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William Rodriguez
William Rodriguez
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William Rodríguez is a former janitor at the North Tower of the World Trade Center during the September 11, 2001, attacks and was in the basement of the North Tower when American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the building. After the attacks he received several awards for heroism for helping in the evacuation of many survivors.[1] The Birmingham Mail said about Rodriguez: "He bravely led firefighters up the stairs, unlocking doors as they climbed and helping hundreds of survivors"[2] and The Lancashire Telegraph added: "He then went back into the building in a bid to rescue his friends at the top of the tower, on the 106th floor. But he kept finding others who needed his help as well."[3]

Key Information

Rodriguez became prominent in the Latino community for helping to institute an economic amnesty program for victims of 9/11 who were undocumented workers.[4]

Subsequently, Rodriguez traveled around talking about a theory and his experiences on 9/11, giving motivational lectures and discussing disaster management.[5][6][7][8][9] The Herald newspaper of Glasgow characterized him as "the poster boy for a movement currently sweeping the globe... the 9/11 Truth Campaign."[citation needed] He titled his website "911keymaster", appearing on TV and having himself photographed frequently with a 'master key' to the World Trade Center,[1][10][11][12][13] which, he has alleged on BBC and Dutch TV and C-SPAN, saved hundreds of lives. He also used the title "Last Man Out", touring in the UK and the US with that phrase.[14][unreliable source?][15] Rodriguez has also employed the "Last Survivor of the World Trade Center" slogan.[16][17] Newspapers articles state that he raised 122 million dollars for the victims of 9/11.[18][19]

Biography

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Magician's assistant

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As a young man, Rodriguez worked under the stage name "Roudy" as an assistant to magician James Randi.[20][21] A December 2005 article published on the Internet claimed that Rodriguez was adroit at insinuating himself into the good graces of Randi's targets and eliciting incriminating information, and that he had previously been featured on television in Puerto Rico escaping from a chained straitjacket while hanging from a burning rope.[22]

WTC janitor

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Rodriguez moved to New York from Puerto Rico and, according to the Internet article linked above, he "found himself a small fish in the big pond of New York magicians." He took a day job as a custodian at the World Trade Center. The article goes on to say that Rodriguez's show business aspirations fell by the wayside when his responsibilities for cleaning the office of Governor Mario Cuomo at the WTC expanded to include organizing Governor Cuomo's press conferences, and that after Cuomo left office in 1994, Rodriguez was reassigned to cleaning the windowless emergency staircases of the North Tower, where he remained until September 11, 2001.[22]

September 11 attacks

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Rodriguez said he usually clocked in at 8:00 a.m. and rode an elevator to the 106th floor, where Hispanic employees of the Windows on the World restaurant fed him a free breakfast. However, on the morning of September 11, 2001, Rodriguez was half an hour late and so reported directly to a basement office of his employer, American Building Maintenance.[citation needed] On September 11, Rodriguez told CNN that shortly before the plane hit the tower he was in the basement when:

...we hear like a big rumble. Not like an impact, like a rumble, like moving furniture in a massive way. And all of sudden we hear another rumble, and a guy comes running, running into our office, and all of skin was off his body. All of the skin. We went crazy, we started screaming, we told him to get out. We took everybody out of the office outside to the loading dock area.[23]

Rodriguez's early accounts repeatedly mentioned a large fireball that shot down the elevator shafts and exploded through the doors, causing serious burn injuries to a man who happened to be standing in front of one of the freight elevator doors. This was consistent with similar reports by numerous other witnesses who saw fireballs erupting and blowing out elevator doors and burning people.[24] In September 2002, Rodriguez said in a CNN interview:

...and at that terrible day when I took people out of the office, one of them totally burned because he was standing in front of the freight elevator and the ball of fire came down the duct of the elevator itself, I put him on the ambulance.

