Its the "Local" Jihadist to Worry About

Gods_Favorite said:
I knew it, I've been telling people this, the next attack that occurs is going to have Americans in on it, Americans like Jose Padilla, that can walk around the streets without any attention and protected with American constitutional rights, while we've got people in America fighting for terrorists to have rights, these same terrorists are working on murdering as many of us as possible, especially the liberals fighting for adbullah the terrorist to have a fair trial. :cool:


You tell em Goddy,we should round up all the local Muslims and lock them up in Concentration camps like we did those terrible Japs.Then sell of all their belongins and use the money we get for the war on terror.!!!!!!!1
 
Brown Pride said:
You tell em Goddy,we should round up all the local Muslims and lock them up in Concentration camps like we did those terrible Japs.Then sell of all their belongins and use the money we get for the war on terror.!!!!!!!1

Whatever man, nobodies saying that.
 
Dont worry GF that man looks black to me.

The spin already been associated between prisons and terrorism and drugs and terrorism, they already use the "patriot act" to go after blacks in Baltimore.

So its just a matter of time before they might come after your black ass in the name of "freedom" and give you 3 hots and a cot and apple pie on sundays.

Its not that serious, I repeat terrorism is not that serious. It can be avoided just like canada as nothing to worry about.

Almost any positive black movement as to go against the status quo of america, how long until that is labled anti american?!!?!?!

Then all I see is black or brown people locked up on bullshit, meanwhile some white militia got more arms than most arab countires and they aitn even getting fucked with, and they are the only domestics to pull shit ON american soil.

YEt the media concentrates on black, brown people.

They dont even mention that shit bout the arayns and domestic terrorism, but they play it up on us.

No people like jose and this cat cant walk around unnoticed cause they are of color, but white people REALLY CAN.

Put one of those arayans or white militia memers in a suit with a briefcase and he can go anywhere!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1

But white folks do not want to here they might have to watch their own, they woud rather watch the "different" ones.
 
gene cisco said:
Put one of those arayans or white militia memers in a suit with a briefcase and he can go anywhere!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1

But white folks do not want to here they might have to watch their own, they woud rather watch the "different" ones.

Thats what I'm saying, there are white Muslims out there, like John Walker Lindh, who can be recruited into Al Qaeda, and since they have access to almost anything, 1 white terrorist can do more damage than 10 arabs in America.
 
Sister 'incited suicide bomber'
A British woman encouraged her brother to take part in a suicide bombing
mission against Israel in which he lost his life, the Old Bailey has heard.



_40113657_parveen_203.jpg

Parveen Sharif allegedly told
her brother to be strong

BBC NEWS
Thursday, 6 October 2005

In April 2003, a week before the attack on a bar which killed three, Parveen Sharif allegedly sent Omar Sharif, 27, an e-mail urging him to be strong.

Ms Sharif, 37, denies inciting her brother to commit a terrorist act.

She and another brother, Zahid, 38, both of Derby, also deny withholding information about terrorism.

'Martyrs'

Omar Sharif was one of two bombers who hoped to secure a place in paradise for themselves and their families through martyrdom, it is alleged

The two men had left their respective homes in London and Derby and flown to the Middle East from London on April 10, the court heard.

A bomb exploded by Sharif's alleged accomplice, Asif Hanif, 21, of Hounslow, west London at a seafront bar in Tel Aviv, on 29 April also injured at least 50 people.

start_quote_rb.gif
She was seeking to strengthen his resolve, to reassure him and she was offering him her support
end_quote_rb.gif


Jonathan Laidlaw
Prosecution​

Omar Sharif fled after his bomb failed to go off and he was later found drowned in the sea off Tel Aviv.

Prosecutor Jonathan Laidlaw described the bombing as a terrorist attack organised and sponsored by the military wing of the Palestinian religious organisation Hamas.

When Parveen Sharif, a teacher, sent the alleged e-mail, she was "encouraging her brother to go through with the bombing", he told the court.

In it, she allegedly wrote: "We all have to be firm and focused with reality as time is slipping away and there is really no time to be weak and emotional.

"When we see you again it will be like only half a day has passed. Stay focused and determined. You have no time for emotions.

"May Allah take care of us all and join us all soon."

Mr Laidlaw told the court: "In the days before the attack, when even the most committed militant and radical of young men may suffer some doubt as to the course upon which they had embarked, she was seeking to strengthen his resolve, to reassure him and she was offering him her support."

The case continues.


SOURCE: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4315896.stm


.
 
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Gods_Favorite said:
Thats what I'm saying, there are white Muslims out there, like John Walker Lindh, who can be recruited into Al Qaeda, and since they have access to almost anything, 1 white terrorist can do more damage than 10 arabs in America.

Goddy,in your previous statement you mentioned "Jose Padilla,who could walk around undetected"Now you filpin your script and saying "White Muslims".When everybody on here is talking about how Black and Brown get profiled and also local arabs,you got to stick to one point like we are,and stop flipin your script.That's what I been trying to point out to you,you sounded like you wanted to lock up all the Muslims ,just like they did the Japs back in the day.
 
Brown Pride said:
Goddy,in your previous statement you mentioned "Jose Padilla,who could walk around undetected".

By that I meant any American white black latin whatever that gets in with Al Qaeda, I just pointed out Padilla because he was an American with ties to Al Qaeda that you would never suspect because of his back ground.
 
Gods_Favorite said:
By that I meant any American white black latin whatever that gets in with Al Qaeda, I just pointed out Padilla because he was an American with ties to Al Qaeda that you would never suspect because of his back ground.


Okay ,goddy,I can feel you on that ,I think.But you got to realize that we people of color ge profiled more so than anybody else.So in this instance a White Muslim could infiltrate more so than a Black or Latino Muslim,correcet?They could move about undetected more so than we could.We get profilied so much more so than White peeps,on anything,so what I'm sayin is "Do not profile all the Arab/Asian/Black /Latino Muslims etc.Becaus we are dark skinned we could be mistaken for Muslim,weather we are or not.Ya feel me,That's why the killed that Brasilian dude in the UK.He was a person of color,so they wacked his innocent ass ,and he was a Christian,not a Muslim.But because of the color of his skin and where he lived ,they thought he was a threat.But on the real,they need to watch out for the WHITE LOOKIN MUSLIMS ,BECAUSE THEY ARE THE ONES WHOS CAN WALK AROUND UNDETECTED.Mientiendes Mendez?Pienselo mi hermano,That's the real LOCAL JHIDAST THREAT,QUE NO?
 

AP: FBI Says 2 in Ga. Plotted Terrorism


Los Angeles Times
By GIOVANNA DELL'ORTO, Associated Press Writer
6:36 PM PDT, April 21, 2006


ATLANTA -- A 21-year-old Georgia Tech student and another man traveled to Canada to meet with Islamic extremists to discuss "strategic locations in the United States suitable for a terrorist strike," according to an affidavit made public Friday.

Syed Haris Ahmed and Ehsanul Islam Sadequee, both U.S. citizens who grew up in the Atlanta area, met with at least three other targets of ongoing FBI terrorism investigations during a trip to Canada in March 2005, an FBI agent's affidavit said.

The affidavit said the men discussed attacks against oil refineries and military bases and planned to travel to Pakistan to get military training at a terrorist camp, which authorities said Ahmed then tried to do.

Ahmed, who was indicted on suspicion of giving material support of terrorism, was being held at an undisclosed location. He waived his right to arraignment and pleaded not guilty.

Ahmed was arrested March 23 when the indictment was returned under seal. It was unsealed by the court Thursday. The charge carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

Ahmed's court-appointed attorney, Jack Martin, did not return messages seeking comment.

Sadequee, 19, who is accused of making materially false statements in connection with an ongoing federal terrorism investigation, was arrested in Bangladesh and was en route to New York City to be arraigned.

Several phone messages left with his sister were not immediately returned.

"There is no imminent threat," said FBI Special Agent Richard Kolko, a spokesman in Washington.

Authorities said the two men spent several days in Canada, where they met with others being investigated by the terrorism task force.

Sadequee is accused of lying about the trip when he was interviewed at John F. Kennedy International Airport in August as he was about to leave for Bangladesh. The affidavit said Sadequee had said he traveled alone in January to visit an aunt.

When Sadequee's suitcase was searched at JFK, agents found a CD-ROM containing encrypted files that the FBI has been unable to decode and a map of the Washington area hidden in the lining, the affidavit said.

One day later, federal agents interviewed Ahmed, who was coming back from a monthlong trip to Pakistan, at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. He said he had gone to Toronto with Sadequee, according to the affidavit.

Federal agents found that money for both men's 2005 bus trip from Atlanta to Toronto was withdrawn from Sadequee's account.

Last month, Ahmed told agents they had met with extremists and plotted how to disrupt military and commercial communications and traffic by disabling the Global Positioning System, the affidavit said.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wire/ats-ap_top13apr21,0,6019294.story
 
Re: New tape threatens attacks on Los Angeles

Greed said:
New tape threatens attacks on Los Angeles
13 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A videotape televised on Sunday purportedly from a U.S.-member of al Qaeda threatened Los Angeles and Melbourne, Australia, on the fourth anniversary of the September 11 attacks.

ABC News said it had received the video in Pakistan. It reported the masked speaker appears to be Adam Gadahn, from southern California, who threatens attacks on the two cities, "Allah willing," and warns that the attackers will show no compassion.

"Yesterday, London and Madrid. Tomorrow, Los Angeles and Melbourne," he said.

"We love peace, but peace on our terms," the speaker said.

