On July 31, 2024, Terry Strada sat in a courtroom in lower Manhattan and watched the faces of two terrorists who carried out the attacks that killed her husband and nearly 3,000 others. Tom Strada went to work on the morning of Sept.11, 2001, and never came home. He died on the 104th floor of the North Tower.
In the years since, his widow has done what the government would not: pursue the full truth of who facilitated the attacks that killed him.
As national chair of 9/11 Families United, Terry has navigated classification battles, diplomatic stonewalls, and the particular cruelty of a system that mourns publicly and conceals privately. The evidence she saw had been seized within 10 days of the attacks and withheld for over two decades.
“To think they had all this evidence and that I am only seeing it in full 23 years later was overwhelming. In one video, Bayoumi is casing the US Capitol, filming entrances, exits, and security posts while calmly narrating the scene. Tears ran down my cheeks,” Terry told me.
“We lived through the unimaginable, only to be forced to relive it every day since, fighting for justice and demanding the truth that should have been ours from the beginning.”
In August 2025, a federal judge ruled the 9/11 families’ lawsuit against Saudi Arabia may proceed to trial. It took 24 years.
That delay is not incidental to this story. It is the story.
For years, Sept. 11 was narrated as institutional failure: signals missed, dots not connected, a system overwhelmed. That framing was too forgiving. The record shows something more troubling: repeated decisions not to follow where evidence led.
When two future hijackers arrived in California in early 2000 speaking almost no English, Omar al-Bayoumi co-signed their lease, opened a bank account, deposited nearly $10,000, and introduced them to a support network that became their operational infrastructure. A declassified FBI report confirmed he was paid as a co-optee of the Saudi General Intelligence Presidency.
Months before the hijackers arrived, Saudi Ministry of Islamic Affairs officials conducted reconnaissance along the exact routes the hijackers would later take, according to a newly filed Second Circuit submission. The Kingdom then more than doubled his salary, backdating the increase with a fabricated promotion.
At the FBI’s request, London’s Metropolitan Police seized eighty videotapes and thousands of documents from Bayoumi’s Birmingham apartment. Copies were sent to the FBI’s New York office but never fully analyzed or disseminated. The San Diego field office — closest to the investigation — never received them. Scotland Yard expected his extradition. Instead, he was released, and in 2002 returned to Saudi Arabia.
Some failures were lapses in coordination. Others were choices.
On Oct. 17, 2003, a meeting took place at a conference palace in Riyadh. A 9/11 Commission memorandum published by the Florida Bulldog describes the meeting: Philip Zelikow, the Commission’s executive director, and officers of the Mabahith, Saudi Arabia’s domestic intelligence service. The memorandum was filed under the heading AFTER-MDR-BAYOUMI-EXONERATION. It records what Saudi intelligence wanted: Bayoumi cleared before the report went to print. Months later, the section detailing Saudi connections was rewritten, its most damaging material removed.
America did not fracture because it confronted the truth too aggressively. It fractured because it did not.
President Bush visited a mosque to declare, “Islam is peace.” The gesture was not wrong. But confronting perpetrators and protecting the innocent were never mutually exclusive — careful avoidance of naming who enabled the attacks became the ethical stance.
That inconsistency created a permission structure in which judgment became selective and violence weighed differently depending on who committed it. The moral inversions after Oct. 7, 2023 — the rationalizations for violence, the erasure of distinctions between victim and perpetrator — did not arise in a vacuum. They filled a void left by a story untold.
When accountability is selective, truth becomes negotiable. And a country that cannot tell the truth about its enemies eventually loses the ability to name them at all.
“Accountability is deterrence,” Strada said. “The truth is our best weapon. If we don’t confront it, history will repeat itself. I will continue the fight for it to be told.”
In a healthy republic, grieving families would not bear this burden. It took two decades of litigation to surface it — not because the government released it, but because the families forced it. That is not vindication. It is a beginning.
Telling the truth is not only a moral obligation. It is, as these families have proven, a prerequisite for national security.
Tali Gillette is an investigative researcher and writer covering national security, accountability, and American policy and culture. She interviewed Terry Strada, national chair of 9/11 Families United, for this article.

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