He did not identify the name of the victim in this interview,[25] but he did identify the name of the victim as Felipe David (a native of Honduras, working for the American catering company Aramark) in several other interviews.[26][27][28][29][30][31][32] David was released after spending 10 weeks recovering in the hospital; first in the New York Weill Cornell Medical Center burn unit, and then in Mount Sinai Medical Center's rehab program. He had suffered third degree burns covering 40% of his upper body while escaping from the basement of 1 World Trade Center.[citation needed]

The fire, the ball of fire, for example, I was in the basement when the first plane hit the building. And at that moment, I thought it was an electrical generator that blew up at that moment. A person comes running into the office saying 'explosion, explosion, explosion.' When I look at this guy; has all his skin pulled off of his body. Hanging from the top of his fingertips like it was a glove. And I said, what happened? He said the elevators. What happened was the ball of fire went down with such a force down the elevator shaft on the 58th (50A) – freight elevator, the biggest freight elevator that we have in the North Tower, it went out with such a force that it broke the cables. It went down, I think seven flights. The person survived because he was pulled from the B3 level. But this person, being in front of the doors waiting for the elevator, practically got his skin vaporized."[33]

At that same NIST meeting, however, Rodriguez told investigators that he was "the last survivor pulled from the rubble". In fact, there were at least 18 survivors pulled from the rubble of the North Tower long after Rodriguez walked out of the building unharmed. The last survivor was Genelle Guzman-McMillan, who was rescued some 26 hours later at approximately 12:30 p.m. on September 12, 2001.[34]

By August 17, 2007, after more than two years of telling his story to enthralled audiences, he told C-SPAN:

All of a sudden at 8:46... we hear 'BOOM!' An explosion so powerful and so loud that (it) pushed us upward in the air, coming from below! It was so powerful that all the walls cracked, the false ceiling fell on top of us, the fire sprinkler system got activated and everybody started screaming in horror: 'Help, help, help!'[35]

He stated that he used a master key to let people out from behind locked emergency exit doors, saving hundreds of people,[3][35][36] and that he turned down Hollywood movie deals worth millions and book contracts "from every publisher" because he "wanted to maintain [his] integrity."[3]

Rodriguez also claimed to have seen hijacker Mohand al-Shehri scoping out the building prior to the attacks, in June 2001. A Daily News article says he told the FBI and the 9/11 Commission that he recognized the man after a brief, chance encounter months prior to the terrorist attacks. "It is believed that American Airlines Flight 11 hijacker Mohamed Atta cased New York City targets, including the Diamond District, but Rodriguez may have given the 9/11 panel the first eyewitness testimony about a hijacker inside one of the towers before the terror strike."[37]

Rodriguez gave evidence to the 9/11 Commission. As was the case with the vast majority of the more than 1200 witnesses[38] who gave evidence to the Commission, Rodriguez's evidence was not given in public and was not specifically itemized in the Commission Report. Of the 1200+ witnesses whose testimony was taken by the Commission, approximately 160 were conducted publicly.[38][39] Rodriguez complains that his testimony never appeared in the Commission Report[40] and that many of the survivors were not called to testify. However, the Commission acknowledges that its report is only a summary of the work that it did, and that it specifically cites only a fraction of the sources it consulted. It acknowledges that due to the scope of the events touching so many issues and organizations, it did not interview every knowledgeable person or find every relevant piece of paper, but that its report is a foundation for a better understanding of a landmark in the history of the United States.[38]

References

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from Grokipedia
William Rodríguez is a Puerto Rican-American former maintenance worker who survived the , 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center's North Tower, where he held the master key for accessing stairwells. On that morning, Rodríguez was in the basement when he reported hearing a large explosion below the impact zone prior to the airplane strike, assisting an injured coworker burned by the blast and later using his key to unlock doors, enabling firefighters and evacuees to escape and saving numerous lives as he became the last person to exit the collapsing structure. For his actions, he received the National Hero Award from the and founded the Hispanic Victims Group to support Latino families affected by the attacks. Rodríguez's testimony before the , conducted behind closed doors, included details of the basement explosion, which he claims was discounted by the panel despite his firsthand account; he has since publicly rejected the official government explanation, asserting that explosives were involved in the towers' destruction. This stance has positioned him as a prominent figure in efforts questioning the events' causality, including advocacy for releasing classified sections of the 9/11 inquiry and international speaking engagements, though his views remain at odds with the conclusions of federal investigations like those from NIST.

