The Unspeakable | Full Movie 4K

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(cow moos) (insects buzzing) (soft, rhythmic music) (indistinct chattering) - [Bob] On September 10th, life was perfect. We had two kids, Bobby and Jeff working up in New York, living up in New York. We were on a pedestal on the 10th. - [Drew] I was having a lot of fun. I guess the only sort of downside was that I didn't get to see my mom too much. I was just being a kid. You want to be out doing stuff and like I said, she was commuting to the city every day. - [Bill] I was not in a good place in my life On the 10th of September. I had spent some time with Frank and that was the good part. - [Matt] On the 10th I'm on the beach obviously with my mom and my wife and two kids. They were probably six months, 18 months at the time, so you're doing stuff like you do, playing in the sand, building sandcastles and just enjoying that time. And, you know, that's how we kind of imagined the rest of the holiday would pan out. (ominous music) (indistinct chattering) - [Woman] You can't forget. (ominous music) (indistinct chattering) - Well prior to 9/11, I was involved in activism, United Nations Group, and the idea was that we would work kind of like the United States on a international level. So when 9/11 happened and the subsequent change in atmosphere, it was really hard to talk about anything that made sense publicly, because it was kind of a unilateral United States world that we were going to do whatever we wanted and it was going to be violent and it was going to be warlike. My name is Robert Griffin, I'm a psychologist and I went to school at Penn State and Marywood University in Pennsylvania. Like most I get up and get coffee and it's time to get to work. Some people go through the trauma of the loss and the violent death and then also go through the trauma of finding out that things aren't as they seemed or that there's problems that hurt in other ways. So their trauma initially is disorienting. How do we fit in the world anymore? Am I a father? Am I a son? - [Helen] I just got a text from Jeff. We have to be there at 10 to seven tomorrow. Can you get the sugar, hun? - Yeah. - Did I put in enough water? Yeah, I'm good. I left some in there from earlier. - When you have a child die, it's very tough for families. Some people do pull together. It depends a lot on who they are before it happened and they seem to be made of the right stuff to be able to support each other and to stay as a family and also enjoy their grandkids. (Helen sighs) - One day at a time, right? - Yep. - Okay, I guess the best thing is to text Jeff back and tell him that you'll go with Zoe and I'll go with Danny. - That's great. - Yeah, that works. Yeah. - I'd rather travel to Schuylkill that early in the morning- - Yeah. - Than in the afternoon, that's for sure. - Well, both of us will get to see. - Yeah. - Yeah, see the kids. - I don't know what the scene is, but that's Jeff and Bobby there. He was a good friend of mine. I just went to his grave site. - It's been years since I wore a wedding band and now because we got these at our 50th, I'm gonna wear it all the time. - Do you know when I lost the first one? - I have it in my drawer. - You still have it? - I found it, yeah. - Here's Jeff and Bobby. I forget what this was. Probably he was in Princeton or just had left Princeton. He left Princeton in '97 and this is of course Bobby at, I'm sure it's, yeah, it's at Princeton. I don't know. I don't know if it was part of graduation. - [Helen] And then that's why it's hard to leave. We have so many memories here. - [Bob] We called this a starter home, right? - Yeah. (laughing) We started and ended. - We started and ended. - This is down at Cape May. Might have been the last weekend we saw Bobby. This was his fiancee, Jen. That's right. They weren't engaged. Jeez. And they were to be engaged that following week. - [Helen] They were going... He hadn't given her the ring when he died. - That's, uh, it's such a great photo. It's probably the best photo of him. They used to share a room, but as Bobby got older, he wanted his own little room. Of course we revamped it. There was a bed here. This was June 21st. Bobby just loved to write. Phenomenal writer. And just to give you an example, when he was in third grade, I'll just never forget this, I forget the teacher's name, but we were sitting there after the interview, of course he was doing great in class and all that, but you know, all third graders seem to do great. But she said, let me tell you something, Bob, I'm telling you right now, save your pennies. Said because this kid's going to Harvard or an Ivy League school. Little Bobby. Bobby was on the side right here with Helen. - [Helen] It's just hard to believe though. I mean, when I look at those times and think about Bobby as a little boy, it's so painful to think he's not here. He's in New York. He's fine. Because that's where I left him. I see him as a little boy and then he's gone and it's almost like a little bit of like guilt in there. Like I wasn't able to keep him alive. Friends said to me, I can't believe you're still going up to New York and we couldn't get enough of it because that's what he loved. He loved being up there. - [Bob] I mean, a lot of people won't go to Ground Zero. I just don't know how people can just walk away from it. - [Helen] You have to understand not everyone can deal with that. I know I can't, I, I just, I want to just think of Bobby as whole and perfect. - [Bob] I don't know. That's what's bothered me about people that they can't look at what happened that day- - [Helen] You can't judge other people by what you're doing. This is your journey, this is your way of going through the tunnel to get to the other side. You need to do this. I couldn't go. - Well that's why... Why can't you do it? - It's not going to bring him back. It would be wasted time to have me in the position you're in. Thank god you do it, though. - It seems like I'm almost ordained to do this for some reason because- - I know you feel that way. - Because no one does it. - She's stuck in the marriage. She's stuck with Bob and it's obviously painful and she does what she needs to to cope and to basically survive. - When it gets more and morbid and you describe certain aspects of it that I can't handle, I think it's time for me to just let you talk, you know? So I think I'll do that. Excuse me. Okay. Catch you later. - All right. - So I will say about Bob McIlvaine is that one of the things that impressed me about him is that he has grown over the years from what I could tell and this trauma has kind of refined him. - On September 10th, life was perfect. We had two kids, Bobby and Geoff. Bobby graduated from Princeton, working up in New York, living up in New York. We were on a pedestal on the 10th, then September 11th came. - [Woman] Something hit the World Trade Center. A huge explosion. (indistinct chattering) - [Man] We saw an explosion at the Twin Towers. - Helen calls me, the Tower's been hit. She still wants to turn the TV... I had turned the TV on and then she called and she said I can't get ahold of Bobby. She immediately called him and there was no answer, but of course we didn't think anything was wrong because he worked at Merrill Lynch, which was right across the street from the Towers. I was in work and I said, look, I have to leave. - [Woman 1] It's very bad. - Did the building collapse? - Yeah. - [Woman 2] Oh my, the whole building? - [Woman 1] I don't know if it's the whole building. It's so crazy... - So Merrill Lynch, of course we were talking to Merrill Lynch immediately and I went up there to look for him. And there was so many people down at Ground Zero walking around the area, just looking for people. Oh, I think we called, you know, we found out where, where he was. He was at the coroners, okay? But I don't know if we found our right there. He said they had a wallet. That's how they found out. We had the wallet. In fact... I got the wallet right here. This is a biohazard thing. I don't think you can see. I've had it opened many times, but this is a biohazard. This is the wallet that they had. In other words, we found out they had a full body except for, and I'll show you what happened to him, but the wallet was one them. Now at the time, everything was fine. Everything's disintegrated, everything in here is. But I think... They had Bobby's license. And Helen went up to the dentist and they actually got x-rays. Helen brought the x-rays down and it was a match. So the next morning we took him home. We're... (sniffles) Believe me, we're one of the luckiest ones. (sobs) Because so many people didn't get bodies. Nothing. And we actually got a full, not a full body, but we got a body to take home and bury. And we, you know, we're so grateful for that. - Whose grief is it? Whose loss is it? In some way, the government has claimed the loss as their own. Folks were told how to feel, what to think about it and it adds to their pain when it's used for other types of policies that have nothing to do with it. - We went to war and there goes the authority thing. I didn't believe it was necessary to go to war because of Bobby. I knew Bobby would have said, what, are you nuts? And this, I can't give you an exact time for this. I think it was July 4th, but I've been to so many demonstrations over the years. And of course around the world, but I think this was in Philadelphia and it was a candlelight type of thing, but again, I've just been to so many of them. I just can't place it. You know, I always wore a picture of Bobby. I haven't been doing that as much as I did before. He would have been 100% against the war. And I was. Helen and I both were 100%. - A conflict is part of our nature. We have a way of identifying the us versus them or the other and so that leads to all sorts of problems where the other is not considered in there as fully human cause it's hard to get people to fight wars. People don't hate on their own. They have to be given a story. - When I got arrested down in Washington, DC at the protests, I didn't want to go to jail, so they arrested us, took us away in a paddy wagon and paid the fine, but everyone agreed to that. so not some people were getting arrested, so forth and so on. So I can't tell you, I would think that would be the first big protest. 