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Kurt Sonnenfeld (right) at 'Ground Zero'
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As a contract employee
for FEMA's Colorado regional branch, 35 year old Kurt Sonnenfeld was dispatched
to videotape and photograph the rescue and recovery effort at ground zero in
the weeks after the 9/11 attacks. There was no restriction on what Sonnenfeld
could film and no documents were signed by him that passed ownership of the
footage to FEMA. According to the TVtechnology website, Sonnenfeld was FEMA’s
Denver-based Region 8 Public
Affairs Officer and he worked the site as one of only four FEMA photographers
along with FEMA's Denver-based Region 8 Deputy Public Affairs
officer Jim Chestnutt.
Sonnenfeld's
accomplishments include:
- Produced and directed videotape and broadcast productions for KDTV-8 Denver,
TCI Cable, KDVR-Denver, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), U.S.
Department of Energy, Army, Air Force, and the National Parks Service
- Footage
has been carried on ABC, CBS, CNN, MSNBC, NBC (including NBC Nightly News),
the Discovery Channel, BBC, and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
- Head
of Broadcast Operations for FEMA's National Emergency Response Advance Team;
set up and oversaw operations of FEMA's Recovery Channel
- Lead Public Affairs
Officer for FEMA on several disasters; interviewed by radio, television,
and print media
- Design and administrate FEMA Region VIII's web site
- Writer and researcher
for World Book Encyclopedia, senior analyst and managing editor for the Ross
Economic Report, editor and writer of Guestinformant Travel Guides, published
author of short fiction
- Literary manager for Chicago's Body Politic Theatre
- Researcher with the
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Higher Education and with the
Colorado Literacy Project
At about 1.40 am
on the morning of January 1st 2002, police officers answered a possible suicide
call from the Sonnenfeld's home in LoDo Colorado. The police were forced to
break a window to enter the house because, according to Sonnenfeld, he couldn't
open the door because he didn't have the keys. "I even helped them in
by moving furniture" Sonnenfeld stated. According to police however, once they
were inside, officers were forced to wrestle
Sonnenfeld to the floor after he became combative.
Police found Sonnenfeld's wife, Nancy Sonnenfeld, on a chaise lounge in an
upstairs bedroom with a bullet wound behind her right ear. She was still alive
but unconscious and breathing heavily. She died six hours later. Dr. Amy Martin
of the Denver coroner's office found numerous bruises on
Nancy Sonnenfeld's body, which she said indicated the woman had been involved
in a struggle. There were bruises under Nancy Sonnenfeld's chin, and on
her left kneecap, right elbow, right foot and both hands. Sonnenfeld asked detectives
to perform tests that would show his wife killed herself. He asked that
Nancy's hands be tested for gunpowder residue, which he said would show
she fired the gun. He also asked that he be given a polygraph test. Tests showed
there was a very small amount of gunpowder residue on Nancy's
right hand, and none on Kurt Sonnenfeld's hands, which were covered with
blood. Also, the only fingerprint found on the gun belonged to Nancy and
was found on the gun's magazine.
Friends and family
attested to a failing marriage and Kurt
Sonnenfeld's drug habit (heroin) as the cause, and police
claimed that they knew that Nancy Sonnenfeld planned to leave her husband because
she had found him using heroin and sleeping with other women during a trip
to Thailand in November 2001. "It's hard to believe," said
Nancy's Sonnenfeld's father, Bill Campbell. "We don't hate Kurt. He was
a wonderful guy and they had a wonderful marriage for 10 years. I know he loved
our Nancy. We knew they were beginning to have problems, but we absolutely
don't know what happened that night." Nancy Sonnenfeld's mother however
said she never believed that her daughter killed herself: "I'm glad I've
had the time to get over all of this because now I can face it," Eleanor
Campbell said. "We loved Kurt. But he was not the
same Kurt we used to know. Denver
police were naturally disinclined to believe that they were dealing with a
case of suicide
and took Sonnenfeld into custody where he remained for several months awaiting
trial.
On
June 14th 2002, one day before the trial date, Deputy District Attorney Michelle
Ann Amico dismissed first-degree murder charges against Sonnenfeld apparently
on the basis of a suicide note written by Nancy Sonnenfeld which police had
not taken into evidence. Public defender Carrie Thompson stated: "Our
investigators found a letter written in Nancy's own hand consistent with a
suicide letter, although it was very cryptic," The
letter said, "What is more beautiful than love and death?" with
the word "love" scratched out. "Kurt, please get help." The
letter was found behind a framed photograph of Kurt Sonnenfeld. Nancy Sonnenfeld's
sister, Amy Leek, said the family knew this was coming but would have no comment
on the news. Nancy's Sonnenfeld's father,
Bill Campbell. stated: "It's hard to believe, we don't
hate Kurt. He was a wonderful guy and they had a wonderful marriage for 10
years. I know he loved our Nancy. We knew they were beginning to have problems,
but we absolutely don't know what happened that night."
According to Sonnenfeld, police abused him during his stay in prison. "Police
beat me and at the precinct one of them suffocated me and another forced me
to inhale something I think may have been pepper. I was kept in solitary confinement
with no water and no windows. The toilet was a hole in the middle of the floor.
