Playboy: Con Man Convinced Bush Administration He Could Predict Terror Attack

Playboy: Con Man Convinced Bush Administration He Could Predict Terror Attack

The weeks before Christmas brought no hint of terror. But by the afternoon of December 21, 2003, police stood guard in heavy assault gear on the streets of Manhattan. Fighter jets patrolled the skies. When a gift box was left on Fifth Avenue, it was labeled a suspicious package and 5,000 people in the Metropolitan Museum of Art were herded into the cold.

It was Code Orange. Americans first heard of it at a Sunday press conference in Washington, D.C. Weekend assignment editors sent their crews up Nebraska Avenue to the new Homeland Security offices, where DHS secretary Tom Ridge announced the terror alert. "There's continued discussion," he told reporters, "these are from credible sources--about near-term attacks that could either rival or exceed what we experienced on September 11." The New York Times reported that intelligence sources warned "about some unspecified but spectacular attack."

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