tracking down
thousands and thousands of leads, may be interested.

"I am not aware of [the website], and I do not know whether the FBI is aware
of it, but I can’t speak for the entire FBI," said Joe Valiquette, spokesman
for the FBI’s New York office. "Generally speaking, we would be interested in
something like that."


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