It had to be flushed from outside. They flushed it often for fun, as that flooded
the room." Sonnenfeld also claimed that police hid and tampered with evidence,
ignored the suicide note and dismissed his request for a polygraph test. "Police
started lying to hide my injuries suffered during three beatings in jail. They
said my wife was shot in the back of the head or in her chest. There is clear
evidence that she shot herself behind the temple. Paraffin tests showed residue
of gunpowder in her hand and none on mine and the gun had her fingerprints
and not mine" stated Sonnenfeld. He accused one named Denver detective
of seeking to destroy his reputation and feeding the press false information,
adding that the detective had contradicted assertions that he made during an
earlier court hearing.
After his release in 2002, Sonnenfeld filed a law suit against the police
for $20 million for false arrest, false imprisonment, deprivation
of civil rights, and brutality. On arriving home from prison Sonnenfeld claims
that his computer was missing and he began to be harassed in various ways;
light bulbs at his home would be found unscrewed, locks unlocked, and he would
be followed and photographed despite taking refuge at friends' homes in other
cities and states.
During the period after his release in June 2002, Sonnenfeld claims that federal
authorities asked a co-worker (at ground zero) about the tapes he had made
of the wreckage of the WTC site and that the co-worker stated that he believed
that Sonnenfeld had handed them over to the authorities in New York. In reality,
Sonnenfeld claims that he had stored them in a make-up box in a
closet.
In February 2003, Sonnenfeld traveled to the Argentine coastal city of San
Bernardo staying in the apartment of the uncle of a friend, where he
met his current wife Paula who he married three months later in April 2003.
Since then Sonnenfeld has claimed that the harassment continued in Argentina
claiming in a October 2005 article in the Buenos Aires Herald that he
and his wife are followed and photographed To support these assertions, Sonnenfeld
provided pictures showing a man allegedly taking pictures of him in Puerto
Madero. He also provided a picture of a message sent to his cell phone that
read, “Watch
what you are doing.” and signed “any,” which his wife Paula
takes for “anybody.”
After moving to Argentina, Sonnenfeld had the make-up
box containing video evidence from ground zero shipped to him along with other
possessions. At the end of July 2004, he and his wife went to the American
embassy in Buenos Aires to enquire about a visa for his wife to travel to the
US. Sonnenfeld and his wife claim that Paula was treated "cruelly" by
embassy staff. Since moving to Argentina, Sonnenfeld has worked as a TV producer
and participated as an actor in a Burger King TV advertisement that was aired
in the US. Sonnenfeld claims that he offered Twin Towers footage to several
local Argentine TV programs for the third anniversary of the attack, but
nothing that he had not shown to other media before.
In September 2004, US prosecutors filed new charges against Sonnenfeld over
his first wife's death stating that new information had come to light based
mainly on the testimony of two men who had shared the same cell as Sonnenfeld
in 2002. According to reports, one month after Sonnenfeld was released, former
cell-mate Robert Dryer said that Sonnenfeld had told him how he shot his wife
behind the ear and put her finger on the gun’s trigger as he pulled it
himself. Another former inmate, Damian Whitehead, said he and Sonnenfeld met
after they were released from jail. According to him, Sonnenfeld said he killed
his wife and that he couldn’t bear to have her leave him. Sonnenfeld
told the Buenos Aires Herald: "In August 2004, I delivered some demo
to a TV producer. A week later, on August 31, Interpol arrested me. I find
that extremely coincidental. A month before, I had gone to the embassy.
Sonnenfeld
spent seven months in Villa Devoto prison in Buenos Aires pending a US extradition
request after the refiling of charges of first-degree murder by the US government
that he dismisses as groundless. He shows a copy of a US Embassy extradition
request dated August 13, 2004, that reads, “The ensuing investigation
has established that Mr Sonnenfeld killed her.” But Sonnenfeld argues, “That
is prejudging and reviving the same lies that had been already dismissed.
The Argentine judge dealing with the extradition request, Daniel Rafecas,
finally rejected it on the grounds that Sonnenfeld has sought asylum in Argentina
and that the US government has not provided
sufficient guarantees that Sonnenfeld will not face the death penalty if extradited.
In response, the US government appealed the ruling and the decision now rests
in the hands of the Argentine Supreme Court. Sonnenfeld has appealed to various
humanitarian organisations including the Human Rights Commission of the Argentine
parliament where, on Tuesday 12th September 2006, discussions began on whether
or not to provide Sonnenfeld with political asylum. Part of the discussions
will include proposals to deal with limiting the scope of the actions on Argentine
soil of agents of the intelligence agencies of other nations, a point which
was raised as a result of Sonnenfeld's testimony about his harassment since
arriving in Argentina.
In an interview with Argentine daily newspaper el Pais on September 10th 2006,
Sonnenfeld, now 41, stated that the fact that he continued to be harassed
even after he moved to Argentina led him to begin to understand
that the core of the problem was the tapes he had made at ground zero: "At
that point I realised that they were after something else: the tapes of ground
zero in my possession."