Gadahn was believed to have been the young American who appeared in another threatening tape about year ago.

ABC said the young man apparently converted to Islam at an Orange County, California, mosque as a teen-ager.

Los Angeles Police Chief William Bratton told ABC News his city has "very robust counter terrorism" steps in place and was already on a heightened state of alert because of next month's Jewish holidays.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050911...ItZ.3QA;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
Almost a year to the day ... Gadahn appears in video again:



<font size="5"><center>American Appears in al-Qaida Videotape</font size></center>

AL_QAIDA_VIDEO.sff_NY116_20060902160140.jpg

man identified as Adam Yehiye Gadahn, an American who
the FBI believes attended al-Qaida training camps in Pakistan
and served as an al-Qaida translator, speaks during part of a
41-minute video posted on an Islamic militant Web site Saturday,
Sept. 2, 2006 - nine days before the fifth anniversary of the
Sept. 11 terror attacks. Gadahn is also known as "Azzam the
American." The video also showed Al-Qaida's deputy leader
Ayman al-Zawahri. (AP Photo


Associated Press
By LEE KEATH
Sep 2, 7:22 PM (ET)

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - An American thought to be an al-Qaida activist appeared in a videotape with the terror group's deputy leader Saturday and called on his countrymen to convert to Islam and for U.S. soldiers to switch sides in the Iraq and Afghan wars.

The 48-minute video, posted on an Islamic militant Web site, had footage of al-Qaida's No. 2 leader, Ayman al-Zawahri, and of Adam Yehiye Gadahn, a 28-year-old American who the FBI believes attended al-Qaida training camps in Pakistan and served as an al-Qaida translator.

It was the second time Gadahn appeared in the same video with al-Zawahri. In a July 7 video marking the one-year anniversary of the terror attack on London commuters, Gadahn appeared briefly, saying no Muslim should "shed tears" for Westerners killed by al-Qaida attacks.

But Saturday's video - and the length of Gadahn's speech - suggested al-Qaida has found in him someone who can directly address the American people in idiom they are familiar with.

Appearing days before the fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the U.S., Gadahn spoke for nearly the entire video, wearing a white robe and a white turban, sitting in front of a desk with a computer and Islamic religious books in a room with a white wall.

The video included no direct threats of terror attacks.

Gadahn delivered a lecture on Islam and the "errors" in Christianity and Judaism. He also said the United States is losing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and told U.S. soldiers they are fighting President Bush's "crusades."

"Instead of killing yourself for Bush ... why not surrender to the truth (of Islam), escape from the unbelieving army and join the winning side. Time is running out so make the right choice before it's too late," he said.

Al-Zawahri gave only a brief introduction to the video, calling on Americans to convert to Islam.

"To the American people and the people of the West in general ... God sent his Prophet Muhammad with guidance and the religion of truth ... and sent him as a herald," he said.

The CIA said it had conducted a technical review on the videotape and concluded the voice is al-Zawahri's. A CIA spokeswoman said the agency is not authorized to conduct such analysis on U.S. citizens such as Gadahn.

White House spokeswoman Christie Parell said the message reflects al-Qaida's "continued attempts to subjugate the world under its twisted view of Islam, which labels as enemies and infidels those who do not have the same beliefs."

Little is known about Gadahn's role in al-Qaida. A Californian who converted to Islam, he disappeared soon after the Sept. 11 attacks. In 2004, the FBI announced it was seeking Gadahn in connection with possible terrorist threats against the U.S., but adding it did not have information linking him to any specific terror activities.

"You know that if you die as an unbeliever in battle against the Muslims you're going straight to Hell without passing 'Go,'" Gadahn said on the video, addressing American soldiers. "You know you're considered by Bush and his bunch of warmongers as nothing more than expendable cannon fodder ... You know they couldn't care less about your safety and well-being."

"We send a special invitation (to convert to Islam) to all of you fighting Bush's crusader pipedream in Afghanistan, Iraq and wherever else 'W' has sent you to die. You know the war can't be won," he said, using Bush's nickname.

Gadahn also urged other Americans to convert to Islam.

"It is time for the unbelievers to discard these incoherent and illogical beliefs," he said. "Isn't it the time for the Christians, Jews, Buddhists and atheists to cast off the cloak of the spiritual darkness which enshrouds them and emerge into the light of Islam?"

Gadahn and al-Zawahri appeared in separate parts of the video, which was released by al-Qaida's production wing, As-Sahab. Gadahn spoke with his face uncovered, resembling FBI photos, with his name and nom de guerre - "Azzam the American" - written in titles in Arabic and English next to him. Arabic subtitles translated his comments.

Besides the July 7 video, Gadahn is believed to be a masked figure who appeared in two previous videos not officially from al-Qaida, one given to ABC television in 2004 and another a few days before the fourth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.

In the 2005 tape, the speaker - who had black cloth draped over his face, leaving only his eyes visible - threatened new terror attacks in Los Angeles and Melbourne, Australia. The 2004 tape praised the Sept. 11 attacks and said a new wave of attacks could come at any moment.

Much of Gadahn's latest speech was dedicated to urging Americans to convert to Islam, and he dotted it with fluently recited Arabic verses from the Quran and stories from Islamic history.

He denounced Christianity as a "hollow shell of a religion, whose followers cling to an empty faith and a false conviction in their own salvation."

"It is time for the unbelievers to discard these incoherent and illogical beliefs," he said. "We invite all Americans and other unbelievers to Islam, wherever they are."

The new video had been advertised on militant Web sites for several days. Al-Zawahri last appeared in a video July 27, calling for Muslims to unite in a holy war against Israel and to join the fighting in Lebanon and Gaza.

Nancy Pearlman, Gadahn's aunt, declined to comment about the tape when contacted by The Associated Press, saying she had not seen it. She declined to talk about anything else regarding Gadahn.

---

Associated Press writers Omar Sinan and Bassem Mroue contributed to this report.



http://apnews1.iwon.com//article/20060902/D8JT14JO2.html
 

Video Is a Window Into a Terror Suspect’s Isolation


04detain.xlarge1.jpg

Jose Padilla, fitted with blacked-out goggles, was videotaped by the government when
he was allowed outside solitary confinement to see a dentist.


By DEBORAH SONTAG
Published: December 4, 2006
One spring day during his three and a half years as an enemy combatant, Jose Padilla experienced a break from the monotony of his solitary confinement in a bare cell in the brig at the Naval Weapons Station in Charleston, S.C.

That day, Mr. Padilla, a Brooklyn-born Muslim convert whom the Bush administration had accused of plotting a dirty bomb attack and had detained without charges, got to go to the dentist.

“Today is May 21,” a naval official declared to a camera videotaping the event. “Right now we’re ready to do a root canal treatment on Jose Padilla, our enemy combatant.”

Several guards in camouflage and riot gear approached cell No. 103. They unlocked a rectangular panel at the bottom of the door and Mr. Padilla’s bare feet slid through, eerily disembodied. As one guard held down a foot with his black boot, the others shackled Mr. Padilla’s legs. Next, his hands emerged through another hole to be manacled.

04detainl.arge2.jpg

In the videotape, Mr. Padilla's feet were shackled.

Wordlessly, the guards, pushing into the cell, chained Mr. Padilla’s cuffed hands to a metal belt. Briefly, his expressionless eyes met the camera before he lowered his head submissively in expectation of what came next: noise-blocking headphones over his ears and blacked-out goggles over his eyes. Then the guards, whose faces were hidden behind plastic visors, marched their masked, clanking prisoner down the hall to his root canal.

The videotape of that trip to the dentist, which was recently released to Mr. Padilla’s lawyers and viewed by The New York Times, offers the first concrete glimpse inside the secretive military incarceration of an American citizen whose detention without charges became a test case of President Bush’s powers in the fight against terror. Still frames from the videotape were posted in Mr. Padilla’s electronic court file late Friday.

To Mr. Padilla’s lawyers, the pictures capture the dehumanization of their client during his military detention from mid-2002 until earlier this year, when the government changed his status from enemy combatant to criminal defendant and transferred him to the federal detention center in Miami. He now awaits trial scheduled for late January.

Together with other documents filed late Friday, the images represent the latest and most aggressive sally by defense lawyers who declared this fall that charges against Mr. Padilla should be dismissed for “outrageous government conduct,” saying that he was mistreated and tortured during his years as an enemy combatant.

Now lawyers for Mr. Padilla, 36, suggest that he is unfit to stand trial. They argue that he has been so damaged by his interrogations and prolonged isolation that he suffers post-traumatic stress disorder and is unable to assist in his own defense. His interrogations, they say, included hooding, stress positions, assaults, threats of imminent execution and the administration of “truth serums.”

A Pentagon spokesman, Lt. Col. Todd Vician, said Sunday that the military disputes Mr. Padilla’s accusations of mistreatment. And, in court papers, prosecutors deny “in the strongest terms” the accusations of torture and say that “Padilla’s conditions of confinement were humane and designed to ensure his safety and security.”

“His basic needs were met in a conscientious manner, including Halal (Muslim acceptable) food, clothing, sleep and daily medical assessment and treatment when necessary,” the government stated. “While in the brig, Padilla never reported any abusive treatment to the staff or medical personnel.”

In the brig, Mr. Padilla was denied access to counsel for 21 months. Andrew Patel, one of his lawyers, said his isolation was not only severe but compounded by material and sensory deprivations. In an affidavit filed Friday, he alleged that Mr. Padilla was held alone in a 10-cell wing of the brig; that he had little human contact other than with his interrogators; that his cell was electronically monitored and his meals were passed to him through a slot in the door; that windows were blackened, and there was no clock or calendar; and that he slept on a steel platform after a foam mattress was taken from him, along with his copy of the Koran, “as part of an interrogation plan.”

