American Airlines Flight 11 was a domestic passenger flight that was hijacked by five al-Qaeda terrorists on September11, 2001, as part of the September 11 attacks.
Lead hijacker Mohamed Atta deliberately crashed the plane into the North Tower of the World Trade Center in New York City, killing all 92 people aboard and ensuring the deaths of 1,402 people at and above the aircraft's impact zone.
The aircraft involved, a Boeing 767-223ER, registration  was flying American Airlines' daily scheduled morning transcontinental service from Logan International Airport in Boston to Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles.
Fifteen minutes into the flight, the hijackers injured at least three people (possibly killing one), forcibly breached the cockpit, and overpowered the captain and first officer.
Atta, an al-Qaeda member and licensed commercial pilot, took over the controls.
Air traffic controllers suspected that the flight was in distress because the crew was no longer responding.
They realized the flight had been hijacked when Mohamed Atta's announcements for passengers were unintentionally transmitted to air traffic control.
On board, flight attendants Amy Sweeney and Betty Ong contacted American Airlines, and provided information about the hijackers and injuries to passengers and crew.
The aircraft crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center at 08:46:40 local time.
Countless people in the streets of New York City witnessed the strike, but few video recordings captured the moment.
Documentary filmmaker Jules Naudet captured the only known footage of the initial impact from start to finish.
Before the hijacking was confirmed, news agencies began to report on the incident and speculated that the crash had been an accident.
The impact and subsequent fire caused the North Tower to collapse 102minutes after the crash, resulting in hundreds of additional casualties.
During the recovery effort at the World Trade Center site, workers recovered and identified dozens of remains from Flight11 victims, but many body fragments could not be identified.
Flight
The aircraft involved in the hijacking was a Boeing 767-223ER delivered to American Airlines in April 1987, with registration number N334AA.
The capacity of the aircraft was 158passengers (9 in first class, 30 in business class and 119 in economy class), but the September11 flight carried 81passengers and 11crew members.
This was a light load at 58percent capacity, but higher than the average load factor for Flight11 on Tuesday mornings of 39percent in the months preceding September11.
The crew members were Captain John Ogonowski (50), First Officer Thomas McGuinness Jr. (42) (a former Navy fighter pilot), purser Karen Martin and flight attendants Barbara Arestegui, Jeffrey Collman, Sara Low, Kathleen Nicosia, Betty Ong, Jean Roger, Dianne Snyder, and Amy Sweeney.
All 92 people on board were killed, including David Angell (the creator and executive producer of the television sitcom Frasier), his wife Lynn Angell, and actress Berry Berenson, the widow of Anthony Perkins.
Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane had been scheduled to be on the flight but arrived at the airport late.
Actor Mark Wahlberg was also scheduled to be on the flight but canceled his ticket the day before as a result of changed plans.
Actress Leighanne Littrell, wife of Backstreet Boys singer Brian Littrell, had also previously been booked on the flight but, like Wahlberg, changed her plans at the last minute.
Boarding
Portland, Maine
Mohamed Atta, the ringleader of the attacks, and a fellow hijacker, Abdulaziz al-Omari, arrived at Portland International Jetport (Portland, Maine) at 05:41 Eastern Daylight Time on September11, 2001.
At the Portland ticket counter, Atta asked ticket agent Mike Tuohey for his boarding pass for Flight 11.
Tuohey told Atta he would have to check in a second time when he reached Logan.
Atta clenched his jaw and appeared on the verge of anger.
He told Tuohey that he'd been assured he'd have "one-step check-in."
Tuohey didn't budge or rise to Atta's hostility, and simply told him that he'd better hurry if he didn't want to miss the flight.
Although Atta still looked cross, he and Omari left the ticket counter for the Portland airport's security checkpoint.
They boarded Colgan Air Flight5930, which was scheduled to depart at 06:00 from Portland, Maine, and fly to Boston.
Both hijackers had first class tickets with a connecting flight to Los Angeles; Atta checked in two bags, while Omari checked in none.
When they checked in, the Computer-Assisted Passenger Prescreening System (CAPPS) selected Atta for extra luggage scrutiny, but he boarded without incident.
The flight from Portland departed on time and arrived in Boston at 06:45.
Three other hijackers, Waleed al-Shehri, Wail al-Shehri, and Satam al-Suqami, arrived at Logan Airport at 06:45, having left their rental car in the airport parking facility.
At 06:52, Marwan al-Shehhi, the hijacker pilot of United Airlines Flight 175, made a call from a pay phone in Logan Airport to Atta's cell phone.
This call was apparently to confirm that the attacks were ready to begin.
Boston, Massachusetts
Since they were not given boarding passes for Flight11 in Portland, Atta and Omari checked in and went through security in Boston.
