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  1. This is the pair of shoes Richard Reidalso known as the shoe bombertried to detonate. (Click image to view high-res.) On December 22, 2001—just months after the 9/11 attacks—Richard Reid...

  2. December 2020: Richard Reid's Shoes. On December 22, 2001—just months after the 9/11 attacks—Richard Reid boarded American Airlines Flight 63 from Paris to Miami with homemade bombs hidden in his shoes. During the flight, Reid tried to detonate his shoes, but he struggled to light the fuse.

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  3. Sep 22, 2021 · The FBI's December Artifact of the Month is the pair of shoes Reidalso known as the "shoe bomber"—tried to detonate. FBI bomb techs determined that the shoes contained about 10 ounces of explosive material. During a preliminary hearing, an FBI agent revealed how dangerous the homemade bomb was.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Richard_ReidRichard Reid - Wikipedia

    Richard Colvin Reid (born 12 August 1973), also known as the Shoe Bomber, is the perpetrator of the failed shoe bombing attempt on a transatlantic flight in 2001. Born to a father who was a career criminal, Reid converted to Islam as a young man in prison after years as a petty criminal.

  5. Explore Authentic Richard Reid Shoe Bomber Stock Photos & Images For Your Project Or Campaign. Less Searching, More Finding With Getty Images.

  6. As Flight 63 was flying over the Atlantic Ocean, Richard Reid, an Islamic fundamentalist from the United Kingdom and self-proclaimed al-Qaeda operative, carried shoes that were packed with two types of explosives. He had been refused permission to board the flight the day before.

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  8. Feb 25, 2002 · But the FBI laboratory experts who dissected Richard Reids black suede sneakers were horrified by what they found in the soles: bombs that were, as one agent says, “the first of their kind...

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