Mr. Padilla’s situation, as an American declared an enemy combatant and held without charges by his own government, was extraordinary and the conditions of his detention appear to have been unprecedented in the military justice system.

Philip D. Cave, a former judge advocate general for the Navy and now a lawyer specializing in military law, said, “There’s nothing comparable in terms of severity of confinement, in terms of how Padilla was held, especially considering that this was pretrial confinement.”

Ali al-Marri, a Qatari and Saudi dual citizen and the only enemy combatant currently detained in the United States, has made similar claims of isolation and deprivation at the brig in South Carolina. The Pentagon spokesman, Lieutenant Vician, said Sunday that he could not comment on the methods used to escort Mr. Padilla to the dentist. Blackened goggles and earphones are rarely employed in internal prison transports in the United States, but riot gear is sometimes used for violent prisoners.

One of Mr. Padilla’s lawyers, Orlando do Campo, said, however, that Mr. Padilla was a “completely docile” prisoner. “There was not one disciplinary problem with Jose ever, not one citation, not one act of disobedience,” said Mr. do Campo, who is a lawyer at the Miami federal public defender’s office.

In his affidavit, Mr. Patel said, “I was told by members of the brig staff that Mr. Padilla’s temperament was so docile and inactive that his behavior was like that of ‘a piece of furniture.’ ”

Federal prosecutors and defense lawyers are locked in a tug of war over the relevancy of Mr. Padilla’s military detention to the present criminal case. Federal prosecutors have asked the judge to forbid Mr. Padilla’s lawyers from mentioning the circumstances of his military detention during the trial, maintaining that their accusations could “distract and inflame the jury.”

But defense lawyers say it is unconscionable to ignore Mr. Padilla’s military detention because, among other reasons, it altered him in a way that will impinge on his trial.

Dr. Angela Hegarty, director of forensic psychiatry at the Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in Queens, N.Y., who examined Mr. Padilla for a total of 22 hours in June and September, said in an affidavit filed Friday that he “lacks the capacity to assist in his own defense.”

“It is my opinion that as the result of his experiences during his detention and interrogation, Mr. Padilla does not appreciate the nature and consequences of the proceedings against him, is unable to render assistance to counsel, and has impairments in reasoning as the result of a mental illness, i.e., post-traumatic stress disorder, complicated by the neuropsychiatric effects of prolonged isolation,” Dr. Hegarty said in an affidavit for the defense.

Mr. Padilla’s status was abruptly changed to criminal defendant from enemy combatant last fall. At the time, the Supreme Court was weighing whether to take up the legality of his military detention — and thus the issue of the president’s authority to seize an American citizen on American soil and hold him indefinitely without charges — when the Bush administration pre-empted its decision by filing criminal charges against Mr. Padilla.

Mr. Padilla was added as a defendant in a terrorism conspiracy case already under way in Miami. The strong public accusations made during his military detention — about the dirty bomb, Al Qaeda connections and supposed plans to set off natural gas explosions in apartment buildings — appear nowhere in the indictment against him. The indictment does not allege any specific violent plot against America.

Mr. Padilla is portrayed in the indictment as the recruit of a “North American terror support cell” that sent money, goods and recruits abroad to assist “global jihad” in general, with a special interest in Bosnia and Chechnya. Mr. Padilla, the indictment asserts, traveled overseas “to participate in violent jihad” and filled out an application for a mujahedin training camp in Afghanistan.

Michael Caruso, a public defender for Mr. Padilla, pleaded “absolutely not guilty” for him to charges of conspiracy and of providing material support to terrorists. Mr. Padilla faces two charges that each carry a maximum penalty of 15 years.

Over the summer, Judge Marcia G. Cooke of United States District Court in Miami threw out the most serious charge, of conspiracy to murder, kidnap and maim persons in a foreign country, saying that it replicated accusations in the other counts and could lead to multiple punishments for a single crime. This was a setback for the government, which has appealed the dismissal.

Mr. Padilla’s lawyers say they have had a difficult time persuading him that they are on his side.

From the time Mr. Padilla was allowed access to counsel, Mr. Patel visited him repeatedly in the brig and in the Miami detention center, and Mr. Padilla has observed Mr. Patel arguing on his behalf in Miami federal court.

But, Mr. Patel said in his affidavit, his client is nonetheless mistrustful. “Mr. Padilla remains unsure if I and the other attorneys working on his case are actually his attorneys or another component of the government’s interrogation scheme,” Mr. Patel said.

Mr. do Campo said that Mr. Padilla was not incommunicative, and that he expressed curiosity about what was going on in the world, liked to talk about sports and demonstrated particularly keen interest in the Chicago Bears.

But the defense lawyers’ questions often echo the questions interrogators have asked Mr. Padilla, and when that happens, he gets jumpy and shuts down, the lawyers said.

Dr. Hegarty said Mr. Padilla refuses to review the video recordings of his interrogations, which have been released to his lawyers but remain classified.

He is especially reluctant to discuss what happened in the brig, fearful that he will be returned there some day, Mr. Patel said in his affidavit.

“During questioning, he often exhibits facial tics, unusual eye movements and contortions of his body,” Mr. Patel said. “The contortions are particularly poignant since he is usually manacled and bound by a belly chain when he has meetings with counsel.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/04/u...n=da34e5482b02b8b8&ex=1165899600&partner=IWON
 

Rainier Valley barber shop owner flees U.S.


Facing sentencing in plea deal, he phones FBI to say he's in Somalia

Seattle Post Intelligencer
By PAUL SHUKOVSKY
P-I REPORTER

Ruben Shumpert, who federal agents allege made his Rainier Valley barber shop a kind of "anti-American training ground for Muslims" where children were taught "how to shoot and fight the Americans," has telephoned the FBI to say he won't be going to prison anytime soon.

Shumpert, who faces sentencing on federal counterfeiting and weapons charges, has fled to Somalia.

A warrant has been issued for the arrest of Shumpert, who is also known as Amir Abdul Muhaimin, Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Redkey said. He was to be sentenced Tuesday.

Shumpert -- an African American convert to Islam -- was among more than a dozen, mostly African immigrants from Islamic countries arrested by the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force two years ago on a mix of charges, including immigration fraud and bank fraud.

Shumpert was never charged with any terrorism crimes, but court documents paint a picture of his barber shop at 7821 Rainier Ave. S. as a gathering place for adherents of radical Islam where he showed children videotapes of "fighting, shooting and killing with images on Shumpert's computer screen of al-Qaida and the Taliban."

Shumpert had been free on personal recognizance and was facing sentencing under a plea agreement when he fled the country, Redkey said. Shumpert called an FBI agent on the Joint Terrorism Task Force from Somalia, Redkey said.

But he noted that the United States has no extradition treaty with Somalia. Somalia is considered a fertile breeding ground for radical Islamic terrorists by U.S. intelligence agencies.

Redkey said Shumpert also likely is to be charged with failing to appear for his sentencing hearing, a separate felony.

A condition of Shumpert's release before sentencing was that he surrender his passport, said Redkey, who noted that in recent years, it has become more common for judges to allow defendants to turn in their passports after they are released from custody. Shumpert never surrendered his passport, Redkey said.

Redkey said the U.S. Attorney's Office is reviewing the practice of allowing people out of custody before they surrender their passport.
 
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The Making of a Homegrown Terrorist

The real threat to the West is not from foreign jihadis but
from ‘unremarkable’ civilians within our societies, says an
insightful new report from the New York Police Department.



By Christopher Dickey
Newsweek
Aug 15, 2007


What happens when politics and politicians, legislation and regulations fail to address the real and continuing threat that terrorists pose to our homes, families and businesses? Do we pretend that the fundamental laws we’ve got in the United States, including the Constitution and Bill of Rights, need not apply? Or should we declare war half a world away, imagining that with shock and awe and open-ended military occupation we can terrorize the terrorists? No. We’ve been there, done that, and there’s every indication the threat is not only growing but growing closer to home. Maybe as close as next door.

Fortunately, a study published Wednesday by the New York City police department’s Intelligence Division, which is run by former CIA deputy director of operations David Cohen, provides a clear-eyed assessment of the risks that are real, rather than imagined, and opens the way for solutions that support the enforcement of the laws we’ve got in the war of ideas that is at hand. The terrorists’ ideology, it warns, “is proliferating in Western democracies at a logarithmic rate.” And the police can only do so much to counter this fact. Communities have to understand it as well.

“Radicalization in the West: The Homegrown Threat,” which I read in draft form several weeks ago and just reread on the Web, provides the most succinct and pragmatic analysis of recent terrorist trends I have seen anywhere. Its conclusions are based on a close study of 11 cases, from London, England, to Lackawanna, New York; Sydney, Australia, to Portland, Oregon; Madrid, Spain, to Herald Square in the heart of Manhattan, with some revealing insights into the September 11, 2001, plot as well.

The authors, Mitchell D. Silber and Arvin Bhatt, work mainly out of the NYPD’s intelligence headquarters in a fashionable (and officially unspecified) corner of Manhattan, but they were able to call on firsthand reporting by NYPD detectives and analysts deployed around the globe. They also had input from outside consultants, including influential French criminologist Alain Bauer.