'Cause Helen and I were doing the Peaceful Tomorrows and with that, we did the protest with Peaceful Tomorrows. And I actually went to the commission hearings thinking that we would actually get something done. I really, I kept that hope alive, but Condoleezza Rice on August 6, and she just bullshitted the whole time. And even the commissioners were getting so frustrated with it. But see, in those hearings, each person that's asked a question, you know, they couldn't go one for 15, 20, 25 minutes to grill you. Listen, Condoleezza, you're not telling us anything. Let's get to the facts here. But no, they get five minutes and she filibustered through it. And I just started, I said, you know, I won't say right here, but you know, MF-this, no good sons of bitches and Canadian broadcasting, you know, they heard me, so they wanted to hear this, and from there I just changed direction. That's when I decided, well, I'm not going to do Peaceful Tomorrows anymore. I'm just going to talk about what happened on 9/11. (Bob chuckles) Hey my man. - Hey, Bob. How are you? My name is Tony Szamboti, actually formally Anthony Szamboti, and I'm a degreed mechanical engineer. Are you still in the same place? - Oh yeah. - Near Fort Washington? - 47 years now. - 47... How long? - Bobby was two-years-old. - Wow. - So he would be 46. - He would be, he was 26 when he passed away. - Yeah, so it's, yeah, 46. - 46-years-old. - Good memory. - Well, I know he was 26 when it happened. - I didn't think about that. - The interesting thing about engineering that I can say is problems, the way they are solved, is it evolves. The solution evolves. You have a subconscious mind and a conscious mind. Your conscious mind can only handle so much at any given time. Your subconscious mind is a vast storehouse or warehouse of all your life experience and what happens, you hear the old expression sleep on it. That's the way difficult problems are actually solved. And if there is a solution, it'll come, it'll evolve, it'll converge. And that's why engineering is fun to me because you're thinking about things, you're trying to solve this problem and you're musing or mulling it over and sort of, that's, you know, even with 9/11, that's the way it worked with me, looking at these buildings. You know, I imagine myself in the basement of a large skyscraper and these huge, concrete encased columns and you know, like a parking garage or something. How did that just completely give up the ghost? - So this didn't happen until 2000... Six, seven, eight... I really didn't have the guts enough to go up and find out exactly what happened to him, okay? So this has been sitting there and of course the first thing we get is a picture of what happened. All right, now this is how I started coming out, finding out, you know, what I feel happened to him. So we didn't know for sure. A lot of people thought, family members thought that maybe he jumped. His friend said that no, he was running away from the building and he got hit by falling debris. - You know, Bob's a decent guy. Who wants to have their 26-year-old son killed in that kind of fashion where, you know, his body is partially destroyed? - In this, his right arm's missing, okay? In this, from his nose down, his entire face is missing. Okay, so in other words, everything has blown. His eyes are missing. Everything is blown out. Back of his head is intact but, you know, there's some fractures, okay? - And all the wounds to his body were from the front. No wounds on the back, right? - Right. - So that would indicate explosive force. - Can I just read you something? You know, and it's taken a long time to get to the point where I am right now, but the story of 9/11. This is coming right from the 9/11 commission hearing. They spent two lines talking about what happened to the buildings. "A jet fuel fireball erupted upon impact and shot down at least one bank of elevators. The fireball exploded onto numerous lower levels, including the 77th, the 22nd, the West Street lobby and the B4 level." - You expect us to believe this fireball came down and then exploded. Explosions are caused by rapid release of energy from a confined substance. The fireball is not confined. - No. Ground floor, the lobby, flowers, things, they weren't singed or anything. I have documentation that he was found outside the building. - Outside. This was before the buildings came down. - Well when they picked him up, he was outside the building. - Right, but the building hadn't fallen yet. Is that true? I think- - No, no, of course not. - Right. He was one of the first ones- - Well... - Taken out, right? - The report on him, he had, rigor mortis hadn't set in, so that's when you can really tell when- - I know, when- - So it's probably less... He got to the coroners less than two hours after he died, less than two hours. - Right. - And what happened, I think what happened, is Bobby was walking and decided to go up to the floors and I think he was hit as he was trying to walk in because of the nature. His whole face was just blown off. He lost his arm and he was blown out of his shoes. So with that, I, you know, I stick by that story, but then I've gone too much further than that. Again, I want to know who killed him and why. - Somebody said to me one time where a coverup is only six inches deep. You imagine a big layer of concrete, but it's a mile wide. So unless you dig down vertical, you can't get under it. You can't see out to the edges of it. (ominous music) (Maureen laughs) - [Matt] We're up to, all right, three minutes, you're doing another 30 seconds. Or should we just ruin his tea and take it out now? It's true, though. It does make a hell of a difference. There's no point doing squeeze, squeeze, 30 seconds. You'll get an absolutely rubbish cup of tea. - I'd like most of this to be edited out, please. (laughs) My name's Maureen Lucille Campbell and I live in Hassocks, West Sussex, about eight miles from Brighton and I've been retired for many years since I was 55, 21 years ago. Probably only came in about three or four that morning. - We were so hung over. - Hung over. - I can tell 'cause Geoff- - They look like criminals. - Well we are still drunk. - Oh, I know. (film reel rolling) - [Maureen] Well, the three boys I'd say different in a number of ways. We've got Matthew, the eldest. (laughs) - Yep, my hair. It's just, it's where I'm at right now. Frustrated and pissed off with current events. but in particularly, you know, my fight for the last 20 years. And so it's just, yeah, it's where I'm at. A little bit like this up to the system. Yeah, for the wake that we had. We had a memorial with no remains. This was I think 30th of September? - Yes, it was. - I mean, that to me is just a classic photo. My name is Matt Campbell. I live in the south of England in a small village in Sussex. I have a degree in mathematical physics and a master's in applied mathematics and I have a second master's in scientific application software. - And Robert, the youngest one I was most like. We like the quiet life and if someone said two and two made eight, we'd say, yeah, that's fine. We don't like confrontation and just let it go. - Yeah, my name is Robert Benjamin Campbell. I live in Keymer, Hassocks, which is in West Sussex. - Rob was about five years younger me. It was sufficient of a gap that in my head he's always the little brother. - I had a good friend, Nick, who had his own pub. What we did is for Geoff, we had his wake there. So all his friends, his family, everybody came and what they did as a surprise for the family, was they had a really good friend who's really good at doing paintings and they did a painting of Geoff. My friends, like, you know, like Geoff, a lot, if you know what I mean. Looked up to him. - [Matt] That's Geoff's James Bond- - [Maureen] Yes, coming out the... (laughs) - [Matt] I think he loved that, didn't he? - Outgoing, very sort of smiley, lots of charisma, good nature, generous spirit, always, you know, good at listening. He'd laugh. He's four years older than me, so there's a bit of a gap, but, I always looked up to Geoff more than Matt. (laughs) Sorry. (laughs) He was a bit of a nerd. (laughs) - Both Matthew and Geoff really had their dad's brains, really clever. Robert always said, the youngest, the store brains ran out when it was his time to be born. - Both finished uni. So Geoff finished I think a year before me and just she tarted to travel and he definitely kind of switched from I'm going to work in a bank, because I think he realized the trading route wasn't going to happen, and just basically became a specialist. His area was risk. With Reuters, who he eventually ended up working for, had products that worked in that space. - This is Caroline. They went up to London and took photos. Phoebe's christening, isn't it? Yeah. So that's the little church where we actually had the memorial. Quite a glamorous shot of them, and they went up to London, look right he is there. - I think it was early 2000. Worked for a client in Manhattan for six weeks, eight weeks, something like that. I can't remember. So staying really close to where Geoff lived and he'd just met Caroline I think the previous year. And I think he was looking at getting an apartment with