Early Career

Magician's Assistant and Initial Employment

Rodríguez was born and raised in . As a young man there, he worked as an assistant to magician and skeptic , performing under the stage name "Roudy" and assisting with stage setups, illusions, and audience interactions that involved physical dexterity and quick problem-solving. Seeking expanded opportunities, Rodríguez relocated to in the United States during his early adulthood. He entered the field of building maintenance, taking on janitorial and custodial duties that emphasized manual labor, such as cleaning stairwells and performing inspections. His initial long-term employment in this sector was with American Building Maintenance, a contractor responsible for services at the World Trade Center complex, where he began working in the North Tower around and remained for approximately twenty years.

World Trade Center Tenure

Role as Janitor and Maintenance Worker

William Rodriguez began his employment as a worker for American Building Maintenance at the North Tower of the World Trade Center in the early 1980s, serving for approximately 20 years until 2001. His role encompassed routine cleaning and upkeep tasks essential to the building's operations, with a primary focus on the three emergency stairwells designated A, B, and C, which spanned from the sub-basement levels to the upper floors. In addition to sweeping and inspecting these stairwells, Rodriguez's duties involved broader inspection and maintenance of the tower's , ensuring accessibility and safety across various levels. As one of only five staff members entrusted with a master key, he had unrestricted access to all doors and floors, facilitating comprehensive servicing of the 110-story without reliance on tenant or security assistance for entry. This key possession underscored his integral role in maintaining the building's operational integrity, including interactions with security personnel during access verifications and coordination with tenants on reported issues in common areas.

September 11, 2001 Attacks

Basement Experiences and Initial Explosion Reports

On September 11, 2001, William Rodriguez was performing maintenance duties in the basement levels of the World Trade Center's North Tower (WTC 1) when, at approximately 8:46 a.m., he reported experiencing a massive originating from sub-basement areas, which he stated preceded the impact of on floors 93 through 99 by several seconds. Rodriguez described the initial blast as occurring deep below ground level, around sub-level B2 or lower, based on his position two floors underground at the time. The produced immediate and intense physical effects, including violent shaking of the floor beneath Rodriguez's feet, cracking of walls, and the forceful ejection of doors from their shafts, with debris scattering across the area. Moments later, Rodriguez's colleague Felipe David, who had been operating an , burst into the basement office covered in severe burns; David suffered third-degree burns to his face, arms, and body from exposure to ignited hydraulic oil or fuel, with skin described as hanging loosely and emitting a smell of burned flesh. Rodriguez immediately assisted David by guiding him to a safer area and alerting others, noting the man's condition as evidence of the subterranean blast's intensity. As , including Port Authority police and firefighters, arrived in the lobby shortly after the plane's impact, Rodriguez relayed his observations of the pre-impact to them, emphasizing its timing and origin below the surface. His account of anomalous subsurface events in the moments before the aircraft strike was consistent with reports from other workers who described similar seismic-like disturbances and damage prior to any upper-level collision sounds reaching ground level.

Evacuation Assistance and Heroic Actions

During the chaos following the impact of into the North Tower at 8:46 AM on , 2001, Rodriguez utilized his master key—a tool issued to a limited number of maintenance staff—to unlock secured stairwell doors that had jammed or been barricaded amid the evacuation. This action enabled office workers and other occupants to descend through smoke-filled staircases despite accumulating debris and structural instability, directly contributing to the escape of individuals from lower and mid-level floors. Rodriguez also directed arriving firefighters upward through the stairwells, opening doors on multiple floors including up to the 39th level, where he assisted in accessing trapped personnel amid raging jet fuel fires and falling debris. His familiarity with the building's layout allowed him to lead FDNY teams past obstacles, supporting their efforts to reach victims higher in the structure before conditions deteriorated further. As the North Tower's collapse initiated at approximately 10:28 AM, Rodriguez emerged as the final survivor to exit the building alive, having made repeated trips to aid others; he sustained minor injuries from but immediately assisted with efforts in the plaza outside.

Post-Attack Recognition

Awards for Heroism and Official Acknowledgments

Rodriguez was invited to the in 2002 by President , where he received commendation for his heroism and participated in a photo opportunity recognizing his evacuation efforts. In recognition of his actions in aiding the escape of numerous individuals from the North Tower, Rodriguez received the National Hero Award from the . This honor highlighted his use of a master key to unlock stairwells, facilitating the rescue of trapped occupants and firefighters, as corroborated by survivor accounts. Rodriguez founded the Hispanic Victims Group to provide support for Latino families impacted by the attacks, coordinating aid for approximately 150 households and advocating for policy changes benefiting undocumented victims. His leadership in this initiative underscored institutional acknowledgments of his post-attack community efforts, separate from his on-site bravery. Portrayed in media as the "last man out" of the North Tower, Rodriguez's contributions were validated through testimonies from those he assisted and records of his multiple re-entries to guide evacuees. Additional honors came from 9/11 survivor organizations and local governments, affirming his role in saving lives amid the collapses.

