"My
penis has given me the ability to heal," Te DeVan "Rocketman"
Kurzweil told The New York Observer last January. "I need someone
who has a headache, congestion, back pain or any other painand the power
of my penis, without touching you, through the power of my hand, will heal you."
Forward
to June 27. Kurzweil awoke at 9:37 this morning in his New Jersey home, prepared
a breakfast of scrambled eggs and parmesan cheese, then bought a used gas mask
at his neighborhood Army surplus store and took a train into Times Square. There
he attempted to recruit as many New Yorkers as possible to protest in front
of a Queens grocery store he believes is operated by men directly connected
to the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
"Im
gonna stand outside the store yelling like a maniac, Youre a
fucking terrorist! Youre a terrorist! Youre responsible for Sept.
11!" declared the 23-year-old Kurzweil, who stands 6-foot-7,
holds a psychology degree from the University of Michigan and makes his living
as a street-based faith healer. "At which point you can assume theyll
come out and fight me. Terrorists dont like attention being drawn to them.
Im really good at drawing attention, so Im like the Anti-Terrorist."
According
to Kurzweil, the grocery storelocated in Jamaica, Queensemployed
Sept. 11 hijacker Mohammed Atta a month prior to the 9/11 attacks, and is responsible
for last falls anthrax scare on the East Coast.
"I
casually went up to the guys in the grocery store and said, Hey, didnt
Mohammed Atta used to work here? I swear he used to work here behind the counter,"
Kurzweil said. "And the one guy goes, Maybe, I dont know.
And the other guy goes, Yes, he used to work here. And then I asked
them about the anthrax, at which point they proceeded to laugh, and it was that
kind of awkward, knowing laugh."
And so
Kurzweil traveled to Times Square, wearing nothing but a pair of shorts and
carrying a poster that read TERRORISTS ARE IN JAMAICA, QUEENS, then went
on to say that this grocery store MADE ANTHRAX/CONSPIRED/ MOHAMMED ATTA.
"The
fact I know this and the cops dont nine months after the fact scares me,"
Kurzweil told numerous passersby. "This is the truth and its right
under my nose, and I told the FBI and they ignore it. They said they dont
have time
These people tried to anthrax my friend. This is the truth,
and Im not an FBI agent but I know this is the truth."
Unfortunately
for Rocketman, only one man besides this reporter agreed to join him on his
journey to Queens: Cyril, an unemployed West African actor who had a bit role
in the successful 1996 movie Twister.
"I
believe him," Cyril said. "You know, if something goes down thereif
shit breaks out and we fight these menonly the blacks will come to our
aid. Only the blacks will fight with us against these men."
"If
I dont do thisif I stop now and these guys kill more peopleI
dont want that on my conscience," Kurzweil said as the three of us
rode the subway to Queens. "I couldnt live with that, knowing I couldve
done something. Yeah, theres a good chance Im going to get really
hurt today
Terrorists dont like it when you blow up their spot.
When you flush these people out, yeah, theres danger involved. But I totally
believe in the afterlife, you know? I totally believe in something so much greater
than we can understand."
Minutes
later Kurzweil and Cyril stood facing a small grocery on Hillside Ave. with
gas masks donned, holding the TERRORISTS ARE IN JAMAICA, QUEENS poster
and screaming at every bystander in sight. Before long three men came outside.
Instead of telephoning the police as one mightve expected with two menone
of them crazy-lookingscreaming outside their establishment, they repeatedly
photographed Kurzweil and Cyril. Then they approached me, standing across the
street.
"You
came here to cause trouble," one said.
"No,"
I replied. "Im just a writer."
"No,"
the man scowled. "You came here to cause trouble."
Later that
night, Tommy Smalls and his wife, Hope, who worked for an insurance firm previously
located on the 51st floor of WTC Tower Two, called me at home. Tommy is the
friend Kurzweil claims terrorists "tried to anthrax." Tommy and Hope,
former Jamaica residents who now say theyre in hiding, are the source
of much of what Kurzweil says about the grocery store. Its a story they
told to the Village Voice pseudonymously last December. They spun it
out for me, the most intricate conspiracy theory this side of The X-Files.
"I
went into the store Sept. 10 and spoke to [the owners son]," Tommy
said. "And he said, Tommy, you work in the Trade Center? And
I said, No, Hope works in the Trade Center. And he said, Well,
tell her not to go to work tomorrow.
As far back as July 24 they
were telling us, Thats not a good place to work."
Tommy and
Hope lived then on the second floor of a seven-story apartment complex one block
from the grocery store. Both claim that a man who identified himself as Mohammed
Atta temporarily lived in the apartment across the hall, and that the building
is currently being investigated by the FBI.
When asked
about this, the buildings superintendent said he isnt allowed to
talk to anyone. The FBI was equally unforthcoming when we called.
"[Atta]
told us his name," Tommy said. "And I made a joke to my wife: All
he needs is a C and a K and it would be Mohammed Attack...
He used to say, I kill AmericansIm gonna kill a whole planeload.
Thats one of the last things he said to me. He said, Remember my
face. Remember my face."
Across
the street from the grocery store is a thrift shop. The woman who runs it now
says she was confused when she told her story to the Voice back in Decembera
story of antagonistic Arab and Indian neighbors, of strange packages and warnings
and a white powder found in one of her tea cups. She told the Voice that
she developed a mysterious illness and lesions, was tested and proved negative
for anthrax. She also said that 61-year-old Kathy Nguyen was her customer. Nguyen
died of inhalation of anthrax on Halloween. "I know it was [Nguyen],"
she told the Voice. "I remember: She said she worked at Ears and
Throat."
Indeed,
Nguyen worked in the stock room of the Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital,
and how she contracted anthrax is still an official mystery. Hope claims that
94-year-old Ottilie Lundgren, who died of anthrax by Thanksgiving, also visited
the store, though the owner denies it. CNN reported Nov. 23 that the FBI had
been looking into the possibility Nguyen and Lundgren had been in the same location.
When we
spoke to Nguyens friend Gina Ramjassingh, however, she said she doesnt
believe Nguyen had been in Queens. Calls to Lundgrens niece werent
returned.
Back to
Tommy and Hope and their story.
"In
mid-August, 17 men came out of [Attas] apartment with suitcases,"
Hope said. "I tell you, the man lived in that apartment with nothing."
"Before
the World Trade Center they became very cocky, very animated," Tommy added.
"I knew these guys six, seven years and they were never like this. Right
after the World Trade Center they were the happiest people in the world, talking
about how bombs are going to fall from the sky, how people are going to be afraid
to open their mail."
Later,
"Rocketman" Kurzweil called on the other line.
"Hey man, I just fell asleep in Penn Station," he said. "And I had the poster and my backpack under my feet, and I woke up and they were gone. Think about it. Why would some pickpocket want my poster? I think Im being watched, man. I know Im being watched."
Research assistance: Ned Vizzini