The conclusion: in the six years since 9/11, the real threat to the West that has taken shape is not from abroad but from within, and most of the plotters are what NYPD Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly calls “unremarkable” people with unremarkable jobs and educations. “Direct command and control by al-Qaeda has been the exception, rather than the rule,” the report concludes. Radicalization of young Muslims takes place not in spite of a Western environment but, in many cases, because of it. Communities that feel like Muslim ghettoes, isolated from the Western society and values around them, are especially vulnerable to extremism, says the report.

The psychological and social evolution of radical Muslim terrorists has been observed by scholars of mayhem for many years (indeed, you can see it in Kurt Kurtovic, the American-born jihadi at the center of my 1997 novel, “Innocent Blood”). And much has been written of late about the way the Internet serves as “a driver and enabler for the process of radicalization,” in the words of the NYPD report. But the cops go further here. They lay out clear and observable stages in the making of a homegrown terrorist:

Pre-Radicalization: Some characteristics of “pedigree, lifestyle, religion, social status, neighborhood and education” are common “just prior to the start of their journey” down the path to violent jihad. They’re not poor. “Middle class families and students appear to provide the most fertile ground for the seeds of radicalization,” the report concludes. They are mostly male Muslims under the age of 35 and local residents or citizens of Western liberal democracies. Some of “the most vulnerable” were born to other faiths and recently converted to Islam. They are of varied ethnic backgrounds—and almost all are “clean skins” in police parlance. They’ve got no records. The bottom line: at this stage they’re effectively impossible to profile.

Self-Identification: This is where the winnowing begins; the terrorists-to-be start to identify with what the report calls Salafi Islam, which emphasizes a “pure” faith harking back to the early days of conquest and empire in the Caliphate of the seventh century. In fact the ideology they embrace is even narrower than that. It’s the version often ascribed to Al Qaeda, but embraced by many other radical groups as well, which twists the revelations, sayings and hearsay of the Prophet Mohammed to serve anti-Western rage. A political or personal crisis can provoke this phase. So does an increasing association with small clusters of other angry young men (and occasionally angry young women).

Indoctrination: Goaded by the “groupthink” of fellow believers and fed by a constant diet of Internet propaganda, the terrorist candidate comes to believe that his faith demands action. Most likely, there will be what the report calls a “spiritual sanctioner” who literally blesses the idea of violent jihad with his teachings and opinions. There will also be a sort of “incubator”—whether a mosque, bookstore, student group or other small organization—where contacts can be made and fanaticism can be reinforced by the group’s approval.

Jihadization: In this, the final phase, “members of the cluster accept their individual duty to participate in jihad.” They call themselves holy warriors, and ultimately begin planning their attacks. Typically, by this stage they don’t want to waste any time. While earlier steps from ordinary guy to would-be mass murderer may take years, “this jihadization component can be a very rapid process,” says the NYPD report, “taking only a few months, or even weeks to run its course.” At its center will be an “operational leader,” like Mohammed Siddique Khan, who commanded the July 7, 2005, bombings in London, or like Muhammad Atta, on September 11, 2001—both of whom seemed so unremarkable just months before.

One of the most interesting observations in the study, in fact, compares the cluster in the 9/11 attack with those that came after. The similarities are remarkable. The real difference, apart from the number of casualties, is that the Hamburg cell that attacked on 9/11 eventually had more direct contact with the Al Qaeda leadership and was persuaded to hit the United States as part of a plan originally conceived by mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed in the 1990s. But the way the key members of the group identified, radicalized and prepared themselves for the action fits right into the paradigm. They were “the critical piece” that KSM and Osama bin Laden needed, says the report. Muhammad Atta and his buddies were “fluent in English, Western-educated, and accustomed to Western culture and lifestyle.” And they delivered themselves to Al Qaeda like a gift. The 9/11 attack itself hugely accelerated the overall process of radicalization among similar bunches of guys.

The fact that the pattern is so consistent “provides a tool for predictability,” says the report. But, knowing all this, what can law enforcement do about it? Few arrests can be made before a clear conspiracy is taking shape in the final stage. Any effort at blanket surveillance of Muslim communities is likely to be counterproductive, to say the least, by feeding the anger of those who already feel themselves singled out and persecuted.

The answer, says criminologist and consultant Bauer, is “human intelligence, human intelligence, human intelligence.” But to get effective information, the community has to be enlisted in the cause, not alienated by repression. So the report was presented Wednesday to an organization called NYPD Shield, which aims at “countering terrorism through information sharing” with businesses and security specialists. Kelly says it is also meant “to contribute to the debate among intelligence and law-enforcement agencies on how best to counter this emerging threat.”

You’d think it would be obvious that to stop groups of violent jihadists, especially in a free society that wants to remain that way, it makes sense to study how they begin. But, then again, common sense has not been the hallmark of Washington’s policies these last six years. It’s good to know it can still be found in New York City.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20285251/site/newsweek/
 

Somali-Americans’ Disappearances
Raise Alarm of Terrorism Ties


Some young Somali-Americans from the Minneapolis-St. Paul area
were recruited to train at terrorist camps and fight in Somalia’s civil
war; Now, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is concerned those
Somalis may return to the U.S., where they are citizens, and plot
terrorist attacks. Those fears were heightened last week when
Robert Mueller, the FBI director, said a Somali-American living
in Minneapolis was “radicalized” in his hometown, went to
Somalia and
became the first known U.S. citizen
to carry out a suicide bombing



Bloomberg
By Justin Blum

March 6 (Bloomberg) -- Seven months ago, Mustafa Salat told his father he was taking his clothes to the laundromat near their apartment in St. Paul, Minnesota. He never returned.

Salat, 19, later called from his birthplace, Somalia, and said he was okay, though he wouldn’t discuss what he was doing in a country he left when he was one year old, according to his parents, Lul and Ali. Salat’s parents, along with U.S. authorities, said they fear he and other young Somali-Americans from the Minneapolis-St. Paul area were recruited to train at terrorist camps and fight in Somalia’s civil war.

Now, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is concerned those Somalis may return to the U.S., where they are citizens, and plot terrorist attacks. Those fears were heightened last week when Robert Mueller, the FBI director, said a Somali-American living in Minneapolis was “radicalized” in his hometown, went to Somalia and became the first known U.S. citizen to carry out a suicide bombing.

“I am like a dead person walking,” said Lul, 42, who asked that her last name not be used and spoke in Somali through an interpreter. She and her husband go to bed with the phone under the pillow, fearing bad news about their son, they said. “I am not sleeping,” Lul said.


FBI Interviews

The FBI said it has been interviewing relatives of the missing and monitoring other cities with large Somali populations such as Columbus, Ohio, and Seattle, for reports of disappearances. The bureau wouldn’t comment on Salat or estimate the number of Somali-Americans who have disappeared. The FBI wouldn’t say whether those who went missing would face charges if they return.

At least 17 young men have vanished during the past two years from the Minneapolis-St. Paul area and are believed to be in Somalia now, said Omar Jamal, executive director of the Somali Justice Advocacy Center in St. Paul, a legal-aid organization.

Jonathan Evans, a counter-terrorism official in the U.K., recently raised concern in a newspaper interview that residents there had trained in camps in Somalia and had returned to Britain. The FBI won’t say whether any of the Somali-Americans have returned to the U.S.

The FBI is concerned that there may be more Somalis who have disappeared and whose parents haven’t reported them as missing, said E.K. Wilson, a bureau spokesman in Minneapolis.


Senate Hearings

The disappearances also are raising concern among lawmakers. Joseph Lieberman, a Connecticut independent who heads the Senate homeland security panel, plans a hearing March 11 on recruitment efforts in the U.S. by Somali groups.

Somali-Americans have gone to Somalia and trained there in terrorism camps associated with the militant group al-Shabaab, or “the Youth,” which has ties to al-Qaeda, said a U.S. counter- terrorism official who spoke on condition of anonymity. Al- Shabaab was designated as a terrorist group last year by the U.S.

The official said al-Shabaab and al-Qaeda are closely connected and it is unclear which organization runs the Somali training camps.

U.S.-backed Ethiopian troops entered Somalia in 2006. Islamist and clan-based opposition militias began a guerrilla war against the Ethiopian occupation. Ethiopian troops withdrew from Somalia in January after the occupation failed to end Somalia’s civil war, leaving much of the south of the country under the control of al-Shabaab.

Obama’s Inauguration

While al-Shabaab has focused its activities within Somalia, its aspirations may be expanding. The FBI investigated a possible threatened attack by the group that could have been directed at Washington, coinciding with President Barack Obama’s Jan. 20 inauguration.

The disappearances are worrisome because of the risk posed by citizens of the U.S. and U.K. who can travel freely and blend in with the population, terrorism analysts said.

“It’s a blinking yellow light that needs further attention before it deteriorates and becomes a dangerous opening for attack,” James Phillips, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington public policy organization, said in an interview.

The recruiting in the U.S. “raises the question of whether these young men will one day come home, and, if so, what they might undertake here,” the FBI’s Mueller said in a Feb. 23 speech in Washington.


Suicide Bomber

Mueller flagged the case of Shirwa Ahmed, 27, who lived in Minneapolis before going to Somalia, where he carried out a suicide bombing in October that killed at least 30 people, according to news reports. Ahmed was a naturalized U.S. citizen.

For their part, Salat’s parents said they don’t know if their son is involved with al-Shabaab.

Lul and three other mothers or grandmothers of missing young men have formed a group attempting to make sure the disappearances are reported, and to ensure that if their children return, they won’t be held by authorities. Other parents may not have reported disappearances for fear their children will be targeted by law enforcement, or that family immigration violations may come to light, said Jamal, who helped organize the mothers.