Advocacy for Further Investigation

Testimony on Explosions and Building Collapse

Rodriguez testified before the in 2004, describing a powerful in the sub-basement of the North Tower (World Trade Center 1) that occurred prior to the impact of at 8:46 a.m. on , 2001. He recounted feeling the floor shake violently from the blast below, which damaged walls and ejected a co-worker through a door, followed seconds later by the sound of an from higher levels consistent with the plane strike. This closed-door session lasted hours, but his account of pre-impact explosions was omitted from the Commission's final report, which attributed collapses solely to aircraft damage and ensuing fires without modeling explosives. In subsequent public forums and interviews, Rodriguez detailed hearing sequential explosions during his descent from the 106th floor via Stairwell B, where he assisted in evacuating survivors. He reported blasts propagating downward floor by floor, which he claimed indicated internal detonations rather than isolated fire-induced failures, as structures require temperatures exceeding 1,500°C for total loss of strength—conditions not uniformly achieved per empirical data from the event. These observations, corroborated by audio recordings of reporting secondary explosions (e.g., FDNY transmissions noting "secondary devices" and blasts in lobbies), led him to question the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) 2005 report's model for the towers. Rodriguez argued that the near-free-fall descent rates observed in video evidence—approximately 9.8 m/s² for portions of the collapses—defied causal of asymmetric weakening, as gravity-driven pancaking would exhibit deceleration from resistance, not uniform acceleration absent simultaneous support removal. Rodriguez's claims extended to broader evidentiary gaps, including his advocacy from 2004 onward for declassifying the 28 redacted pages of the 2002 Congressional Inquiry into 9/11 intelligence failures. He linked potential revelations of Saudi governmental ties to hijackers or foreknowledge as context for unexplained explosive events, urging empirical re-analysis of seismic data and patterns inconsistent with NIST's fire-only simulations. During a 2002 recognition event for 9/11 responders, his scripted mention of the basement explosion was excluded from the delivered remarks and official video, a detail he publicly highlighted in later statements as evidence of narrative curation. These testimonies positioned Rodriguez as a firsthand challenging official causal attributions, emphasizing verifiable eyewitness convergence over modeled assumptions.

Involvement in 9/11 Truth Movement and Calls for Inquiry

Rodriguez became a key advocate for renewed investigations into the , leveraging his firsthand account of sub-basement explosions preceding the North Tower plane impact to challenge aspects of the official collapse explanations. As a public speaker, he has delivered keynotes at conferences scrutinizing the events, including the 2006 American Scholars Symposium, where he emphasized eyewitness discrepancies in the sequence of events. In media appearances and presentations, Rodriguez has cited the symmetric free-fall collapse of World Trade Center Building 7 as inconsistent with fire-induced failure, alongside persistent reports of molten metal in the debris, to argue for engineering-focused probes detached from ideological agendas. He featured in the documentary 9/11 Whistleblowers: William Rodriguez, recounting his experiences and pressing for independent analysis of structural anomalies and timelines. Rodriguez aligned with technical critique groups, participating in forums hosted by Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth to highlight physics violations in NIST simulations of the collapses. His advocacy prioritizes causal inconsistencies, such as pre-impact detonations and unaccounted energy sources for the towers' rapid descent. Continuing into 2025, Rodriguez maintains calls for accountability via online platforms, noting unresolved intelligence gaps and forensic questions 24 years post-attack. He established the Hispanic Victims Group to organize affected families, channeling survivor testimonies toward demands for data-verified reinvestigations of event physics and preparatory lapses.