Suqami, Wail al-Shehri, and Waleed al-Shehri also checked in for the flight in Boston.
Wail al-Shehri and Suqami each checked one bag; Waleed al-Shehri did not check any bags.
CAPPS selected all three for a detailed luggage check.
As the CAPPS' screening was only for luggage, the three hijackers did not undergo any extra scrutiny at the passenger security checkpoint.
First Officer Lynn Howland had just arrived in Boston after copiloting the flight from San Francisco that would be redesignated American Flight 11.
As she walked off the aircraft and entered the passenger lounge, Atta approached her and asked if she'd be flying the plane back across the country.
When Howland told him she just brought the aircraft in, Atta turned his back and walked away.
As he boarded Flight 11, Atta asked a gate agent whether the two bags he'd checked earlier in Portland had been loaded onto the plane.
In the rushed check-in after the flight from Portland, airline officials did not load Atta's bags on Flight11.
By 07:40, all five hijackers were aboard the flight, scheduled to depart at 07:45.
Atta sat in business class seat 8D with al-Omari in 8G and Suqami in 10B.
Waleed and Wail al-Shehri sat in first class seats 2B and 2A.
Shortly before takeoff, American Airlines flight service manager Michael Woodward walked aboard for a final check.
He briefly passed Atta, making note of this passenger's brooding expression, and then left the plane.
At 07:46, one minute behind schedule, the aircraft received clearance to push back from Gate B32, and was cleared to taxi to the runway at 07:50.
The aircraft began its takeoff run from Logan International Airport at 07:59 from runway4R.
Hijacking
The 9/11 Commission estimated that the hijacking began at 08:14, when the pilots stopped responding to requests from the Boston Air Route Traffic Control Center (Boston ARTCC).
At 08:13:29, as the aircraft was passing over central Massachusetts at , the pilots responded to a request from Boston ARTCC to make a 20-degree turn to the right.
At 08:13:47 Boston ARTCC told the pilots to ascend to a cruising altitude of  but received no response.
At 08:16, the aircraft leveled off at  and shortly thereafter deviated from its scheduled path.
At 8:17:59, flight controllers at Boston Center heard a brief, unknown sound on the radio frequency used by Flight 11 and other nearby flights.
They didn't know where it came from, and they couldn't be certain, but it possibly sounded like a scream.
Boston ARTCC made multiple attempts to talk to Flight11 without reply, and at 08:21, someone in the cockpit stopped transmitting the flight’s Mode-C transponder signal.
At 8:23 and 8:25, several times, Aircraft Communication Addressing and Reporting System (ACARS) tried to contact the flight.
One ACARS message read, "Good morning, ATC looking for you on 135.32", the other read, "Plz contact Boston Center ASAP.
They have lost radio contact and your transponder signal."
Flight 11 didn't reply.
Reports from flight attendants
According to flight attendants Amy Sweeney and Betty Ong, who contacted American Airlines during the hijacking, the hijackers had stabbed flight attendants Karen Martin and Barbara Arestegui and slashed the throat of passenger Daniel Lewin.
The hijackers might have used a predetermined signal: when the pilots turned off the Fasten Seatbelt signs.
It is unknown how the hijackers gained access to the cockpit; FAA rules at the time required that the doors remain closed and locked during flight.
Ong said she thought that the hijackers had "jammed their way" in.
The commission suggested they attacked the flight attendants to get a cockpit key, to force one of them to open the cockpit door, or to lure the captain or first officer out of the cockpit.
It is believed that one or more of the hijackers, possibly the brothers Wail and Waleed al-Shehri, made the first move, attacking Martin and Arestegui.
Sweeney said that Martin was badly injured and being given oxygen.
Sweeney and Ong said Arestegui's injures weren't as serious.
Ong said she heard loud arguing after the hijackers entered the cockpit.
It is believed that the hijackers either killed or incapacitated Ogonowski and McGuinness.
Sweeney said that one of the hijackers had shown her a device with red and yellow wires that appeared to be a bomb.
Ong and Sweeney said that the coach passengers didn't seem to fully understand the peril, and were under the impression that there was a routine medical emergency in the front section of the plane, and that the other flight attendants were helping passengers and finding medical supplies.
Ong said Lewin appeared to be dead.
Sweeney said that Suqami was the one who had attacked Lewin.
Lewin was seated in 9B, and Suqami sat directly behind him in 10B.
One assumption is that Suqami attacked Lewin, unprovoked, to frighten other passengers and crew into compliance.
Alternatively, Lewin, an American-Israeli Internet entrepreneur who understood Arabic, and had served as an officer in the elite Sayeret Matkal special operations unit of the Israel Defense Forces,Hersh, Seymour M. (October 29, 2001).