her. I mean, it was that serious that quick, which, you know, I said he'd had relationships before, it was quite fast. And so very quickly, you know, it was obvious that this was very serious. I guess he'd been working for Reuters for at least a year, maybe longer. And, you know, he was looking to, I guess, you know, put his roots down. I mean, it was very clear he loved, absolutely loved New York. - Well you know I'm fanatical about keeping all these documents, so I just had a quick look through to see what we could dig up. I met Matt originally back in '97, '98. We were both working on the same project. Matt was working for one of the suppliers. Matt's brother, Geoff, was working for Reuters. We had an idea that we would need a North American New York based office and Geoff was interested in leaving Reuters and helping us set that up. - In the weeks and the months prior, we'd obviously been talking with him, and Henry in particular, just sorting out the structure of the proposed company over in the states. - But he'd actually come to England at the end of August, the August bank holiday time. - Did his usual thing, rushing around the country, seeing family, friends. - Well, we worked in a very small, niche industry of specialists and there is a whole ecosystem of industry press and industry conferences. And there was one coming up on September the 11th that was going to be at the World Trade Center. So it ended up being that Nick and Geoff would go to the conference and I ended up staying in London. Meanwhile, Matt was on holiday in Lanzarote. - I'm on the beach obviously with my mum and my wife and two kids. They were probably six months, 18 months at the time so you're doing stuff like you do, playing in the sand building sand castles and just enjoying that time. - Around lunchtime or just after I'd been exchanging emails with Geoff about, you know, who he needs to meet at the conference and stuff like that. And I recall getting an email from him where he literally said, okay, Henry, I've got to go. I'm going to be late for the conference. That may have been the last email he ever sent. - So I was at work and just on the computer, on the internet, and then we started hearing about what was going on at the World Trade Center. - Phoebe, who was only six months old, was just struggling to settle. All my kids have loved just being pushed around in pushchairs and buggies. Gets them to sleep most of the time, so you do what any parent did and Mel took her off the beach time and was just basically walking up and down. You know, please sleep. - My understanding is that she saw the televisions there which suddenly would show the Towers and what was going on. One had been hit. (indistinct ratter chatter) I think she may have come back and called Matthew, Matthew went up and I was on the beach, and then eventually Matthew said basically what has happened. - Immediately I wasn't that concerned. I mean, I knew Geoff worked for Reuters up in Time Square. You're well away from the World Trade. - Not long after it was basically I think someone in the office told me, I think it was Henry who told me that basically Geoff might have attended the meeting. - I remember calling Henry from this public payphone. - There I am seeing what's happening on TV. I'd seen this email from Geoff saying, Henry, I got to go. I'm going to be late for the conference, which was at the right time for him to have got the subway downtown from his apartment and get to the conference. I didn't know what to say to Matt. I just... I just mumbled something. I'm not sure what I said, but I didn't tell him that, hey, I know your brother's in the building. I couldn't. I mean, what would you say? - Got through to Rob and he just, I remember him almost blurting out Geoff's in the Tower, and I remember just dropping the phone. He'd spoken to Caroline and you know, it became very clear that Geoff had headed down to the conference and was at the top of the North Tower, which obviously by this time had collapsed. - [Man] Two came down and one just came down now, on firefighters and cops. Really bad, you're gonna have thousands dead. - I remember mom just agasp. I mean, she just, she knew, I mean, she's always said that she felt. - He died. I just... I just had that feeling that he was no more. - So that was the day where the American guy was dissolved into tears in our office. And my diary entry simply says at the end of the day, WTC tragedy, as straight laced as that. Later in the day, it started becoming clear. A few people who were due to be going to the conference were okay and found and known to be okay, but an awful lot of people were not simply not being heard from. And Nick responds saying, "Nothing we can do I'm afraid. People here can't even find out if husbands and wives were okay." - I had no idea, I mean, obviously it's going. But I had no idea. - You haven't those ones at all. You saw the Geoff email, right? - Yeah, yeah, I was copied on that, but I didn't see until, you know, a couple of days later. And I remember I used to mock you for keeping your diary, Henry. Your sort hourly blow by blow account of working. (chuckles) (Matt inhales) (clears throat) - I don't remember exactly how long, but Matt continued to work for the company for a while, but the pressure and the stress and a number of other factors meant that he just took a leave of absence that got formalized sometime later as, okay, Matt's left and he's not coming back to the company. I kept in touch with Matt and we would talk about stuff and share views about things. And I think he started looking into what had happened with a bit more interest, weeding through all of the mad, crazy theories put around on the internet. - You know, you get taught in the movies and stuff that it's been a crime, it's going to be investigated, you're going to go to court and you're going to get truth and justice, potentially someone held accountable for it. We've never had that with 9/11. There has been no examination of the events of that day in court. We have the 9/11 commission report as the investigation, but nothing to that legal standard that we all know. Whether you trust it or not, it's what normally happens. - Matt is a very interesting man. It's going to haunt him if he hasn't moved on, I can't see that he's ever going to let this go. - [Matt] Hey. - [Ian] Matt, how are you? How you feeling? - Ian, how are you doing, mate? You good? - Yeah, not too bad. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So what's new since we saw each other last? - Apart from my hair? - Your hair, yeah. I wasn't going to say anything about that, Matt. - Well you haven't got any, so. (laughing) I see you're wearing a- - 9/11... Well it's the 20th anniversary coming up, isn't it, so. I did maths at university. University was slightly unusual. I did maths and then I did applied social studies masters. You know, it was sort of ideal, really, to make somebody suspicious about 9/11, because the maths told me that there was something terribly wrong with the energy equation, what we'd call the energy equation of the Towers. I also have my social science background, so I knew how easy it is to brainwash people basically. So people wrote in after our ad in The Guardian saying, oh, you know, we don't agree with this. And I wrote a letter back and normally you wouldn't expect, they'd just bin it. They think well we've got his money, we'll bin it. But actually they ran it. Journalism, you know, if you're antiestablishment or suspicious of the establishment, journalism, it's very, very hard to make a living. And I figured out that freshly roasted coffee should work well. We started off with just a homemade coffee roasting machine on the street corner and then, you know, it's got bigger and I'm now I'm approaching retirement, actually. So if you know anybody out there who wants to buy a coffee shop in Notting Hill, you know. - Who is this? This is... The full size? - That was the full page. It would have been bigger than that. - I was going to say, yeah, because was a tabloid then or was is still a broad sheet? - In those days it was still a broadsheet. - Broadsheet, yeah. - Yeah. - But when we met- - Yeah, when we first. I remember it clearly, Matt. - No, I've got a hazy memory, 'cause I thought it was that very first Reinvestigate 9/11 meeting in about May 2013 or April 2013. - I mean, one of the most important things that happened to the 9/11 Truth Movement was that Matt Campbell turned up. - Go back a bit in 2004, because we as a family had brought back repatriated remains, through English law, you have to have an inquest. And I just started to think, a little light bulb moment, if I repatriated Geoff's remains, would that force a new inquest? - That's exactly what politicians have been saying to us. Can you find a victim? And then you showed up, you know and I thought... This is fantastic, you know? We finally cracked it. - Ian had some contacts. We ended up arranging a meeting with Michael Meacham. He was a labor MP, not my MP, but he'd been a longterm skeptic, very cynical about what the US government had been up to and other issues with the narrative. - And when we had a private meeting with him, he basically said, this just destroys my reputation when I do this. - Very supportive. I mean he basically said whatever I need to do to help you get your brother's inquest reopened, you know, get in contact. And he basically, you know, said use the remains. It's a big part. So we had a death certificate issued towards the end of October. And then around December, I remember both the press, but also the police liaison officers, telling us that we were very, very unlikely to get any remains of Geoff because bodies had been vaporized. Which is, you know, in hindsight, it's a really strange term