Key Witness to WTC 7 Explosions Dead at 53
Aaron Dykes
Infowars.com
Wednesday, Sept 17, 2008
Emergency coordinator and 9/11 witness Barry Jennings has passed
away with controversy about WTC7 still hot– as the BBC hit piece and
NIST report have been released to counter Jennings’ exclusive
testimony of explosions inside WTC 7
Authority, has passed away at age 53 from circumstances not yet
disclosed. A spokesperson for the Housing Authority has now
confirmed his death, after weeks of rumors circulating online, but
refused to give any further details. This office has not yet been able to contact anyone in the
Jennings family and the official cause of death is not yet known,
but online comments have reported the date of death as August 19,
2008. It is very unusual that a prominent — and controversial– 9/11
witness would die only days before the release of NIST’s report on
WTC7 and shortly after a firestorm erupted over his testimony that
he heard explosions inside the building prior to collapse of either
tower and that there were dead bodies in the building’s blown-out
lobby.The BBC aired The Third Tower in July in attempt to debunk
Barry Jennings’ account– which is both contradictory and damaging to
the official 9/11 story– by making issue over whether or not he said
he “saw” dead bodies in the lobby. Yet Jennings own statement in an exclusive interview with
Dylan Avery and Jason Bermas– which has not been denied– was: “The
fire fighter who took us down kept saying, ‘Don’t look down.’ And I
said, ‘Why.’ And we were stepping over people– you know, you can
feel when you’re stepping over people.” Now the release of Jason Bermas’ Fabled Enemies is giving
further exposure to Jennings’ controversial account. The film
features a full interview with Barry Jennings, as well as the
statements he and Michael Hess, who was also trapped with him inside
WTC7, made to news media on the day of the attacks. Barry Jennings reiterated in the exclusive interview his
confusion over the explanation for WTC7’s collapse– given that he
clearly heard explosions inside the building: “I’m just confused about one thing, and one thing only– why
World Trade Center 7 went down in the first place. I’m very confused
about that. I know what I heard– I heard explosions. The explanation
I got was it was the fuel-oil tank. I’m an old boiler guy– if it was
a fuel-oil tank, it would have been one side of the building.” That interview was not released until June 2008 at the
request of Mr. Jennings, who had received numerous threats to his
job and asked that it be left out of Loose Change: Final Cut because
of those threats. Jennings statements have lit fire to questions about what
really caused the sudden collapse of WTC7 just as NIST had hoped the
release of their report would quash widespread beliefs that the
building was brought down by controlled demolition. News of Jennings’ death comes on the heels of losing another
9/11 hero and eyewitness– Kenny Johannemann, who reportedly
committed suicide 12 days before the seventh anniversary of 9/11.
Johannemann is credited with saving at least one man’s life on 9/11
and was also a witness to explosions in the towers. NIST’s report, as well as that of the 9/11 Commission (which
did not even mention WTC7), completely ignored statements from the
building leaseholder Larry Silverstein as well as numerous police,
fire fighters and other eyewitnesses who have testified that they
were warned about the building’s collapse and told to get back. One
rescue worker even heard a countdown for the building’s implosion. Unfortunately, Barry Jennings, whose testimony was ignored by
the 9/11 Commission, can no longer raise questions personally about
his experience inside WTC7, but his account will remain on the
record and what he witnessed about 9/11 cannot be ignored. The truth about WTC7 will come out, and Barry Jennings’
testimony will not be in vain. Please contact aaron@infowars.com if you have any information
about the circumstances of Barry’s death or any other reports. We
extend our condolences to any family or friends reading this for
their loss.