"Watching the Warheads: The Risks to Pakistans Nuclear Arsenal", The New Yorker.
may have attempted to stop the hijacking, and confronted one of the hijackers in front of him, unaware Suqami was behind him.
Lewin is believed to be the first fatality in the 9/11 attacks.Ron Jager, Danny Lewin: The First Victim Of 9/11, 5TJT, September 8, 2011  During a four-minute call to the American Airlines operations center, Ong provided information about lack of communication with the cockpit, lack of access to the cockpit, and that she thought someone had sprayed Mace in the business class cabin.
She also provided the seat locations of the hijackers, which later helped investigators to determine their identities.
Hijacker's transmissions
At 08:24:38, a hijacker’s voice, believed to be Atta, broadcast to Boston ARTCC.
Air traffic controllers heard Atta announce, "We have some planes.
Just stay quiet and you'll be O.K. We are returning to the airport."
At 08:24:56 he announced, "Nobody move.
Everything will be okay.
If you try to make any moves, you'll endanger yourself and the airplane.
Just stay quiet."
As Atta spoke English fluently, he likely made the transmissions.
It is also possible that Atta's seatmate, al-Omari, accompanied him into the cockpit.
Apparently, Atta tried to make an announcement to the passengers, but keyed the wrong switch and instead his voice was picked up and recorded by air traffic controllers.
After Atta’s transmissions and the inability to contact the airliner, air traffic controllers at Boston ARTCC realized that Flight 11 was being hijacked.
At 08:26, the plane turned south.
At 08:32, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Command Center in Herndon, Virginia, notified FAA headquarters.
At 08:33:59, Atta announced a third and final transmission: "Nobody move, please.
We are going back to the airport.
Don't try to make any stupid moves."
At 08:37:08, the pilots of United Airlines Flight175 verified Flight11's location and heading to flight control.
Fighter jets dispatched
Boston ARTCC bypassed standard protocols and directly contacted the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) Northeast Air Defense Sector (NEADS) in Rome, New York.
NEADS called on two F-15 fighter jets at Otis Air National Guard Base in Mashpee, Massachusetts, to intercept.
Officials at Otis spent a few minutes getting authorization for the fighters to take off.
Atta completed the final turn towards Manhattan at 08:43.
The order to dispatch the fighters at Otis was given at 08:46, and the F-15s took off at 08:53, roughly seven minutes after American Airlines Flight11 had already crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center.
Of the four hijacked aircraft on 9/11, the nine minutes of advance notification about the hijacking of Flight11 was the most time that NORAD had to respond before the aircraft crashed into its intended target.NEADS/NORAD (the military) was notified about Flight11 at 08:37, nine minutes before the crash.
This nine minutes was the amount of time available to them to respond to the situation.
They were notified about United Airlines Flight175 at 09:03, the same time it crashed into the South Tower.
They were notified about American Airlines Flight 77 four minutes before it crashed into the Pentagon.
The military was notified about United Airlines Flight 93 at 10:07 (four minutes after it crashed in Pennsylvania).
The nine minutes with Flight11 was the most time they had to do something in response.
Source: Crash
At 08:46:40 Atta intentionally crashed American Airlines Flight11 into the northern façade of the North Tower (Tower1) of the World Trade Center.
The aircraft, traveling about  and carrying about  of jet fuel, hit between floors 93 and 99 of the North Tower.
Witnesses saw the plane flying at low altitude over Manhattan and thought the aircraft was in distress.
Lieutenant William Walsh of the FDNY (who appears in the documentary film 9/11) witnessed the aircraft:
We were under the impressionhe looked like he was going down, but we didn't hear any mechanical difficulty.
We couldn't figure out why an American Airlines plane would be so low in downtown Manhattan.
We sort of expected him to veer off and go into the Hudson.
But he just rose a little bit, his altitude, leveled off, and he was headed straight for the Trade Center.
So just before he got to the Trade Center, it seemed as though he gained power.
We were just watching this airplane on target for the World Trade Center.
All of a sudden, boom!
He disappears into the Trade Center.
The damage caused to the North Tower destroyed any means of escape at the impact zone or above it.
All stairwells and elevators from floor 92 to at least floor 99 up were rendered impassable, killing or trapping 1,344people.
According to the Commission Report, hundreds were killed instantly by the impact; the rest were trapped and died from the subsequent fire and smoke, the eventual collapse, or (in some cases) after jumping or falling from the building.
Elevator shafts channeled burning jet fuel through the building, allowing some of it to explode in the Skylobbies on floors 78 and 22, and in the main lobby at the base of the tower.
Jules Naudet, a French cameraman, and Pavel Hlava, a Czech immigrant, videotaped the crash.
A webcam set up by Wolfgang Staehle at an art exhibit in Brooklyn to take images of Lower Manhattan every four seconds also captured images of Flight11 crashing into the North Tower.