to use. It was actually from the chief medical examiner. - There's literally no trace. A significant number of people. It's utterly, utterly horrifying. - Obviously plenty bodies had been found, but I think due to the degree of fragmentation and all the rest of it, and obviously what they knew they had. I think it was a day before mom's birthday in June and I think she got a call from, you know, our police liaison officer. Some of his remains had been identified. And the, the piece in question was a piece of Geoff's collarbone. - And I thought Geoff is having a laugh on us. When he was six months, we went on motor rail, long story, but it jerked and he was thrown on the ground at six months old. He had a green fracture. All right, don't forget my broken collarbone when I was six months old. - But you know, it went from an undertaker in the States, it then got delivered to an undertaker in the UK and then it was released to us. It was in a little casket. I didn't want to do with it and so for quite a few years, it just sat outside my office on the top floor of my house. In 2004, mom got another call from the police, and this time three of his remains had been identified. They were small bone fragments. I remember one was from his thigh bone, but they were small. And so we now we had four. - Another lot came over and that actually was his scalp. - A bit of his scalp, a bit of his face, a bit of his jaw, his ear, just, you know, recognizable. - It wasn't burnt because my fear was that, you know, to be in the flames... We were told by the police liaison that there was good chance that he could just be vaporized or whatever the term is when there's just ash. - [Woman] It's in the World Trade Center, sir, on the 106th floor. There is no injuries, but the people are trapped. They don't have air. - We got it. - So the very first inquest was here at the West London Coroner's Court. And anyway, out of the 67 British victims, 10 had actually been identified. They basically created 10 different inquests, but it's like a joint inquest or inquiry that they held. Only two of the 10 victims were represented by family members. At the time, I didn't know that all of attending inquests were done in an hour and 45. I've listened to the audio, I've got the actual transcripts, the official transcript. And they spent probably no more than about three or four minutes talking about my brother's life and what was found. And it seemed incredibly short that, you know, that's his moment of an inquiry and justice into the events surrounding his death. After the inquest, a couple of weeks later, I think mom just got a formal letter, which is, you know, it's basically the conclusion that the coroner drew. The impact into the North Tower of American Airlines 11 caused the subsequent collapse of the building and that's how my brother died. - The inquests were held at a time when all the families would still have been in the stunned disbelief inability to accept all the different psychological states that you're in, so it's like, yeah, get this done, sweep it under the carpet, close that chapter and move on. - Eight years ago, my brother had an inquest here and you know, I didn't attend. And it's kind of weird standing outside the building now that possibly, hopefully, within two years, I'm actually going to be inside that building attending his reopened request. So if all things are considered, it's not political, it's not anything else. It's just purely looking at the evidence and the new evidence and the lack of inquiry into that evidence. - So much new information has come to light since the inquest, not withstanding Geoff's own remains, which weren't available, and witness testimony about what happened on 9/11 . - Yes, I would like that to be submitted and the attorney general to make a decision on that and I think really with all the information that we have, I think it should go through. - We've got way over what's required to basically get the authority granted by the attorney general. - I'm sure Matt might have more faith in British justice, but I'm afraid I'm pretty cynical. - But if you don't try, you don't succeed. - So I'd say an awful lot is down to the luck of the draw as to whether Matt goes before an individual who cares about the facts. You know, there's absolutely no reason in law why Matt shouldn't win. - My name is Drew DePalma and I'm the director of operations for an engineering firm in New Jersey. My mom Jean Caviasco-DePalma, was killed in 9/11 and she was in the World Trade Center Tower One. "I write this letter to support the application of the Campbell family and briefly to explain why I believe that further investigation into the cause of the collapse of World Trade Center One is not only worthwhile but necessary because the ruling that the towers collapsed due to fire makes them the first and only skyscrapers in the world to do so by that cause. The first and only of anything deserves extreme scrutiny, especially given the cloud of doubt surrounding all the events that transpired before, during, and after that 9/11 day." (gentle, emotional music) We're at the 9/11 Memorial. This is the town I live in. I didn't live here when my mom passed, but it's a nice remembrance and I'm glad my town has this for all the people that were affected in this town. I've been part of the town's parks committee for about a year now, and we actually just ran a fundraiser to help raise some funds to upgrade the playground equipment. There's a balance beam there now that kind of stretches the playground. You know, you see benches all around the park, pretty much everywhere. That's what most people donate. But I think we have enough benches. I want something, you know, kids can enjoy, - So Drew doesn't really talk about his mother as much as I'd hope. We met in '04 and he told me a little bit about everything, but we only really talk about it on the anniversary. But this is something that he has been involved in in the last two or three years and I feel like this is closure and almost a catharsis for him. - I started going down the rabbit hole, doing a bunch of research. I was fine, I got a little angry for a little bit at a time, but now I'm pretty much at peace with everything. - Drew has, as you know, lost his mother before he was fully grown. He's an example of someone who's been able to weather the loss at a very inconvenient time that was too soon and somehow managed to make himself an adult and a father and a husband. - This picture was taken in Miami, Florida. It was Jean's 40th birthday weekend. It was a lot of fun. It was something that we always planned to do when Jean turned 40 and we actually did it. So my husband calligraphed this for me. It is actually something that Jean sent, an email. She didn't write it, but it was an email that she sent, she found, called From Me to You to several people minutes before the towers were struck. She was trying to get her life together and this was maybe something that she was reading periodically to help her, you know, reevaluate her life and... - Divorce was a pretty rough time for my mom. It hit her really hard. Just emotionally and physically. But I felt at that point, at 9/11, she was actually in good physical health. She started working out more. I guess we have big life changes, you go one way or the other. She was exercising more. She loved biking. So she was by bicycle riding. She was losing weight. She was definitely happier, for sure. So that's kind of a bright side that, you know. I always hope when I go, you know, it's at a peak of happiness, as opposed to the latter. We got chickens in this past year. They provide us with breakfast every morning. The kids love handling them. Some chickens are more social than others. Probably... Oh, no. So I couldn't be happier here. They definitely have different personalities, though. Chickens aren't as dumb as you would think. They actually understand, up to like 20 words or something, I read. I don't know if that's true or not, but... I like animals. - So Jean's name is right here. - She worked in the city. She was usually out of the house before I even woke up because I drove myself to school at that point. And then she didn't get home usually until late and when she came home, I was out with my friends and then we saw each other for dinner and then I'd be out until whenever. She was probably asleep by the time I got home. Being a kid, you want to be out doing stuff, and like I said, she was commuting to the city every day. - You know, I had not seen this memorial before and I was surprised how immense it is and exactly from what I read points right to where the Towers stood. - [Man 1] We got a plane crashed into the World Trade Center. Are you aware of that? - [Man 2] The World Trade Center in Manhattan? - [Man 1] World Trade Center in Manhattan. - Just another normal work day. Drop Marissa off at my parents' house and got to work. I don't remember the exact time, but my principal came knocking on my door and took me into the hallway and said that my mother had called and... (sighs) Wanted me to go to her house. - So I was walking through the halls and there's just a lot of commotion going on. I had no idea what was happening and then they called, I guess like a meeting for the whole school into the gym, and they kind of explained what happened. - The principal explained that planes flew into the buildings that she had worked in. (indistinct radio chatter) - My mom works there. So it's just like everyone else that day. If anyone knew anyone that worked there or around there, they were on the phone. - And so I kind of went into numb mode, I call it. You know, I just like, didn't have any feelings. And she asked if someone should drive me home and I said, no, no, I'll go. And I drove home just totally