"Of course, we expect no winners," Walter, 57, heir to an $11 million
fortune from his father's home-building business, said in a telephone interview
from California on Wednesday. He accuses figures in government, the military
and business of involvement in the Sept. 11 attacks.
Walter said a panel of expert engineers would judge submissions from the students.
Next month, he also launches a nationwide contest seeking alternative theories
from college and high school students about why New York's World Trade Center
collapsed. The contest offers $10,000 to the best alternative theory, with 100
runner-up awards of $1,000. Winners will be chosen next June.
The World Trade Center's twin towers were destroyed after hijackers from Osama
bin Laden (news - web sites)'s al Qaeda militant group slammed two commercial
airliners into them. The attack in New York killed 2,749 people.
Various official investigations give no credence to Walter's theory. A Sept.
11 commission spokesman said its policy was not to comment on criticism of the
report.
Walter insists there had to be explosives planted in the twin towers to cause
them to fall as they did, and also rejects the official explanation for the
damage done at the Pentagon (news - web sites).
"We have all the proof," said Walter, citing videotapes and testimony
from witnesses.
"It wasn't 19 screw-ups from Saudi Arabia who couldn't pass flight school
who defeated the United States with a set of box cutters," he said. He
dismissed the official Sept. 11 commission report, saying, "I don't trust
any of these 'facts."'
Walter has spent millions of dollars to bolster support for his case, running
full-page ads in The New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker
and Newsweek, as well as alternative newspapers and 30-second TV spots.
He points to a Zogby poll he commissioned last summer that showed 66 percent
of New Yorkers wanted the 9/11 investigation reopened.
Walter has spent about 30 percent of his net worth on his efforts.
"I am a patriot fighting the real traitors who are destroying our democracy.
I resent it when they call me delusional," he said.