News organizations at first reported an explosion or incident at the World Trade Center.
CNN broke into a commercial at 08:49 with the headline "World Trade Center Disaster".
Carol Lin, who was the first anchor to break the news of the attacks, said:
Later, in an on-air phone call from his office at the CNN New York bureau, CNN vice president of finance Sean Murtagh reported that a large passenger commercial jet had hit the World Trade Center.
Eventually, other television networks interrupted regular broadcasting with news of the crash.
President George W. Bush was arriving at Emma E. Booker Elementary School in Sarasota, Florida.
Initial news reports speculated that the crash may have been an accident until United Airlines Flight 175 was flown into the South Tower 17 minutes after Flight11 made impact.
Aftermath
thumbnail|Wreckage at museum
After the crash, the North Tower burned for 102minutes before collapsing at 10:28.
Although the impact itself caused extensive structural damage, the long-lasting fire ignited by jet fuel was blamed for the structural failure of the tower.
In addition to the aircraft passengers and building occupants, hundreds of rescue workers also died when the tower collapsed.
Cantor Fitzgerald L.P., an investment bank on floors 101–105 of the One World Trade Center, lost 658employees, considerably more than any other employer.
Rescue workers at the World Trade Center site began to discover body fragments from Flight11 victims within days of the attack.
Some workers found bodies strapped to airplane seats and discovered the body of a flight attendant with her hands bound, suggesting the hijackers might have used plastic handcuffs.
Within a year, medical examiners had identified the remains of 33victims who had been on board Flight11.
They identified two other Flight11 victims, including purser Karen Martin, in 2006, while other unrelated body fragments were discovered near Ground Zero around the same time.
In April 2007, examiners using newer DNA technology identified another Flight11 victim.
The remains of two hijackers, potentially from Flight11, were also identified and removed from Memorial Park in Manhattan.
The remains of the other hijackers have not been identified and are buried with other unidentified remains at this park.
Suqami's passport survived the crash and landed in the street below.
Soaked in jet fuel, it was picked up by a passerby who gave it to a New York City Police Department (NYPD) detective shortly before the South Tower collapsed.
Investigators retrieved Mohamed Atta's luggage, which had not been loaded onto the flight.
In it, they found Omari's passport and driver's license, a videocassette for a Boeing 757 flight simulator, a folding knife, and pepper spray.
In a recording, a few months later in Afghanistan, Al Qaeda's leader, Osama bin Laden, took responsibility for the attack.
The attack on the World Trade Center exceeded even bin Laden's expectations: he had expected only the floors above the plane strikes to collapse.
The flight recorders for Flight11 and Flight175 were never found.
After the attacks, the flight number for flights on the same route with the same takeoff time was changed to American Airlines Flight25.
These flights now use a Boeing 737-800 instead of a Boeing 767.
An American flag is flown on the jet bridge of gate B32 from which Flight11 departed Logan Airport.
In 2002, the first recipients of the annual Madeline Amy Sweeney Award for Civilian Bravery were Sweeney and Ong.
Ogonowski also received a posthumous award.
They were all residents of Massachusetts.
Relatives of all three accepted the awards on their behalf.
On April 26, 2013, a piece of the wing flap mechanism from a Boeing 767 was discovered wedged between two buildings at Park Place, near where other landing gear parts were found.
The onboard defibrillator from Flight11 was found in 2014 during roadwork near Liberty Street.
At the National September 11 Memorial, the names of the 87victims of Flight11 are inscribed on the North Pool, on Panels N-1 and N-2, and Panels N-74N-76.About: The Memorial Names Layout.
Memorial Guide: National 9/11 Memorial.
Retrieved December 11, 2011.
See also
American Airlines Flight 77
United Airlines Flight 93
United Airlines Flight 175
List of tenants in One World Trade Center
Notes
References
External links
The Final 9/11 Commission Report
9-11 NTSB Report
, September 11, 2001
, September 12, 2001
Category:2001 fires Category:2001 in New York (state) Category:2001 in Massachusetts Category:2001 murders in the United States Category:Accidents and incidents involving the Boeing 767 Category:Aircraft hijackings in the United States Category:Airliner accidents and incidents in New York City Category:Airliner accidents and incidents involving deliberate crashes Category:Airliner accidents and incidents caused by hijacking Category:Airliners involved in the September 11 attacks 11 Category:Aviation accidents and incidents in the United States in 2001 Category:Disasters in New York City Category:Filmed murder–suicides Category:Islamic terrorism in the United States Category:Logan International Airport Category:Mass murder in New York (state) Category:Mass murder in the United States Category:Murder–suicides in New York Category:Murder in New York City Category:Mass murder in 2001