focused. And when I got there, you know, you just keep seeing those same pictures. That's all that we had at the time was those pictures of the planes flying into those buildings. - And we just, we went home and I wasn't a smoker back then, but that day I sure as heck had a cigarette. (laughs) - I called their high school and they had already left. (water sploshing) I have not been up there. I've only been to the memorial inside and I've been to the waterfalls, but I have not been up into the tower. You know, 'cause after 20 years, you come to a place in your mind where you're, you know, not necessarily at peace, but you've kind, of me personally, I've kind of put it in itS little pocket, you know? And then every once in a while something happens or, you know, someone says something and it kind of brings you back to a little bit of that place where you don't always want to be. The next day, though, my two brothers and my sister went into the city. I stayed home with my parents and Marissa and they took pictures of Jean, and, you know, people were just trying to find people that could find their loved. - Nothing was ever found of my mother, so, had nothing to go on as far as physical evidence for her, personally. And I was probably the most optimistic person in my family. I was like, you know, she's gonna come out of it. We'll find her eventually. Even weeks after that and even years after I was like, you know, who knows, maybe she was in a coma or she wandered off somewhere. I think with a weekend, my uncle, who is her brother, pretty much, you know, he analyzed where she worked, where her office was. - She was on the hundredth floor, and there was no way that she could have... - He just didn't want me hold up false hope. You know, pretty much gave it to me straight. It's like, you know, the chances of her making it out were pretty slim, so that was pretty disappointing to say the least. He could have let me hold on to some hope. (laughs) But no, I always like people to give it to me straight. I like to do that for other people, so I expect the same in return. - I mean, I have to say when I'm with my niece and nephew, Drew and Jamie, Jean's kids, it's a comfort, you know? She's there. I mean, she's everywhere, but she's there, with those kids. I went to the 10 year memorial when it was 10 years ago. Didn't really do anything for me as far as helping me... Grieve because I've already, you know, done that. So I don't need to go to any physical space to look at that horror again and again and again. You know, I kind of just deal in my own way by myself or with my family or whatever it happens to be. But yeah, I'm not interested in doing those things. The 10th anniversary was enough. It's just amazing to me that that, and I know that's the whole crux of this whole thing. Like, how does that just, you know... How do those buildings perfectly fall? You know... - So yeah, it just strikes me as odd that three buildings within a couple hours of each other all fell down. So it seems like something else was going on. - And Drew is a man on a mission right now. He wants all the answers. - And there was a lot of stuff that didn't get analyzed correctly, in my opinion. I mean, if they had done their job, I probably wouldn't be here now. You know shooting this documentary and trying to help get a new investigation. - I think we owe, as a country, we owe it to the poor people that have passed away and their families and the world to find out what really happened here because it's not just, you know, planes hit, book closed kind of thing. - From the time I was a little kid, I was building things and I was always trying to build something My mother used to say, if it can be taken apart, Bill will take it apart 'cause that's what he does. He wants to know how things work. (laughs) And I pulled a lot of things apart. My name is Bill Brinnier and I am a architect. I've been an architect since 1984, but I've done architecture all my life. You know, I grew up right around here and here, in this house and I must've built 20 forts in the woods. And the last one I built, I think I was 15 years old. It was framed properly. It was completely wired for electricity. I used (laughs) I used barbed wire to run electricity from the house up to to my tree house, which was 100 yards up in the woods. I applied to Pratt and I got in. That January, I moved down to New York and went to Pratt. And it was interesting because when I got there, the World Trade Center was under construction. And from my dorm out in Brooklyn, you could see the Two Towers coming up. The World Trade Center buildings, each building was compared, somebody from the New York Times I think said the World Trade Center looks like the box that the Empire State Building came in (laughs), but it was fascinating and they were always lit up, even at night and there was cranes on top and there was such activity. So it was fun. You know, we got to watch that go up. Little did we know what was waiting for us in the future. - What's striking about Bill is that even though he lost his best friend and went through some tough times, he was fortunate enough to be able to pull out of it. Not everybody does. - You know, I met Frank. I met Frank de Martini at Pratt. He was one of the first guys I met. For some reason, I just fell in with him and the two of us really, really hit it off. We were popular in the community. Lots of people knew us and work just came out of the sky. You know, we had lived through the bombing of 1993, which was actually Frank's entry into the whole realm of the World Trade Center. Frank kind of walked me through what that damage was and how robust the structure of the building was. There were redundancies beyond belief. He was a big fan of the History Channel and he said why hasn't there been a history of the World Trade Center on the History Channel? That's gotta be something. So he, I can't remember the woman's name, but he contacted this woman and they worked and worked and worked and they finally produced it. - [Frank] The building probably could sustain multiple impacts of jetliners because this structure is like the mosquito netting on your screen door. And the jet plane is just a pencil puncturing that screen netting. - Wow. Good to hear his voice. When he made that statement, he was working for Leslie E. Robertson, one of the designers, one of the structural engineers who designed that structure. He had, believe me, Frank was as bad as me when came to understanding how things work. So, you know, I know he had many conversations with Leslie about how the building went together. You know, how it was designed to withstand all manner of loads, of dynamic loads. That's what they call a plane hitting the building, or a wind hitting the building. (children shouting) - [Tara] My kids were asking me about 9/11 and it's really hard to talk about it and explain it. And I was curious to what they'd pick up on, you know, and is it a scary thing? - I can't believe it's almost 20 years. - I can't either. - It seems like yesterday. I was not in a good place in my life. I had spent some time with Frank and that was the good part. I had lost my job and my marriage was not in a good place. You know, I just things were... I was down and out. There was some excitement in my life, and I was nervous because Frank and I were about to go into business together. And it was funny because Frank, for the longest time, had tried to get me to help him get out of the World Trade Center. (laughs) You know, my day to day life was, was going down to this high rise in in Long Branch, New Jersey and working on an apartment. And, you know, Frank was going to work at the Trade Center. You know, I was an early riser and I got up at six o'clock. It was about a hour and a half, hour and 45 minute drive, and as I came around the corner, off of route 80 and onto I-95, that's where the World Trade Center comes into view and the North Tower looked like a chimney. So I dialed up Frank and it went to voicemail and I dialed him again and it went to voicemail. It just kept, I couldn't get him. - We were supposed to have dinner with Frank. - I remember. - The three of us. - Yeah. - We ere supposed to have dinner. - Our father-daughter dinner was going to be our father-daughter-uncle dinner. (laughs) I panicked. I just continued south and went to Long Branch, went to the job. When they told me that the South tower had collapsed, I was shocked. I was like, that's impossible. - [Man 1] Yeah. - [Man 2] Get ready for the big one. - [Man 1] The tower just collapsed. - [Woman] The whole thing collapsed? - [Man 3] Yeah, it's collapsed. - [Woman] What do you mean the whole thing just collapsed? - [Man 3] It collapsed, I'm watching it live. - I didn't know what to think of it. I really didn't. You know, we all went in, everybody went into shock. It was just the most bizarre... I mean, it was, it was like an out-of-body experience. I was just consumed with worry about Frank, you know? And I didn't even think about Nicole. (phone dialing) - [Nicole] Hello, you've reach Nicole de Martini. Please leave a message. - Hi, Nicole. It's Bill. Hey, listen, I'm up in Fort Greene Park trying to find Frank's bench and his trees, and there's a bench nearby, but it's dedicated to people who passed away from COVID-19. Thanks, Nicole. And he used to live right up the street at 11-A, South Elliot Place. But we planted trees just like these. They were just like these, you know, because there was nothing left of the people that perished, you know? I think Bobby McIlvaine, at least they got his body. You know, he was one of the very few. Most people just disappeared. From the Prison Ship Martyr's Monument, when you stand at the base of the monument, you can look out- (phone ringing) There she