Texarkana Gazette

Sept. 11 families seek answers in secret pages

- By Jennifer Peltz and Tom Hays

NEW YORK—Fifteen years after the attacks that killed her husband, Lorie Van Auken thinks she still hasn’t been told the whole truth about 9/11.

She wants to know what’s in 28 classified pages locked away in a basement room of the U.S. Capitol. They describe investigat­ive leads about “specific sources of foreign support” for the terrorists and might shed light on possible Saudi connection­s.

The secrecy “gnaws at you every day,” Van Auken says. “Fifteen years is long enough. We want to stop guessing.”

She soon may. President Barack Obama has hinted that at least portions of the 28 pages may be released shortly amid growing calls to reveal what some see as a hidden chapter in the explanatio­n of Sept. 11.

Victims’ relatives say they and the public deserve full transparen­cy about the worst terrorist attack on U.S. soil, and some argue that continued secrecy raises troubling questions about who or what is being shielded, and why.

Some Sept. 11 families expect the pages’ contents will help them sue the Saudi Arabian government, since a former lawmaker has said the 2002 document casts suspicion that the terrorists got financial help from the kingdom, though U.S. investigat­ions later concluded otherwise.

But the push to unveil the pages stirs mixed feelings among victims’ families, and sometimes even within them.

Diane Massaroli, who lost her husband, is convinced responsibi­lity for 9/11 extends beyond al-Qaida. She and sister-in-law Joann Massaroli find suspicions of Saudi links compelling, and they lament that important questions have been left unanswered.

“To see us get to the bottom of the financial paper trail … would give me tremendous satisfacti­on,” Joann Massaroli says. “To me, those pages hold something that’s going to be revealing.”

Diane’s son, Michael, doubts it. He favors releasing the pages but thinks the idea of Saudi complicity doesn’t add up, and he wonders about the point of grasping for what he sees as fragments of data.

“There’s no informatio­n out there that’s going to bring my father back, that’s going to bring any of these people back,” says Michael, 20, a college senior and his father’s namesake. “I’m at as much peace as I will ever be with what happened.”

The classified pages come from a congressio­nal inquiry into the attacks, which killed nearly 3,000 people when hijacked planes smashed into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvan­ia field in 2001.

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