“If he comes back, I’m afraid he will be arrested,” Lul said of her son. “We don’t want him to be victimized again.”

Salat, a high school student, often asked questions about the food eaten in Somalia, and about universities there, his father said. He talked about wanting to become a nurse or police officer in the U.S., never about returning to Somalia.

Salat left behind some clothes and books in Arabic on a shelf in a room with a bunk bed that he shared with his brother Zacharia, 17.


‘Indoctrinated’

Lul said someone “indoctrinated” her son, though she isn’t sure who persuaded him to travel to Somalia. Jamal said those he knows of who disappeared had attended a Minneapolis mosque, the Abubakar As-Saddique Islamic Center.

Omar Hurre, director of the center, said the mosque played no role and that he has urged anyone with knowledge of what happened to come forward.

“We don’t know where they picked up those ideas,” Hurre said in an interview. “Attending the mosque programs does not in any way, shape or form mean we had anything to do with this.”

Even so, he said the mosque’s imam and a leader of its youth group were placed on the U.S. government’s no-fly list, preventing them from traveling to Mecca. Amy Kudwa, a Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman, said the department doesn’t comment on those on the no-fly list.

Another member of the mothers’ group, Fadumo Elmi, said through an interpreter that her grandson, Mahamoud Hassan, 18, disappeared in November. In the days before he disappeared, Hassan brought Elmi money to help pay for clothes and shoes for an Islamic celebration, she said.

Hassan called Elmi from Somalia last month. She told him to come back. He said he couldn’t, Elmi said. He also wouldn’t answer questions about what he was doing in Somalia.

“His mind was taken by something we don’t know,” said Elmi, as she wiped away tears using her head covering. “They forced him out of my hand.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Justin Blum in St. Paul, Minnesota at jblum4@bloomberg.net


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=aV778.GDWLqE&refer=home
 

Suspects in NY jihad plot due in court


* Suspects wanted to commit holy war, police say

* NY Jews shocked to be target of purported attack

* Mayor, police commissioner greet worshipers


7_61_Synagogue3_320.jpg

May 20: An FBI agent escorts a man from Newburgh,
New York into Federal Plaza in New York.


Reuters
By Edith Honan
Thursday May 21, 2009


NEW YORK, May 21 (Reuters) - New York's mayor and police chief sought to calm Jewish worshipers on Thursday, the morning after authorities said they foiled a plot to blow up two synagogues and simultaneously shoot down military planes.

Four men arrested in the suspected plot were due to appear in court later in the day in White Plains, New York. Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said all four had criminal records and did not appear to be part of al Qaeda.

As they greeted worshipers at one of the targeted synagogues Thursday morning, Kelly and Mayor Michael Bloomberg conveyed calm following the latest threat to New York City, which has been on high alert for another attack since the Sept. 11 hijacked plane attacks of 2001.

The FBI and New York police arrested the four Muslim men on Wednesday night after they planted what they believed to be explosives in two cars -- one parked outside each synagogue -- and planned to head to an air base with what they thought was an activated stinger surface-to-air missile.

But the explosives were inert and the stinger deactivated as the four suspects had been infiltrated by an FBI informant who provided the fake weapons.

"They stated that they wanted to commit jihad," Kelly told reporters, using a term that can mean holy war. "They were disturbed about what was happening in Afghanistan and Pakistan, that Muslims were being killed. They made the statement that if Jews were killed in this attack that would be all right."

Worshipers at the Riverdale Jewish Center, an orthodox synagogue that had an early morning service, were shocked.

"It's just unbelievable, unbelievable, that it's here in this community," said Rose Spindler, who said she was a Holocaust survivor. "They should let us live. How can they come here and do that to innocent people? We were very lucky."

David Winter, the executive director of the Riverdale Jewish Center, said the possibility of an attack was "always in the back of your mind."

"We were shocked. The shock and being floored is followed by relief," Winter said.

The other target, the Riverdale Temple, is a reform synagogue.

The suspects were due in court on the day U.S. President Barack Obama was to speak on national security and outline his strategy for closing the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay where terrorism suspects are being held. [ID:nN20544607]


HOME-GROWN

None of the four suspects had any known connection to al Qaeda, Kelly said. One of them was of Haitian descent and the other three American-born.

"It speaks to our concern about home-grown terrorism ... that in many ways is the most difficult to address," Kelly said.

The two synagogues are in a wealthy area of the Bronx, just north of Manhattan and near a highway that leads upstate toward New York's Air National Guard base at Stewart airport in Newburgh, where authorities said the men planned to shoot down planes with surface-to-air guided missiles.

The suspects were identified as James Cromitie, David Williams, Onta Williams and Laguerre Payen. Kelly called Cromitie, 53, the leader of the group. Two of the others were aged 29 and 33. Kelly said they may have converted to an extreme vision of Islam in jail, he said.

Each man is charged with one count of conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction within the United States, which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison, and one count of conspiracy to acquire and use anti-aircraft missiles, which also carries a maximum penalty of life in prison.

All the men lived in Newburgh, about 60 miles (100 km) north of New York City, authorities said.

According to investigators, Cromitie said if he died a martyr, he would go to "paradise" and that he was interested in doing "something to America," the complaint said.

In October, Cromitie and the other men began a series of meetings at a house in Newburgh to plot their attacks and just last month they selected the synagogue and Jewish community center and conducted surveillance, it said.

The complaint said they bought an arsenal in May that included improvised explosive devices containing inert C-4 plastic explosives and a surface-to-air guided missile provided by the FBI that was not capable of being fired.

In November, according to the complaint, Cromitie said, "The best target (the World Trade Center) was hit already" and "I would like to get (destroy) a synagogue."

(Additional reporting by Mark Egan; Writing by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Bill Trott)


http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSN21196807
 
<font size="5">
Suspects in NYC Synagogue Bomb Plot

</font size>


0521090313_M_Synagogue5_350.jpg

May 21: Onta Williams is seen seated in a police car
after being taken out from a federal building in New
York


0521090313_M_Synagogue6_450.jpg

May 21: James Cromitie, right, is led by police officers from a federal
building in New York after being arrested on charges related to a bombing
plot in the Bronx.


0521090313_M_Synagogue7_450.jpg

May 21: Onta Williams also known as Hamza is led by police officers from
a federal building in New York after being arrested by the FBI on charges
related to a plot to bomb targets in the Bronx section of New York.


0521090313_M_Synagogue8_450.jpg

May 21: David Williams also known as Daoud is led by police officers
from a federal building in New York after being arrested on charges
related to a bombing plot in the Bronx.


0521090021_M_Synagogue1_450.jpg

May 20: An FBI agent escorts a man from Newburgh, New York into
Federal Plaza in New York.


0521090021_M_Synagogue2_450.jpg

May 20: An FBI agent escorts a man from Newburgh, New York into
Federal Plaza in New York.


0521090021_M_Synagogue3_450.jpg

AP/WNBC TV May 20: Police stand outside the Riverdale Jewish Center
in the Bronx section in New York.
 
<font size="5"><center>
7 North Carolina men charged
with plotting 'violent jihad'</font size></center>



PH2009072702806.jpg

This undated photo provided by the
City County Bureau of Identification
in Wake County shows Mohammad
Omar Aly Hassan. Hassan is being
charged with conspiring to support
terrorism and traveling overseas to
participate in "violent jihad,"
according to an indictment unsealed
Monday, July 27, 2009. (AP Photo/
City County Bureau of Identification)
(AP)

PH2009072900228.jpg

This undated photo provided by the
City County Bureau of Identification
in Wake County shows Daniel Patrick
Boyd. Boyd and the six other men
were arrested, Monday, July 27,
2009, and made their first appear-
ances in Raleigh, charged with
providing material support to terrorism.
(AP Photo/City County Bureau of
Identification) (AP)





By MIKE BAKER
The Associated Press
Monday, July 27, 2009; 11:01 PM

RALEIGH, N.C. -- A father, his two sons and four other North Carolina men are accused of military-style training at home and plotting "violent jihad" through a series of terror attacks abroad, federal authorities said Monday.

Officials said the group was led by Daniel Patrick Boyd, a married 39-year-old who lived in an unassuming lakeside home in a rural area south of Raleigh, where he and his family walked their dog and operated a drywall business. But two decades ago, Boyd, who is a U.S. citizen, trained in terrorist camps in Pakistan and Afghanistan and fought against the Soviets for three years before returning to the United States.

An indictment released Monday does not detail any specific terrorist plans or targets overseas, although it claims some of the defendants traveled to Israel in 2007 with the intent of waging "violent jihad" and returned home without success.

"These charges hammer home the point that terrorists and their supporters are not confined to the remote regions of some far away land but can grow and fester right here at home," U.S. Attorney George E.B. Holding said. He would not give details of the alleged plots beyond what was in a news release and indictment.

The seven men made their first court appearances in Raleigh on Monday, charged with providing material support to terrorism. If convicted, they could face life in prison. Court documents charged that Boyd, also known as 'Saifullah,' encouraged others to engage in jihad.

Boyd's beliefs did not concur with his Raleigh-area moderate mosque, which he stopped attending and instead began meeting for Friday prayers in his home, said Holding, who did not say whether any or all the defendants met with him.

"These people had broken away because their local mosque did not follow their vision of being a good Muslim," Holding said. "This is not an indictment of the entire Muslim community."

In 1991, Boyd and his brother were convicted of bank robbery in Pakistan - accused of carrying identification showing they belonged to the radical Afghan guerrilla group, Hezb-e-Islami, or Party of Islam. Each was sentenced to have a foot and a hand cut off for the robbery, but the decision was later overturned.

