WASHINGTON -- One man has been charged with helping some of the hijackers in the terrorist attacks fraudulently obtain Virginia identification cards, prosecutors said Monday.
Meanwhile, the government ordered all airport workers with access to planes and secure areas to submit to new criminal background checks.
Herbert Villalobos and another man -- his identify was not revealed because he is a witness -- signed identity papers in Arlington, Va., in August for the hijackers who commandeered and crashed American Airlines flight 77 into the Pentagon a little more than a month later, said an affidavit filed in federal court in northern Virginia. The second man was not charged.
The affidavit by FBI special agent Brian Weidner said that Villalobos, using the alias Oscar Diaz, signed papers certifying that Abdul Aziz Al Omari, one of the hijacker suspects, lived in Virginia.
A second man, who is a confidential witness, signed both a residency certification and an identity affidavit that was used by another suspected hijacker, Ahmed Saleh Al Ghamdi, to obtain an identification card, the affidavit said.
It said the unidentified local man was standing in a parking lot near the Arlington office of the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles office along with several other men, including Villalobos, when three men approached him in a van and asked for help in getting Virginia identification cards.
Villalobos and his acquaintances then drove together to an attorney's office nearby with the others following. The papers, which can be used as identification for getting a driver's licenses and state identification cards, require the signature of a notary.
The forms had already been signed by the attorney, who talked to the men in a foreign language, the affidavit said.
352 arrested or detained
Earlier Monday, Attorney General John Ashcroft said 352 people have now been arrested or detained in the investigation of the Sept. 11 attacks in New York and Washington and another 392 people were being sought for questioning.
Ashcroft said he believed those being held or sought have information about the attacks.
The Federal Aviation Administration ordered airports and airlines to redo criminal checks and scrutinize employment histories for baggage handlers, food service workers and other employees who have access to airliners, ramps, tarmacs and other secure areas. The Coast Guard, meanwhile, began checking the identities of passengers on inbound ships.
"We are requiring revalidation of all airport IDs to make sure that they are genuine, current and belong with the person they are with," FAA spokeswoman Rebecca Trexler said.
Investigators are looking at whether box-cutting tools found on two jets may have been planted there by individuals other than passengers who had access to airliners. The hijackers used box-cutters in the hijackings two weeks ago.
In yet another precaution, the Coast Guard said it is requiring that incoming vessels supply local port officials with the identities of crew members and passengers.
"We're working on an interagency basis with the FBI, immigration officials, the U.S. Customs Service and other law enforcement agencies in checking the names we get against their databases in order to ensure national security," said a Coast Guard spokesman, Capt. Mike Lapinski. "We want to identify individuals and cargos that should not get into the United States."
In other developments:
The FBI spent an hour Saturday questioning Khalid al Draibi, who was arrested 13 miles south of Dulles Airport the night after the attacks. A man with the same birthdate and a similar name appears on an FBI list of 21 alleged suspects in the attacks. Attorney Drewry B. Hutcheson Jr. said his client spoke voluntarily without immunity to an agent and was in the Washington area because he wanted to go to the Saudi Embassy, "probably for financial help."
A San Diego Zoo security guard told the FBI she recalled finding a metal case at the zoo several weeks ago that may have belonged to suspected hijacker Hani Hanjour, zoo spokeswoman Christine Simmons said. The case, which contained identification, some other papers and possibly cash, was claimed from the zoo's lost and found. The zoo kept no record of who claimed it, Simmons said.
In the crash of United Flight 93 in Pennsylvania, the FBI has determined from the on-site investigation that no explosive was involved. Passengers on the flight said in cell phone calls that one of their captors had what appeared to be a bomb strapped to him.
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