is. Hi, Nicole. - [Nicole] Hi, Bill. How are you? - I'm good. How are you? - [Nicole] We didn't put in a bench. They didn't allow us. They were very strict. They were like, you can't put in a bench. - Do you remember exactly when that was that we did that planting for Frank's memorial? - [Nicole] Maybe 2003. - That's what I'm thinking, the spring of '03. - [Nicole] Big pine trees that are right next to the tennis court. - [Bill] Across the walk? - [Nicole] Yeah. - [Bill] Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I see them now. - Yeah. - [Bill] And they've planted some new, smaller ones now that have fences around them. - Yes, exactly, yes. Yes, so there are a few more that were planted later. Right after that, but they really take good care of them. - Yeah. This is for Frank, too. Wow. - [Nicole] Yeah, the crab apples were for Frank, too, but- - [Bill] It's got some fruit on it. - [Nicole] Say hi to Shelly. - I will. Well, we're here, and this is it. This crab apple is hers... Or his. That pine is his. And that spruce was one of them. I mean, it's not everybody that can say they got trees planted in one in New York City's most famous parks in their honor. The guy that Nina was trying to convince at the parks department was very strict. He said Frederick Law Olmsted never designed the park to have benches all over the place (laughs) and that doesn't make sense to me. But anyway, it was the excuse that was given. It's almost like the excuses that were given to, um, to us as to what happened to those Towers. Just excuses. I didn't really start to think about the mechanics. You know, here I am, the guy that likes to know how things work. I didn't really start to think about that for five years. Straight ahead. I'll never set foot in that Freedom Tower. That's not my cup of tea. I call it the blood building. (chuckles) A lot of people died to put that there. Unnecessarily. But I took my books, I took my toys, I took my tools, I took my grandfather clock and I took my car and I left. You know, I came up here. I put everything in storage and I moved into this little cottage here and didn't know what to do. I didn't know what to do. And this is where, in this cottage, is where I found architects and engineers for 9/11 Truth. And I look at it as this is what I do for Frank. This is what, not just for me. I mean, it's a lot for me and Frank is gone and nothing's going to bring him back. He's history. You know, when those explosives tore that building apart, it tore the people apart, too. So the saving grace is that Frank didn't feel a thing. You know, he just disappeared. - Because so many people didn't get bodies, nothing. And we actually got a full, not a full body, but we got a body to take home and bury. And we, you know, we're so grateful for that. Hundreds of parts they would get from the body. And they just said I don't want it anymore. We can't take this anymore. They would get, you know, every week they get a call, we found, you know, an elbow, we found a thumb or something. And we have a relatively sound body that we got to take home, and that, you know went home and buried him in a week. So it was Tuesday, a week after 9/11 we buried him, or it might have been sometime that week. Our dogs are buried out there so I go to Bobby, put the flowers out there and that's, I've been doing that for 20 years now. Oh good, they just cut the place. - [Helen] They what? They, yeah. I can tell, really. - Can you just move that? - Hey, Bobby. - [Bob] Look at that. They cleaned it up for us around the edges. - [Helen] Yeah. Usually they leave the grass there. He'd love the yellow and purple flowers. - [Bob] Yeah. All right, I'm going to go up and clean the bench, all right? - I'm just going to sit. - Not while I'm cleaning it. That's silly. - Yes, I'm going to sit and just think about Bobby. Clean away. - Just get this stuff out. - [Helen] Where are those stones from? - [Bob] Well mostly from Ground Zero and Japan, but I've added stones. - [Helen] I know this didn't come from Japan. We would've never been able to carry it. - We did two stone walks. I think we did, no, maybe three stone walks. One in Korea, Nagasaki to Hiroshima. We pushed a 2000 pound stone and on the way, where it's talking about anti-war, that 9/11 were not, we think war is the wrong decision. The monks, the Buddhist monks, pushed with us. And we're talking days at a time. I mean, talking about how friendly you can get after days. I mean, if I was a religious person, I would become a monk tomorrow. All right. - [Helen] Now, can we sit for a minute? - Yeah, you can sit. - You're gonna stand? - No. Okay, we did it, Bobaloo. - It looks beautiful. Look at the flowers. It's like yesterday or a thousand miles back, a thousand years back. - Seems like a thousand years. - Yeah. Sometimes it feels like yesterday afternoon. - What is not considered often is the other victims of 9/11, like the 30,000 soldiers that were involved in the war since 9/11 who have killed themselves, the 7,000 that have died, and all the people that are handicapped and disabled, as well as all the first responders that are getting sick and dying. - [Jon] That's America's world. - [Bob] Well that's the answer. - Well America has got to change. America has got to grow up. The people of America have got to grow up. They've got to get out of this they would never mentality. You know, if they would never, then, you know, they would never lie about the environmental impact of 9/11 causing upwards of 70,000 9/11 first responders to become sick and dying. This government is more than capable of anything. Anything. - That's why I've gone in the history. History is so important to me because we've been doing this bullshit forever. - And you know, we're saying that we're leaving Afghanistan, but how many mercenaries, how many thousands are we still leaving there? You know, it's disgusting. - And we've been dealing with these, we've dealt with Bin Laden fro 20 years and then suddenly he becomes, in '98 becomes the boogeyman, the bad guy. The people that were in Iran-Contra, Lee Hamilton, in '92, '93 had hearings on it and he dismissed everything. It got it off the books. And guess what? Who's leading the 9/11 Commission? Lee Hamilton. So if you put all these together, you know, it's bad news. It really is bad news and it's a horrible, horrible cover up. - That was presented to the world as the definitive account of 9/11 . First of all, they only answered 30% of the family's well-researched questions. - There's so many things- - Of course. - By choice, by design, and that keeps us discussing back and forth, back and forth. - Exactly. Which is why I can't say definitively that I know what happened on 9/11. I couldn't tell you one way or the other what happened to those buildings. That is where the majority of the people were murdered that day. There are family members that still question how those buildings came down and as long as it's an important question to them, it will always be an important question to me. - And I spent so much time talking about how he died and the thing is I'm sick of getting emotional. Okay, I really am. And I, you know, I really want to talk about who helped kill Bobby. We have enough for Jack? - Yeah. I guess I could grab a Gerber Daisy out of there. Okay, let's go. - All right? - Yeah - All right. All right, Bobaloo. Love you. See you next week. We went to a psychologist immediately. He said, but look at it this way, just put a silver dollar or a half dollar in front of your eye like this. Okay? And he says, you know, that's right there. It's in your face and it's going to stay in your face. But eventually it just starts moving away. And as that moves away, then you can see over here, you can see over here, but it's still there, but eventually it moves further out. Then you can see this way, you can see this way, but it's still there. And eventually it keeps moving out, and it's the truth. You know, we can laugh now, we have fun things, but it's always there. - [Man] Gotta respond to West Street because we've got some very burned bad, badly burned victims in building one, the lobby. - [Woman] At West Street? - Yeah, West Street side. - Okay. - [Man] All right, thank you. - Hopefully we just sort of drop out because I don't want to sit and argue with people. I just think it speaks for itself. You know, obviously we know he's dead, right? So, you know, I have this. So a doctor confirming and not confirming it, you know, it doesn't mean anything to me. You know, a medical professional, say you're a medical professional. I come up to you and say, this is 9/11. He's probably scared to death to say one thing or another. (ominous music) - Cyril H. Wecht. I am a forensic pathologist and a medical legal consultant. I was the coroner of Allegheny County, Pittsburgh and 129 surrounding municipalities for 20 years, two separate 10 year periods. Since 1957, I would estimate I have performed about 21,000 autopsies. I have reviewed, signed off or supervised on about 41,000 other autopsies. When I was asked to review the Warren Commission report, it was in August of that year that I pointed out that the president's brain was missing. Others knew about it, but no one had said a word. And so, anyway, so these are the things that I do, all of these consultations and these autopsies and then occasionally, you know, the major national controversial case. (mumbling) Abrasions. Oh, much of the face is marked here as missing. They blocked everything, expect the lower face, is blocked off. Unfortunately they don't describe the remaining portion of the skull to permit me to determine whether it looked like that which is missing had blown off as opposed to having been crushed. Most of head. Yeah, I'm right. Absent, most of head. So what is it that the father wants to know? Okay. And the body was found when? - [Man] He was found shortly after the North Tower was struck. - [Woman] And he was in front of, near the lobby. Like entering the lobby. - Well then it had to be from some kind of an explosive effect. - Normally the way it works is if you have a family member that's murdered, you call the police and the police do an investigation and you trust the authorities to be thorough, to care and to want to get to the truth. And you don't have to go petition. It's not the proper role a citizen should have to take is to force the government to do an investigation, but apparently that is what's required. - [Bob] All right. It's another day. - Here, come. We're at Point Mountain Reserve. Every 9/11, I go for a hike to remember my mom. It's better for me, you know, instead of going to a church or memorial. You know, I just like to be by myself, you know, with the ones that I love and that's how I deal with things. I've been to the site a number of times but I've never been to the museum. My sister invited me. I really have no want or need to go there. I find it probably mostly depressing. She confirmed my suspicions. She said it was great to do once, but probably would never do it again. 