Their wives told The Associated Press in an interview at the time that the couples had U.S. roots but the United States was a country of "kafirs" - Arabic for heathens.

Jim Stephenson, a neighbor of Daniel Boyd in Willow Spring, said he saw the family walking their dog in the neighborhood and that the indictment shocked the residents.

"We never saw anything to give any clues that something like that could be going on in their family," Stephenson said.

Two of the suspects are Boyd's sons: Zakariya Boyd, 20 and Dylan Boyd, 22. The others are Anes Subasic, 33; Mohammad Omar Aly Hassan, 22; and Ziyad Yaghi, 21. Hysen Sherifi, 24, a native of Kosovo and a U.S. legal permanent was also charged in the case. He was the only person arrested who was not a U.S. citizen.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702007.html
 
<font size="5"><Center>
Death Sought In Recruiting Center Shooting Case</font size></center>



LiveLeak-dot-com-5ca364504d54-army_recruiters_shot.jpg

Abdulhakim Muhammad, 24, formerly known as Carlos Bledsoe




LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas — Prosecutors told a judge Friday they’ll seek the death penalty for a Muslim convert who allegedly shot and killed a soldier outside an Arkansas Army recruiting center.

Abdulhakim Muhammad, 24, pleaded not guilty to the June shooting outside the center that killed Pvt. William Andrew Long and wounded another soldier. Muhammad, who was born Carlos Bledsoe, told the Associated Press in a telephone interview last month that he considered the shooting justified because it was in retaliation for U.S. military action in the Middle East.

Muhammad said nothing during his brief appearance in court, standing handcuffed at the wrists and ankles. A Pulaski County judge set a Feb. 15 trial date.

His lawyer Claiborne Ferguson declined an initial mental evaluation for his client during the hearing but told reporters afterward he didn’t know whether he’d ask for one. Ferguson wouldn’t say whether Muhammad’s calls to the AP would hurt his case.

“Obviously, he understands the situation that he is in and ... I think we’ll have a good working relationship,” the lawyer said.

The slain soldier’s father, Daris Long, told reporters before Friday’s hearing that he didn’t expect Muhammad to be tried quickly.

“I’ve got to figure this is going to be a long, long drawn-out thing,” Long said.

Long, 23, of Conway had just completed basic training and was volunteering at the suburban Little Rock recruiting office before starting an assignment in South Korea. Police say Muhammad shot Long and wounded another private who were smoking cigarettes outside of the station June 1. Police arrested Muhammad a short time later and recovered an assault rifle and two other weapons in the vehicle.

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">Since his arrest, Muhammad has called the AP bureau in Little Rock, saying he claimed responsibility for the shooting.

“Yes, I did tell the police upon my arrest that this was an act of retaliation, and not a reaction on the soldiers personally,” Muhammad said.

Muhammad converted to Islam and traveled to Yemen in September 2007. Immigration officials there arrested him in November 2008 after he overstayed his visa and had a fake Somali passport.</span>

His previous defense lawyer, Jim Hensley, said Muhammad traveled to Yemen and became radicalized after being tortured in a prison there. The Yemen Embassy and Muhammad both denied the torture claim.



http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=48b_1249107268
 
Last edited:

Alabama Man to be Charged with Providing Material Support for Terrorists


Accused terrorist Omar Hammami showed signs of religious extremism in high school, teacher says


large_American_terrorist_AP_Photo_IntelCenter.jpg

This still photo is taken from examiner.com. The Web site identifies the
man at right as Abu Mansour al-Amriki. Fox News has reported that al-
Amriki is a former Daphne High School and University of South Alabama
student whose given name is Omar Hammami. Fox News also reports
that al-Amriki has been secretly charged in Mobile with aiding terrorists.


Mobile Press-Register
by David Ferrara and
Brendan Kirby
Staff Reporters
September 06, 2009


MOBILE, Ala. -- A suspected al-Qaida-linked terrorist from Daphne, a suburban city on the outskirts of Mobile, Alabama, began to show an anti-American streak as far back as high school, one of his former teachers said Saturday.

Cynthia McMeans, who taught Omar Hammami in an international studies class and a Model United Nations program, said the teenager affected a Middle Eastern accent almost overnight during his junior year at Daphne High School.

As a teenager, Hammami had turned from the Baptist beliefs of his mother to the Muslim religion his father practiced, McMeans said, and in the spring of 2001, he expressed sympathy toward hard-line Islamic regimes.

"He was just starting on that path, when he was in the 11th grade," McMeans said. "It wasn't the religion part of it that was scary, it was supporting Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida and the Taliban and the Sharia law."

Citing a confidential source, Fox News reported Friday that a federal grand jury has issued a secret indictment against Hammami on a charge of providing material support for terrorists. The FBI and the U.S. Attorney's Office in Mobile have declined to comment on Hammami, who has appeared in several Internet videos from war-torn Somalia using the battlefield name Abu Mansour al-Amriki.

His father, Shafik Hammami, declined to talk about the allegations facing his son but expressed anger at the publicity his family has received.

"I am furious about what you wrote," he told the Press-Register on Saturday. "What gives you the right to put my name in the paper? To say where I work? What have I done?"
Omar Hammami was raised in the Plantation Hills subdivision in Daphne, and McMeans said the teen had a Southern accent when he first started her class.

As the lessons progressed, he became more dedicated to Islam, praying daily at the school, McMeans said, and he revealed radical political views.

One day, Hammami attacked another student who teased him for speaking Arabic in class, according to McMeans and the classmate, Mike Faulk.

"His calm face turned sour and before I had even noticed it he was on his feet and running around desks toward me," Faulk wrote in a blog post. "I stayed in my seat just staring at him having no idea what he was about to do. Then he put his hands around my throat, clamped down as tight as he could so that no air was coming in or out and just stared me right in the eyes."

Faulk, who now works as a journalist, told the Press-Register on Saturday that he also noticed signs that Hammami was sympathetic to al-Qaida.

"There's a difference between keeping an open mind and considering all views in a conflict, and then actually being of the opinion that innocent people getting caught in terrorist attacks deserved to die for some higher cause," Faulk said in an e-mail. "He would lean towards the latter, then sort of back off it once people started arguing with him."


large_Copy%20of%20hammamifromvideo.jpg

A still photo taken from a video posted online that reportedly shows a
terrorist simply known as 'The American.' Fox News is reporting that
the man shown grew up in Daphne, Ala., as Omar Hammami and is now
operating out of Somalia under the name Abu Mansour al-Amriki.


While others remembered Hammami as a quiet, normal teenager, McMeans said he argued in class in favor of the Taliban when they demolished Buddhist statues in Afghanistan.
Hammami, whose most recent Web posting appears to show him still in Somalia, withdrew from Daphne High School after his junior year, then attended the University of South Alabama.

The Vanguard, the student newspaper at the university, quoted Hammami in 2001 expressing concern about retaliation against Muslims following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

McMeans said Hammami called her shortly after the attacks, concerned about the media attention he received.

"You do a big disservice to all the Muslims and all the Arabic people around here if you spout off some kind of crazy jihadist stuff," McMeans recalled telling him. "You should be very careful about what you say."

The FBI has been aggressively investigating Americans with links to al-Shabaab, the al-Qaida-linked extremist group that al-Amriki allegedly joined. Federal prosecutors in Minnesota have brought terrorism charges against several Americans of Somali descent who are accused of supporting al-Shabaab.

Hammami has appeared in Web postings as "The American," calling for holy war against the government of Somalia and violence against the United States.

McMeans said she watched online videos in which al-Amriki talks about fighting "the enemy" in Somalia. He wears an unkempt beard and his dark hair is long. He appears thinner and older than the Omar she knew, but she hears his voice.

"He had a lot of potential and was smart. He could've done anything," McMeans said. "It doesn't surprise me that Omar isn't just a regular terrorist -- he's infamous. It's sad but it's not surprising."


http://blog.al.com/live/2009/09/accused_terrorist_omar_hammami.html#more
 
Feds Arrest 3 Men in Terror Inquiry

Airport shuttle bus driver and his father in Colorado and another man in New York
City charged with lying to investigators about an alleged terrorist plot to
detonate an improvised explosive against an unknown target in the United States




21terror_650.jpg

Najibullah Zazi was arrested by F.B.I. agents in Aurora, Colo., late Saturday.

21terror2_650.jpg

Mr. Zazi, 24, arrived at the Byron G. Rogers Federal Building in downtown Denver on Thursday.




The New York Times
By DAVID JOHNSTON
and WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM
September 20, 2009


Federal authorities arrested an airport shuttle bus driver and his father in Colorado and another man in New York City on Saturday night, charging them with lying to investigators about an alleged terrorist plot to detonate an improvised explosive against an unknown target in the United States.

Acting swiftly late on Saturday after a week in which investigators worked intensely in New York and Denver to put together a case, F.B.I. agents arrested Najibullah Zazi, 24, his father Mohammed Wali Zazi, 53, who both reside in Aurora, Colo., and Ahmad Wais Afzali, 37, a resident of Flushing, Queens.

The arrests indicated the case was rapidly accelerating and provided for the first time — in a sometimes confusing week of events — an explanation of why authorities were investigating the men and provided details about the alleged plot still under investigation in the United States, Pakistan and elsewhere.

In a statement issued early Sunday, David Kris, the chief of the Justice Department’s national security division, said: “The arrests carried out tonight are part of an ongoing and fast-paced investigation. It is important to note that we have no specific information regarding the timing, location or target of any planned attack.”