Controversies and Counterarguments

Challenges to Official Narrative

Rodriguez reported experiencing a massive in the sub-basement of the North Tower at approximately 8:46 a.m. on September 11, 2001, which violently shook the structure, cracked walls, and propelled him upward before the sound of the plane impact reached lower levels. This sequence directly contradicts the official causal model, which attributes initial damage propagation to jet fuel igniting fires from the upper impact zones downward, without accounting for independent lower-level detonations. Corroborating accounts from other , including firefighters, describe similar basement blasts preceding the aircraft strike, suggesting a pattern of pre-impact events inconsistent with isolated plane-fueled combustion. Rodriguez testified to these details before the , but later stated that investigators dismissed his evidence entirely during closed-door sessions, prioritizing narratives aligned with fire-induced failure over empirical witness data. He has further questioned the mechanics of the towers' collapses, emphasizing their symmetric, vertical progression at near-free-fall —characteristics empirically akin to controlled demolitions—over assurances of asymmetric pancaking that fail to explain the demands for pulverizing 90,000 tons of into micron-sized dust or hurling multi-ton sections laterally up to 600 feet. These observations, Rodriguez argues, align with reports from multiple witnesses of sequential cutter-charge-like explosions and potential incendiary residues, warranting forensic re-analysis of collapse dynamics from first principles rather than presupposed fire-weakening alone. Rodriguez advocates scrutiny of broader anomalies, such as the expedited shipment of debris overseas—totaling over 1.5 million tons removed within months—limiting tests for explosive traces, alongside the 9/11 Commission's exclusion of certain pre-attack warnings and his own , as indicators of institutional priorities potentially obscuring domestic causal factors. He has campaigned for of withheld materials, like the 28 redacted pages on foreign ties, insisting on impartial truth-seeking detached from partisan narratives.

Criticisms, Debunkings, and Responses

Rodriguez's assertions of pre-impact basement explosions in the North Tower have faced scrutiny from official investigations, which attribute reported sounds to non-explosive causes such as the crash of elevators dislodged by the impact or failures in electrical systems like transformers. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), in its 2005 final report on the collapses of the World Trade Center towers (NCSTAR 1), analyzed eyewitness accounts of explosions and concluded there was no corroborating physical evidence—such as blast residue, seismic signatures consistent with high explosives, or structural damage patterns indicative of —for controlled demolition hypotheses, instead linking the towers' failures to aircraft damage, fireproofing dislodgment, and ensuing fires weakening steel supports. Similarly, the Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) 2002 Building Performance Study examined basement-level damage but ascribed it to debris ejection and fuel ignition from the plane strike, without endorsing explosive origins. Skeptics and media commentators have criticized Rodriguez's evolving testimony, noting that his initial post-9/11 interviews on September 11, 2001, described a "huge " in the but lacked the emphasis on a massive pre-plane blast that appeared in later retellings, suggesting possible embellishment amid his involvement in the . Outlets have portrayed his advocacy as veering into unsubstantiated territory, particularly after his 2004 —later dismissed—against U.S. officials alleging foreknowledge and , which some viewed as exploiting his survivor status for political gain. Associations with truth-seeking groups have drawn accusations of politicizing the tragedy, with critics arguing that prioritizing alternative narratives overlooks the empirical focus on hijacker-piloted impacts and fire-induced documented in engineering analyses. In rebuttal, Rodriguez has maintained that his account aligns with dozens of other first-responder testimonies of sequential explosions, accusing the of deliberately omitting such details from its 2004 report despite his closed-door briefing where he detailed the basement event preceding the plane hit by seconds. He has referenced studies like the 2009 analysis by Niels Harrit and colleagues, which claimed to identify unreacted thermitic material in WTC dust samples—potentially explaining incendiary effects beyond office fires—though the paper's in the non-mainstream Open Chemical Physics Journal has been contested for methodological flaws and lack of independent replication. Rodriguez also invokes independent seismic records from Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory showing spikes prior to collapses, interpreting them as blast artifacts dismissed by official models, while challenging NIST's simulation assumptions for not fully accounting for eyewitness acoustics or steel forensics. Rodriguez's on-site heroism, including aiding evacuations with his master key and earning recognition from figures like President , remains unchallenged and distinct from debates over his interpretive claims. However, his post-attack has divided observers: proponents frame it as principled insistence on causal transparency amid institutional opacity, while detractors see it as undermining validated engineering consensus forged from debris analysis, flight data, and survivor data aggregation. This tension highlights broader toward official inquiries, where source selection—favoring federal models over dissenting voices—fuels perceptions of selective , though no forensic has overturned the core impact-fire-collapse sequence.

References

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