20 years is really just a number. I know for most people who don't deal with it every day, you know, 20 years is a big deal. But same thing year in, year out for me. Having kids and not having my mom here has been pretty tough. I just really wish my kids had a chance to meet her. And there's not many people I feel that are willing to do what I'm doing right now just to kind of keep the victim's memories alive as well as, you know, hopefully get down to the bottom of the things. I think we need more sense of community in this country and I think 9/11 did that for a little bit and then tapered off. So as long as people start to think for themselves and just, you know, hold the ones dear to them close and just have fun and don't take themselves so seriously, I think the world would be a better place. - We need to get some flowers in London. - I've got them, yeah. - Have you got them with you? - Everything ready, yes. - In that little bag? - [Maureen] Yes. (Maureen and Matt chattering) - [Matt] You know, we take his random thought. - [Maureen] Yes. - [Matt] We call it 9/11. - Yeah. - But you know, that's weird. - I know, and in fact- - [Matt] But would you ever call it 11/9? It just... - [Maureen] No, no. - Does it have a significance 20 years? I mean, it's just one of those things, it's like, so different to any anniversary. It's kind of, you know. - Yes, of course. - And for anything, it could be a wedding anniversary. It could be, you know, it's a strange thing to give. Why does the 19th anniversary have any less importance than than the 20th to nothing? Uh, where's the queue? Oh, there is no queue. But it's not a grave or anything. - [Maureen] No, but I wanted to say that after coming for 15 years I stopped coming because... - Why did you stop coming? - Because. When I stopped going after, I suppose about 15 years because I felt it difficult because so many people have not had their loved ones identified and we've had a number of things come over. - I remember the flurry of emails and letters that were going around when this was being proposed and designed. - Every year, September 11th, for the first 15 years, I used to come. You had to arrange in advance whether you wanted to read out a family member, but you sometimes have to read a couple of other people depending on how many came. And that's really lovely. - [Matt] Can you read that, mom? - "Time is too slow for those who wait." I'd like to lay our roses here if we could, yes? Okay. - Put one down from Robin, and then I'll do dad's and ours, yeah? Yeah. - I can't quite reach it. Can you, Matthew? - Oh, here. - "Always I'll be in your heart. Don't forget my soul is near you and so we'll never be apart." And this is from your friends at Risk Waters, which is rather poignant. That's very worse on that fateful day. Keep that on my sideboard next to Geoff's picture. Where is it there's supposed to be a remnant of... Is it the metal? It's the metal, isn't it? - Yeah, no. So the Memorial stone is carved by hand and includes an extract from the American poet, Henry Van Dyke, underneath it preserved in resin lies a section of the steel girder salvaged from the World Trade Center. - Salvaged, yes I knew it was. I thought it would be in that top part there. - Pick it up and test it for explosive residues. All right, mom, should we head out? - I think so. - Yeah? - I'll go get my bag. - [Matt] Oh, it's in the walk about. - With me, I mean, obviously I grieve my Geoff, but I felt well, Geoff wouldn't want to see me in the corner crying all the time. Yes, I just thought, well, I want Geoff to see that I am going on with life and I am continued to be the happy person I always was, a nan, you know, so that's what helped me through. I know Matthew and Robert had a lot, a lot, a lot of struggles, but that's the way it is. We're several individuals and we deal with things differently. - When it takes decades to get some semblance of justice, it's always through the never-ending fights that it just seems so wrong that family members have to pursue in order to get some sort of justice. One of the things that I've always personally found to be quite striking is the degree of fragmentation of the remains. - The title of this report is "Human identification following the World Trade Center disaster: assessing management practices for highly fragmented and commingled human remains." - So out of the 2,600 odd who died at the World Trade Center, you know, there's 22,000 fragments. - Medical examiner personnel were initially caught off guard by the degree of destruction and fragmentation of the recovered human remains. - 5,00 of those 22,000 fragments are smaller than an inch. It's 1100 and something people have not been identified. That's a huge, you can't even fathom Geoff's remains, no more than two, three-percent of his body, it's actually the last remain identified in May 2013. This fragment that's still in New York was actually given a location. It's just south of the North Tower. It's between 18 and 41 meters away from the South Tower. Okay, it's not the kind of two or 300 meters distance that some remains were found. There's a horrendous map that I think the fire brigade prepared and they, you know, they'd tag whether it's a civilian, firefighter, et cetera, but there is one that just tags human remains and it's awful. You've got the two footprints of the Towers and there's just this huge spread of remains that were once people. Okay, well we know the steel beams were propelled out with huge forces, but the actual physical stuff that I care about, people and my brother, were ejected outside of the footprints. And it's just, it's so unpleasant thinking about it, but I've since read a lot that has been published about the search to try and identify people is this concept of commingling. - The explosive force that blew over firetrucks and peeled stone facades from buildings also disintegrated human bodies, turning bones into flying shrapnel. The tidal wave of debris that carried human remains blocks away, depositing them, in some cases on top of buildings, also fused soft tissue into bone fragments. - And that basically means the impact of the force of the explosion, you know, not just the pancake collapse, whatever, has actually mingled remains into my brother. And so the only explanation she could give me was they couldn't get a clear single DNA match in those remains so I just got this horrible vision of other people's remains being removed from my brother's face. It was just, yeah. - That's not going to happen from crushing. A building collapses and two or more people are crushed. I can't envision a situation in which the soft tissue of one victim is hurled with such force as to become embedded into, attached to a bony fragment of another victim. I can't envision that. - And one of the things I've always pondered about is, you know, okay, there's all massive degree of fragmentation. Some people, nothing found at all, but you also had fairly large parts of people being found. I mean, there was one guy at the inquest, same floor as my brother, 86% of his body was found. I am not going to say it was, but you know, he was one of the, in fact, two family members that actually bothered attending. I mean, there you go. But he's just there going, I don't, I don't understand why, because everyone kept being read out, you know, small fragments, all this two percent, and he's sitting there going how? And then for me, you know, the unpleasant conclusion I've drawn is his proximity to explosives so if you were very close to the explosives, there's not a lot left of you. That's something I've always thought about, but that's quite a dark topic to kind of touch on or thought to have, even. - This is a strange situation. I hope that the architects and engineers and others who have studied this horrible tragedy and who have expressed their opinions will be given the opportunity to testify in public. I hope that happens and I'm amazed that it has not yet happened. - I've been holding a vision in my head of standing outside this building after successfully getting the authority from the attorney general. It's that it's not the coroner's court, but it's that important step after the attorney general. You know, exciting is the wrong word, but it's like, you know, we're actually at this point right now where I know that, you know, myself and mom and hopefully dad and Rob will be going up to London and actually submitting this to the attorney general. (gentle music) - Do you want to wear your hat now, love? - No. - You do. (laughing) - [Robert] Are you going to