Affidavits filed in the case said that during a search of the younger Mr. Zaza’s rental car on Sept. 11, agents found a laptop computer that contained an image of nine pages of handwritten notes. The notes, according to affidavit, “contain formulations and instructions regarding the manufacture and handling of initiating explosives, main explosives charges, explosives detonators and components of a fusing system.”

Last Wednesday, the affidavits said, when agents interviewed Mr. Zazi in Denver, he falsely said he had never seen the handwritten notes and told agents that he had not written the notes.

In two additional interviews on Thursday and Friday, Mr. Zazi told agents in Denver that during a 2008 trip to Pakistan, he attended courses and received instruction on weapons and explosives at an al Qaeda training camp located in a tribal area.

The affidavits also said that the elder Mr. Zazi and Mr. Afzali, who was said to have been a source for the New York Police Department, also lied to investigators about their conversations concerning the younger Mr. Zazi and their knowledge of his activities.

The father and son were schedule to make an initial appearance on Monday in federal court in Denver and Mr. Afzali will make his appearance, also on Monday, in federal court in Brooklyn. Government officials said the charges, which carry a maximum penalty of eight years in prison, were preliminary and were likely to be followed by an indictment with more detailed accusations as the investigation continues.

The Zazis and Mr. Afzali are from Afghanistan. The elder Mr. Zazi is a naturalized citizen, while Mr. Afzalie and the younger Mr. Zazi are legal immigrants.

Wendy S. Aiello, a spokeswoman for Arthur Folsom, the lawyer representing the Zazis, said both men were arrested late Saturday night.

“Their attorney is with them,” said Ms. Aiello, who declined further comment.

Earlier on Saturday, following three days in which the younger Mr. Zazi had been intensively questioned by the F.B.I., he declined to meet with its agents, as planned, she said.

“He’s at home,” she said earlier in the day, adding that no plea arrangement was being negotiated on Mr. Zazi’s behalf.

At the same time, The Denver Post reported on Saturday that Mr. Zazi said in a telephone interview that he had not admitted any link to Al Qaeda, to participation in insurgency training in Pakistan or to involvement in a terrorist plot.

Government officials briefed on the matter have said that as Mr. Zazi voluntarily answered questions on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, he admitted that he had perhaps unwittingly crossed paths in Pakistan with extremists allied with the terrorist organization. There were also indications that Mr. Zazi underwent training in explosives and bomb-making while overseas.

“If it was true, they wouldn’t allow me to leave,” Mr. Zazi told The Denver Post. I don’t think the F.B.I. or the police would allow anyone who admits being a terrorist to go free for one minute.”

In an investigation that went from covert to overt last week, the authorities were moving quickly to check clues and track the movements of Mr. Zazi and those associated with him — even as they moved in federal court to file affidavits in support of the arrests.

On Monday, the authorities raided four residences connected to Mr. Zazi in Queens, and later executed search warrants his home in Aurora, Colo., and the home of his relatives there.

Investigators have copied or mirrored the hard drive of the driver’s laptop computer and are looking for e-mails, downloaded material and any trail of Internet sites that had been visited in an effort to determine whether their suspicions about him are warranted. The search of the hard drive did yield information about searches of sites connected to public gatherings in New York.

However, investigators have not yet determined what Mr. Zazi’s apparent interest in those sites suggests.

Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. has been briefed regularly on the status of the investigation, as has the F.B.I. director, Robert S. Mueller III, and officials at the White House and Pentagon.

Aside from Mr. Afzali’s arrest, several people in New York have been questioned in the case. Three men at a fifth-floor apartment on 41st Avenue, in Flushing, Queens, described how they had been interrogated on at least three separate occasions since their home was raided about 2 a.m. Monday.

Naiz Khan, 26, said he was interviewed for eight hours Thursday at what he believed was the Brooklyn offices of the United States attorney for the Eastern District. He said he voluntarily provided his fingerprints, DNA samples and prints of the soles of his shoes. A roommate, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said he submitted to a similar interrogation.

Each man described how they were repeatedly asked series of questions about Mr. Zazi, who they said had spent the night of Sept. 10 sleeping in their apartment.

As they spoke in their home on Saturday, the men said they were not terrorists. Mr. Khan said he had spoken to Mr. Zazi only occasionally in recent years and the other man said he had yet to meet him. Mr. Khan said he doubted Mr. Zazi was a terrorist and expressed frustration over the fallout from his visit.

“He put us into trouble,” he said. “Why do they have to bother me and my roommates? Why do they have to go to my father’s house?”

A defense lawyer with experience in terrorism cases in New York said that three men that he knew of who had had contact with Mr. Zazi had been questioned and fingerprinted by federal authorities.

Robert Nardoza, a spokesman for the United States attorney in Brooklyn, Benton J. Campbell, would neither confirm nor deny the questioning.

Mr. Khan said he had not retained a lawyer.

As he spoke he displayed a several pages of search warrants that agents left with him after the Monday raid. The court papers outlined two pages of items to be seized, specifying that they wanted anything to do with explosives or their building blocks: chemicals, fusing caps, timers or blasting caps, among other things.

But the papers also listed what the authorities left with: cellphones; a laptop computer; papers and notebooks with Arabic writing; tools; 100 tongue depressors; a Con Edison bill; immigration papers and nine backpacks.

New York officers returned on Tuesday and took a green nylon suitcase from a back bedroom, said Mr. Khan. He said his uncle Faiz Mohammed had packed the backpacks into the green suitcase and was planning to bring them to Karachi, Pakistan, for his children and those of his brother.

Mr. Khan also said the authorities asked him whether he had gone to rent a U-Haul on Sept. 9 in Queens and he emphatically said he did not.

“They said, ‘Did you go to U-Haul?’ and I said, ‘No,’ ” said Mr. Khan. “ ‘Did you pack anything, did you store anything in the U-Haul?’ I said, ‘No.’ ”

Ronald L. Kuby, a lawyer, said that Mr. Afzali, an imam in a mosque in Queens, did not rent any truck from U-Haul, though he, too, was questioned by agents in the recent days.

“He has not been in a U-Haul facility since 2004, when he rented a truck to help move his family,” Mr. Kuby said.






http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/21/us/21terror.html
 
<font size="5"><center>
Accused Dallas terrorist
made video for bin Laden, government says</font size>
<font size="4">

Jordanian teenager accused of trying to blow up a
Dallas skyscraper created a seven-minute video that he
believed would be given to 9-11 mastermind Osama bin Laden</font size></center>



Hosam-Smadi.standalone.prod_affiliate.58.jpg

Hosam Smadi - held in the alleged Fountain Place
bombing Sept. 24, 2009 in Dallas. Hosam Smadi,
courtesy of the Dallas County Sheriff's Office



Star-Telegram (Fort Worth, Texas)
By Melody McDonald
Oct. 05, 2009
mjmcdonald@star-telegram.com


DALLAS – The Jordanian teenager accused of trying to blow up a Dallas skyscraper created a seven-minute video that he believed would be given to 9-11 mastermind Osama bin Laden, an FBI special agent testified during a probable cause hearing Monday.

Hosam Maher Husein Smadi, 19, is being held on a charge of attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction in connection with a planned Sept. 24 terror strike on the 60-story Fountain Place.

Federal Magistrate Irma C. Ramirez ruled after the 40-minute hearing that there was sufficient evidence to hold Smadi for further proceedings.

The lone witness was FBI Supervisory Special Agent Thomas D. Petrowski, who runs the counterterrorism squad at the Dallas office of the FBI.

Petrowski said the FBI first became aware of Smadi in January 2009 among a group of extremists online.

Smadi landed on the FBI’s radar, Petrowski testified, because “he was here on U.S. soil and wished to carry out an attack that lacked only the tools.”

Petrowski also told Assistant U.S. Attorney Dayle Elieson that Smadi was in a hotel room with an undercover FBI employee when he made the video, which he believed would be delivered to bin Laden. The agent did not discuss the contents of the video, but said the FBI had recorded the encounter.

Smadi’s attorney, Peter Fleury, a senior litigator at the Federal Public Defender's Office in Fort Worth, asked Petrowski about the three undercover FBI employees who communicated with Smadi until Sept. 24, when he parked an SUV that he believed contained a bomb beneath Fountain Place.

Petrowski identified them as two language experts and a “peace officer” working for the FBI, but said they were not FBI agents.


<font size="3">The Bomb Plot</font size>

A federal arrest warrant affidavit prepared by Petrowski and released last month says Smadi met the peace officer, who was posing as a low-level operative of an al Qaeda sleeper cell, in Dallas on Sept. 24.

The two drove to pick up the SUV, which Smadi believed carried a bomb, and Smadi then drove the vehicle to an underground garage at Fountain Place, the affidavit says.

Smadi left the vehicle, walked to where the peace officer was parked and they drove several blocks away, where he tried to denote the bomb with a cell phone. He was then arrested.

Fleury also asked whether the government had given Smadi money, and Petrowski testified that the peace officer may have bought meals or cigarettes for him during their meetings.

The government is still analyzing Smadi’s computers and electronics devices, Petrowski testified.

Smadi, who has been kept in federal custody in Seagoville, wore a bright orange jump suit to the hearing. His handcuffs were removed during the proceedings, and he spoke to no one except an Arabic translator who sat behind him and leaned forward to speak during the hearing.

