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Thursday, June 24, 1993
New York Bombing Conspiracy
Tuesday, January 10, 1995
International Airline Bomb Threat
Wednesday, April 19, 1995
Oklahoma City Bombing

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© Corbis

Saturday, December 10, 1994
A man claiming to represent a Philippine Moslem rebel group said it was responsible for the bombing of a Philippine Airlines plane on a flight to Japan that killed one person. "We are Abu Sayyaf Group. We explode one plane from Cebu."
© Reuters

Active Measures
Philippine Airline Explosion Kills One
Saturday, December 10, 1994
(Reuters) - An apparent mid-air explosion on a Philippine Airlines jumbo jet on Sunday killed one person and injured five, forcing the plane to make an emergency landing in Okinawa. The Boeing 747-200 was carrying 273 passengers and 20 crew on Flight 434 from Manila to Tokyo via Cebu when the apparent explosion happened.

Abu Sayyaf Claims PAL Bombing
Saturday, December 10, 1994
(Reuters) - A man claiming to represent a Philippine Moslem rebel group said it was responsible for the bombing of a Philippine Airlines (PAL) plane on a flight to Japan on Sunday that killed one person. "We are Abu Sayyaf Group. We explode one plane from Cebu," the man said in broken English in a telephone call.

Yousef Connected to Airline Bombing
Monday, January 30, 1995
(AP) - Materials left in a Philippines apartment detailed a plane bombing and plot to kill the pope that authorities suspect were planned by the man accused of masterminding the World Trade Center explosion. Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, 27, may have supplied the financial backing, organization and technical expertise for the plots.

Ramzi Yousef Captured in Pakistan
Monday, February 20, 1995
(AP) - U.S. authorities have arrested the alleged mastermind of the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center and are holding him in New York for trial. Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, 27, was detained Tuesday by law enforcement officials in Pakistan and was handed over to American authorities. Yousef was flown to the United States last night.

Plane terror suspects convicted on all counts
Thursday, September 5, 1996
(CNN) -- A federal jury on Thursday found three men guilty of plotting to bomb 12 U.S. airliners in Asia. The jury found Ramzi Ahmed Yousef, the alleged mastermind of the plot, and two other defendants, Abdul Hakim Murad and Wali Khan Amin Shah, guilty on seven counts after two-and-a-half days of deliberations.

Kukui Roadhouse - Los Angeles, California