WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Two Minnesota flight instructors who reported Sept. 11 terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui to the FBI will be considered for a multi-million-dollar reward from which they had been excluded.
The decision was disclosed Tuesday by Minnesota Sens. Norm Coleman and Amy Klobuchar after meeting privately with State and Justice Department officials involved in the "Rewards for Justice" program.
The FBI confirmed that it will review the case involving Tim Nelson and Hugh Sims, who were left out of a $5 million payout made last month to Clarence Prevost, one of the other original tipsters.
"They assured us that they will take another look at this case," said Coleman, a Republican who had sought the FBI review.
Both Coleman and Klobuchar joined a chorus of critics after it was learned that Nelson and Sims had not been recognized by the secretive reward program, which has paid more than $75 million to more than 50 tipsters in recent years, including $30 million for the information that led authorities to Saddam Hussein's sons, Uday and Qusay Hussein.
Klobuchar, a Democrat who has written to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice about the affair, emphasized that she and Coleman are not questioning the reward given to Prevost, the flight instructor who testified in Moussaoui's trial as a Sept. 11 conspirator.
"The idea was that they needed to look beyond to the other people who had contributed to Moussaoui's conviction," she said.
Prevost reportedly urged his bosses at Minnesota's Pan Am International Flight Academy to call the FBI in August 2001 to report his suspicions about Moussaoui, who was seeking commercial jetliner training without any previous flight experience.