No, media on 9/11 did not call buildings' collapse an 'inside job' | Fact check
The claim: Media on 9/11 said World Trade Center building collapses were ‘controlled demolition’
A Sept. 11 Instagram post (direct link, archive link) shows clips of national and local TV coverage of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, including the collapse of World Trade Center Building 7.
“Just the media on 9/11 calling it a controlled demolition,” read the post's caption, which includes the hashtag “#insidejob.”
The post was liked more than 50 times in a day.
Follow us on Facebook! Like our page to get updates throughout the day on our latest debunks
Our rating: False
The post misrepresents clips of broadcast journalists saying the collapses visually resembled building implosions. None of the reports identified the cause of the building collapses as controlled demolitions. Contemporaneous coverage and multiple investigations since then prove two buildings were brought down by aircraft crashing into them, and flaming debris caused fires that brought down a third building.
Journalists commented on visual similarities
None of the journalists featured in the video claim the buildings were brought down by "controlled demolitions."
The post begins with then-CBS anchor Dan Rather commenting on the collapse of 7 World Trade Center. The building was not hit directly by a plane but collapsed hours after the Twin Towers.
“It's reminiscent of those pictures we’ve all seen too much on television before, when a building was deliberately … destroyed by well-placed dynamite to knock it down,” Rather says. He does not claim the building was brought down by a controlled demolition.
Much of the footage in the clip is from WCBS-TV in New York. It includes one clip of a reporter with the news station at the scene remarking, “It was almost as if it were a planned implosion.”
The video then shows footage of Building 7's collapse, including a segment seen in footage archived on YouTube.
Fact check: LAX evacuation due to suspicious item, not Ebola or Burning Man
Conspiracy theorists have focused on the collapse of Building 7 as “proof” the collapses were planned, as it was not struck by a plane. Multiple investigations in the years after the attacks show it was not rigged to collapse.
A Federal Emergency Management Agency report stated the collapse was a direct result of fires that "likely ... started as a result of debris from the collapse" of the first World Trade Center tower.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology says on its website that investigators found no evidence of a “blast event" at Building 7. It instead focused on heat from the fires sparked by the debris, which it said caused steel floor beams and girders to expand, which in turn led to a structural column’s failure.
In July 2004, an independent, bipartisan commission released a report detailing how terrorists hijacked commercial aircraft to commit the 9/11 attacks that led to the collapse of the World Trade Center buildings.
USA TODAY previously debunked the claim that Building 7 was destroyed by a "controlled demolition."
USA TODAY reached out to the user who shared the post for comment but did not immediately receive a response.
Our fact-check sources:
USA TODAY, Sept. 23, 2022, Fact check: World Trade Center Building 7 collapsed due to fire on 9/11, not pre-rigged explosives
USA TODAY, June 17, 2021, Fact check: False claim persists that planes weren't used in 9/11 attacks on World Trade Center
National Institute of Standards and Technology, accessed Sept. 11, Questions and Answers about the NIST WTC 7 Investigation
Federal Emergency Management Agency, accessed Sept. 11, FEMA 403 - Chapter 5 WTC 7
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States, accessed Sept. 11, Report
fresnosean379 (YouTube), July 28, 2019, 9 11 WTC7 Damage Fires & Collapse Vince DeMentri WCBS Raw Footage & Reports
L. Reichard White (YouTube), Aug. 22, 2018, 911 WTC 7 Collapse with Dan Rather commentary
Thank you for supporting our journalism. You can subscribe to our print edition, ad-free app or e-newspaper here.
Our fact-check work is supported in part by a grant from Facebook.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Media on 9/11 discussed implosions as visual comparison | Fact check