wear a hat? - [Matt] Only for the photo. - [Robert] You want me to sit, or are you sitting there, mom? - Let's assume that the attorney general grants his authority. An order will go to the high court to quash the provincial inquest and to open a new one. The high court typically sides with what the attorney general has decided. So, you know, we're hopeful that once the attorney general says yes, grants his authority, it should be a formality for the case to be pushed to the West London coroner's court. And I think the question then would be after the courts trial, the court case, how I feel then, and, you know, it's been hard, hard work over a year to get everything together to actually come to this day. A couple of weeks before the 20th anniversary, you know, it's a massive achievement. I went to the Reinvestigate 9/11 meeting that was being held in London and it was the first time I was actually interacting and actually seeing people who, you know, were like me. Didn't believe the official narrative of what we've been told. So, yeah, I mean, 'cause in the early days it was really just me. - Well of course, yes. - I started going slightly insane in the early years, you know. I was still dealing with depression and you know, I basically had a huge eureka. I just felt I was able to actually go public properly and you know, I guess talk about stuff. And I was kind of inspired by the speakers that were at Reinvestigate 9/11 and I thought, well, I can surely do something because I'm a family member and you know I lost someone. I think that all of us together as applicants, it helps the case, I guess, to a certain extent. All right, we want to go to 54 Douty Street. - Douty? - Douty Street. - And Evie Devie, that's Henry. - Hi. Hug, hug? The place is like a ghost town. I mean, it goes all the way back and have a lot of space so if you want to get a meeting room there, I'm sure. - We're waiting for Ian Henshall to turn up. - You know, you can't predict the future, but this could be the moment that changed everything. You know, I'm not 100% optimistic about that, but it could be. If you don't even try, then you've lost to start with, and how much Matt's tried, I mean, this is just like Matt's day today. - Well, today's the culmination of a lot of hard work by a lot of people. Where it goes beyond here, who's to say, we'll find out, I guess, in probably a few months. - In this box, we have just shy of 3000 pages. This is a cover letter to the attorney general. Eye witness statements from first responders who were there when, you know, the three towers collapsed. You know, these first responders who are willing to support our application, but also in court, they're prepared to be cross-examined as witnesses. Yeah, I'm hopeful that we can actually change the verdicts of what caused my brother's death, that it was explosives that ultimately killed him. If the senior coroner, at the Westland coroner's court looks at our application, decides it has enough merit to reopen my brother's inquest, he can sign that consent order and it will speed things up tremendously. And, you know, we could be talking months instead of years to actually get this stuff into court. When I looked at Geoff's remains, you know, for me, I wasn't really looking at my brother. I mean, for me, the physical form, the 3D form of Geoff is gone. That doesn't mean he's not, you know, in the stardust and around us all the time, you know? - Yes, well, this is one of my favorite photos of Geoff. If you can see here that he's got his blue spotty tie and after Geoff had died, we went back to the flat and I asked Caroline I'd love to take something back of Geoff's and I asked if I could have his spotty tie. He called it his lucky tie. I like to think of happy thoughts of Geoff. I know there's a lot of sadness and that, but yes, I like to go forward thinking it could make a difference. He worked in London. I think it was the Abbey National, and it was the time when there were bomb scares going off. And in fact at Barclaycard we had various drills and things like that. And he said to me, do you know, mom, you can just be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Always thought of Maureen and the three boys, and in fact, I've been given a lovely bracelet from Matthew and Mel with the three signs, the three stones from the three boys. And if anyone asked me how many children you've got, I always say three. (film reel rolling) I think you should be proud of all your efforts and Geoff. - Yeah. - I hope so. - I'm sure dad is, too, in his own way. - So I have hope. I think at this stage, it's too premature for me to be thinking too far in the future. You know, the application has been submitted, where it leads after that, I don't know, but I'm just pleased we're here, it's submitted and we'll see what the future brings. My wife's always said she sees me, you know, has visions of me outside the high court and we've, you know, we've got it there. She can't really see further than that, but she just has this vision. She likes me wearing a shirt occasionally, which I've done today. You know, she just she sees me outside the court. You know? Am I going to get a haircut? Um, no, I'm going to keep my hair. It's growing on me. Be fun just to annoy mom, you know. She prefers me wearing a hat these days, but no, I like my hair. It's still that a little bit towards the system and my frustration, but now it's growing on me. I'm going to keep it. - How should I put this? Yeah, of course governments lie. It's their job. But it makes you very cynical about the world. In my view, quite rightly so. - Our country took the wrong tact. They didn't investigate 9/11 thoroughly and I think it's caused us to live in fear of something that we didn't fully understand. - I can't remember who said it. Somebody said, you know, World War III will be fought with the most incredible technology, with the most incredible weapons of war and World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones. And I believe it. - Thomas Merton had a phrase that he coined called the unspeakable. Evil so awful and almost unimaginable that it defied the ability of words to capture it. It's a void that exists even before uttering the unspeakable. Well, the void would be not talking about 9/11. That if we don't deal with it, then we can't correct it. The story can only last so long, however enduring the seams, that lies always need protecting, the truth doesn't. ♪ When the dust settled, the glass and the metal ♪ ♪ Lives devastated, the screams still echo ♪ ♪ Every mind in America engulfed in fear ♪ - Let me start again. Right? God, this is like fucking outtakes. Ridiculous, right? ♪ When the dust settled, the glass and the metal ♪ ♪ Lives devastated, the screams still echo ♪ ♪ Every mind in America engulfed in fear ♪ ♪ Welcome to the Aftermath the Future's here ♪ ♪ It was a September morning when everything changed ♪ ♪ Ashes rained from the towers, Pentagon in flames ♪ ♪ Lives gone in a flash, loved ones and strangers ♪ ♪ The fear of a boogie man, a new world danger ♪ ♪ They sold us safety, lied us into a war ♪ ♪ Spy on your neighbors and lock your door ♪ ♪ It was written, did PNAC have a plan for us ♪ ♪ Liars in the White House, who can you trust ♪ ♪ Evidence gone missing, bones and steel ♪ ♪ Families want answers, the truth will heal ♪ ♪ So much dis-info and outright lies ♪ ♪ Two decades later and we ask why ♪ ♪ Why was tower seven left from the report ♪ ♪ Why despite all the evidence is science ignored ♪ ♪ We insist NIST purposely skewed the facts ♪ ♪ Smelling like of a cover-up, a treasonous act ♪ ♪ Unspeakable ♪ ♪ The lies and deception ♪ ♪ Why are they neglecting ♪ ♪ The Truth is in question ♪ ♪ The lies and deception ♪ ♪ Why are they neglecting ♪ ♪ The Truth is in question ♪ ♪ The lies and deception ♪ ♪ Why are they neglecting ♪ ♪ The Truth is in question ♪ ♪ The lies and deception ♪ ♪ Why are they neglecting ♪ ♪ The Truth is in question ♪ ♪ Unspeakable ♪ - Do you mind us being... You know, quite frankly, emotional. - It's great to feel peaceful. Everyone just wants to feel peaceful, but I can't do it anymore, but I'm able to balance it. I'm angry. I'm always angry. I'm angry at this country. - I just want to try to do the right thing. That's all I would say. ♪ 20 years later do you feel safer ♪ ♪ Old towers gone, new skyscrapers ♪ ♪ Homeland security, The Patriot Act ♪ ♪ Soldiers sent to war some not making it back ♪ ♪ Wasn't bout Bin Laden or keepin' us safe ♪ ♪ Money, power, and oil, leading the chase ♪ ♪ Color-coded warnings keeping us awake ♪ ♪ 24/7 news cycle making us hate ♪ ♪ Became us against them ♪ ♪ Every Muslim suspect as trust runs thin ♪ ♪ NSA spying on us, this just in ♪ ♪ Any freedoms you have, yeah, that must end ♪ ♪ It's the new norm ♪ ♪ Panic on the dance floor, the barrel's still warm ♪ ♪ Terrorist threats streaming loud from the horn ♪ ♪ So stressed out we didn't have time to mourn ♪ ♪ Unspeakable ♪ ♪ The lies and deception ♪ ♪ Why are the neglecting ♪ ♪ The Truth is in question ♪ ♪ The lies and deception ♪ ♪ Why are they neglecting ♪ ♪ The Truth is in question ♪ ♪ The lies and deception ♪ ♪ Why are they neglecting ♪ ♪ The Truth is in question ♪ ♪ The lies and deception ♪ ♪ Why are they neglecting ♪ ♪ The Truth is in question ♪ ♪ Unspeakable ♪ - Never really exposed my feelings publicly like this in this venue, but I'm doing it because... I want to.
Info
Channel: Hipstr
Views: 1,317,777
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: the unspeakable, Bobby McIlvaine, Cyril Wecht, full movie, world trade center, september 11, never forget, documentary, truth, 9/11
Id: 11RwCm_OaGc
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 89min 47sec (5387 seconds)
Published: Mon Nov 01 2021
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