"In faltering Spanish and with the help of his wife Paula, Kurt answers
each question with abundant documentation. He produces papers, signed by
the Deputy District Attorney, which show that he was finally cleared as the
author of his first wife's murder. He offers copies of American newspaper
articles in which the Denver police are denounced for having dismissed evidence
that his wife committed "suicide", and the police photos of his bruised face,
evidence, he says, of police brutality. Sonnenfeld also makes reference to
the testimony of the two prisoners who, in exchange for a reduction in their
sentences, swore to the same police that I accused of torture, that I had
confessed to the murder of my wife" The testimonies reopened the case and
dismissed my suit against the Denver police. Sonnenfeld displays documents
to show that he never attempted to hide his identity and even presented himself
to the US embassy in an effort to return to the US with his new wife, an
act which, two weeks later, led to his arrest and the serving of an extradition
warrant.
- What exactly was he able to document at the WTC site?
I was the only person, with camera in hand, with total and absolute access
to any area of Ground Zero and the WTC. Any other cameras that were within
that area would have been confiscated and the the person carrying them arrested.
- But what exactly are in these images of yours that could contradict the
official US government version of events on 9/11?
What I saw at certain moments and in certain places...is very frightening,
I don't know who to put it in words, what I saw leads me to the terrible conclusion
that there was foreknowledge of what was going to happen. The precautions that
were taken to save certain things that the authorities there considered irreplaceable
or invaluable. For example, certain things were missing that could only
have been removed with a truck, yet after the first plane hit one of the towers,
everything in manhattan collapsed and no one could have gotten near the towers
to do that.
- What things were removed?
Several offices of the US intelligence agencies were located in the WTC,
including the second most important CIA building in the country. From some
of these locations certain documentation that was irreplaceable was removed.
I don't want to give too many details because our future, our lives, depend
on this. The information of which I speak is already distributed in several
places."
On February 23rd 2006, Sonnenfeld displayed a selection of his photographs
from Ground Zero at the La Bohéme Salón gallery in Buenos
Aires. The Buenos Aires Herald reported:
A fireman works amid the debris of Ground Zero just hours after the September
11, 2001, terrorist attack that razed the Twin Towers in New York, as pictured
by US citizen Kurt Sonnenfeld, who claims to be the only videographer given
full access by the US government to record rescue works. An exhibit of 28
Ground Zero pictures taken by Sonnenfeld and never shown before opened yesterday
for about a month. The United States has requested that Argentina extradite
Sonnenfeld on charges that in 2002 he killed his first wife and the case
is in the hands of Argentina’s Supreme Court of Justice. Sonnenfeld,
43, claims that she took her own life. He was detained for several months
in Denver, Colorado, and one day before a trial was due to start a judge
dismissed the charges and he was released in June 2002.
He publicly accused
US police of torturing and persecuting him. In February 2003, he came for
a month’s
holiday in Argentina, where he married an Argentine citizen Paula. The pictures
he is now exhibiting came to Buenos Aires in a make-up box, hidden in his
furniture. Asked by the Herald in an interview last October whether he thought
that the alleged persecution was linked to his work as a videographer, he
simply said, “The
US authorities are trying to extradite me under false pretenses.”
Case closed? What seems obvious is the fact that, if Sonnenfeld really does
have evidence to prove a government conspiracy on 9/11, he knew about it within
a few weeks of the attacks themselves. It is also reasonable to suggest that
he is (or was on 9/11) an employee of one of the intelligence
agencies involved in the perpetration of the attacks since it is unlikely that
the one of the only photographers allowed into Ground Zero to document the
evidence would have been just an average Joe. The questions that remain then
concern the reality of all that has happened since. That
Sonnenfeld was in his house on the morning of January 1st 2002 when his first
wife died from a gunshot wound seems beyond dispute. That within a year
of his somewhat miraculous release from prison in 2002 he moved to Argentina,
quickly remarried, and is now the subject of an extradition warrant by the
US government is also clear, along with the fact that the Argentine government
seems reluctant to hand him over.
If we are to believe his claims,
we can assume that Sonnenfeld has not yet released all of the evidence in his
possession of a government conspiracy on 9/11 and is perhaps waiting on the
most opportune moment to do so. If he is guilty of murdering
his wife (which seems likely) and is using the 'evidence of conspiracy' that
he possesses
to ensure his continuing liberty, then his 'evidence' may never be released.
If, however, he is innocent of the murder and is being harassed with a trumped
up charge precisely because he has evidence of a 9/11 government conspiracy,
then it would seem sensible for him to release the details at some point
in the near future. Whatever the case, the saga of Kurt Sonnenfeld appears
to be but one more detail in the sordid tale that has been the US government's
continuing attempts to distort and cover up the massive and growing evidence
that the 9/11 attacks were undeniably the work of elements of the US government
itself.
Notes:
www.tvtechnology.com/...
cbs4denver.com/...
ar.news.yahoo.com/...
www.rockymountainnews.com/...
www.rockypreps.com/...
www.thedailycamera.com/...
www.infobae.com/...
www.buenosairesherald.com/...
www.buenosairesherald.com/...
www.buenosairesherald.com/...
www.pagina12.com.ar/...
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