No date was immediately set for the next hearing.


http://www.star-telegram.com/804/story/1662709.html
 
<font size="5"><center>
Pakistan Detains Five Americans Tied to Militants </font size>
<font size="4">

Five young Muslim American men from the Washington suburbs who
disappeared late last month were detained in Pakistan
on Wednesday in a police raid on a house linked
to a militant group, American and
Pakistani officials said.</font size></center>



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New York Times
BY SCOTT SHANE
December 9, 2009


WASHINGTON — Five young Muslim American men from the Washington suburbs who disappeared late last month were detained in Pakistan on Wednesday in a police raid on a house linked to a militant group, American and Pakistani officials said.

One of the men had left behind an 11-minute video calling for the defense of Muslims in conflicts with the West and suggesting that “young Muslims have to do something,” said one person who had seen the video, describing it as a farewell of sorts. Another official who viewed it called the video “disturbing,” though he said it was not a martyrdom video of the kind sometimes made by extremists planning suicide attacks.

The five young men were detained at a house in Sargodha in Punjab Province that was occupied by Khalid Farooq, the father of one of the young men, Umer Farooq, according to an official familiar with the case. The elder Mr. Farooq is believed to have ties to Jaish-e-Muhammad, a banned Pakistani militant group, the official said. Pakistani news reports also said security officials linked the house to the militant group.

The men, ranging in age from the late teens to early 20s, were not accused of any crime; their intent remained mysterious and both American and Pakistani officials emphasized that they were still gathering facts. One of the men, Ramy Zamzam, 22, is a dental student at Howard University, where he received an undergraduate degree this year with a major in biology and chemistry, according to his Facebook page.

But their disappearance and resurfacing in Pakistan came amid broad concern in the United States about a rash of terrorism cases that appeared to be homegrown.

Nihad Awad, national executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, an advocacy group that is working with the families of the young men, cautioned against hasty conclusions about the episode during a news conference in Washington with other Muslim leaders.

But Mr. Awad, who said he had seen the video, and the other leaders said that the case — along with the recent recruitment of young Somali-American men in Minnesota by a violent group in Somalia — suggested that at least a small number young American Muslims were drawn to extremist views. They pledged to start a nationwide campaign to counter such attitudes.

The five men, some of whom knew each other from their mosque in Alexandria, Va., disappeared from their homes in late November, officials said. Concerned family members contacted local imams and the Council on American-Islamic Relations, or CAIR.

Officials with the group met with the families on Dec. 1 and put them in touch with the Federal Bureau of Investigation the same day, said Ibrahim Hooper, a spokesman for the group.

Mr. Hooper said neither the mosque — the I.C.N.A. Center, associated with the national Islamic Circle of North America — nor the Virginia families supported extremism or violence. “The Muslim community has taken the lead on this case in terms of taking it to law enforcement,” Mr. Hooper said.

The Justice Department, in a statement, said the F.B.I. “is working with families and local law enforcement to investigate the missing students and is aware of the individuals arrested in Pakistan.”

It continued, “We are working with Pakistan authorities to determine their identities and the nature of their business there, if indeed these are the students who had gone missing.”

American and Pakistani officials said the five men flew from Dulles International Airport outside Washington and landed in Karachi, Pakistan, on Dec. 1, the day their families approached the F.B.I. They traveled to Hyderabad, Pakistan, and then to Lahore, where they spent five days before moving on to Sargodha.

Asked for assistance by the F.B.I., Pakistani security officers tracked the men to Mr. Farooq’s house, where they were taken into custody on Wednesday, the officials said. In addition to Umer Farooq, two of the other men — named in Pakistani press accounts as Ahmed Abdullah and Waqar Khan — were described by officials as of Pakistani descent. Mr. Zamzam’s family is Egyptian and a fifth man, Aman Yasir, is of Yemeni descent, according to one official. Some were born abroad but all are now United States citizens, American officials said.

Old friends of Mr. Zamzam seemed incredulous at the news that he had been detained in Pakistan. Zohra Alnoor, a student at Northern Virginia Community College, met Mr. Zamzam two years ago through the Muslim Students’ Association D.C. Council, an umbrella organization joining Washington-area colleges. Mr. Zamzam helped organize and competed in a yearly quiz competition about Islamic texts and issues, she said.

“He was very devout, he wouldn’t date women,” she said. But she said she could not recall his expressing strong political beliefs.

Mr. Zamzam lives with his parents and younger brother in a basement apartment in Alexandria, Va. The brother, who said he goes by the nickname Zam, said in an interview that Mr. Zamzam “is a good guy. He’s a normal Joe.” He said his brother earned a 4.0 grade point average and wanted to become a dentist.

An upstairs neighbor, 16-year-old Peter Max-Jones, called Mr. Zamzam “very intelligent, very kind, very helpful. Good citizen, all around.” He said Mr. Zamzam’s family was “very patriotic, very quiet.”

He added: “They’re never outside. They’re always at home, studying.”

A year ago, in a Facebook message to a woman who questioned the need for women to cover their heads or faces, a person who identified himself as Mr. Zamzam responded by saying that the Koran “clearly instructs the believing women to cover themselves,” adding that “those that don’t, then woe to them for a day where all will be held accountable.”

At the I.C.N.A. Center in Alexandria, which occupies a modest brick building without a sign at the edge of a residential neighborhood, most people arriving for prayers on Wednesday night declined to comment.

One man who would not give his name acknowledged that he knew some of the young men but described them as unsophisticated.

“They didn’t even know the price of beer,” the man said.

According to documents posted on the Web, Mr. Zamzam led a drive last year by young Muslims affiliated with the I.C.N.A. Center to raise money to build a new mosque. The plan was to persuade 500 mosques around the United States each to donate $500 toward the cost, and Mr. Zamzam and 16 other activists named the effort Project 500.

“We hope to inspire the Muslim youth all across America to step up and how everyone that we can get things done and prove we are the future of this Muslim Ummah,” or community, said a statement on Project 500’s now-defunct Web site. The site displays no hint of radicalism.


Reporting was contributed by David Johnston, Mark Mazzetti, Eric Lichtblau, Jodi Kantor, Ashley Parker, Ashley Southall, Bernie Becker and Barclay Walsh from Washington.


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/10/world/asia/10inquire.html
 
<font size="5"><Center>

Feds Arrest 3 Men in Terror Inquiry </font size>
<font size="4">

Airport shuttle bus driver and his father in Colorado and another
man in New York City charged with lying to investigators about
an alleged terrorist plot to detonate an improvised explosive
against an unknown target in the United States</font size></center>



21terror_650.jpg

Najibullah Zazi was arrested by F.B.I. agents in Aurora, Colo., late Saturday.

21terror2_650.jpg

Mr. Zazi, 24, arrived at the Byron G. Rogers Federal Building in downtown Denver on Thursday.




The New York Times
By DAVID JOHNSTON
and WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM
September 20, 2009


Federal authorities arrested an airport shuttle bus driver and his father in Colorado and another man in New York City on Saturday night, charging them with lying to investigators about an alleged terrorist plot to detonate an improvised explosive against an unknown target in the United States.

Acting swiftly late on Saturday after a week in which investigators worked intensely in New York and Denver to put together a case, F.B.I. agents arrested Najibullah Zazi, 24, his father Mohammed Wali Zazi, 53, who both reside in Aurora, Colo., and Ahmad Wais Afzali, 37, a resident of Flushing, Queens.

The arrests indicated the case was rapidly accelerating and provided for the first time — in a sometimes confusing week of events — an explanation of why authorities were investigating the men and provided details about the alleged plot still under investigation in the United States, Pakistan and elsewhere.

In a statement issued early Sunday, David Kris, the chief of the Justice Department’s national security division, said: “The arrests carried out tonight are part of an ongoing and fast-paced investigation. It is important to note that we have no specific information regarding the timing, location or target of any planned attack.”

Affidavits filed in the case said that during a search of the younger Mr. Zaza’s rental car on Sept. 11, agents found a laptop computer that contained an image of nine pages of handwritten notes. The notes, according to affidavit, “contain formulations and instructions regarding the manufacture and handling of initiating explosives, main explosives charges, explosives detonators and components of a fusing system.”

Last Wednesday, the affidavits said, when agents interviewed Mr. Zazi in Denver, he falsely said he had never seen the handwritten notes and told agents that he had not written the notes.

In two additional interviews on Thursday and Friday, Mr. Zazi told agents in Denver that during a 2008 trip to Pakistan, he attended courses and received instruction on weapons and explosives at an al Qaeda training camp located in a tribal area.

The affidavits also said that the elder Mr. Zazi and Mr. Afzali, who was said to have been a source for the New York Police Department, also lied to investigators about their conversations concerning the younger Mr. Zazi and their knowledge of his activities.

The father and son were schedule to make an initial appearance on Monday in federal court in Denver and Mr. Afzali will make his appearance, also on Monday, in federal court in Brooklyn. Government officials said the charges, which carry a maximum penalty of eight years in prison, were preliminary and were likely to be followed by an indictment with more detailed accusations as the investigation continues.

The Zazis and Mr. Afzali are from Afghanistan. The elder Mr. Zazi is a naturalized citizen, while Mr. Afzalie and the younger Mr. Zazi are legal immigrants.

Wendy S. Aiello, a spokeswoman for Arthur Folsom, the lawyer representing the Zazis, said both men were arrested late Saturday night.

“Their attorney is with them,” said Ms. Aiello, who declined further comment.

Earlier on Saturday, following three days in which the younger Mr. Zazi had been intensively questioned by the F.B.I., he declined to meet with its agents, as planned, she said.

“He’s at home,” she said earlier in the day, adding that no plea arrangement was being negotiated on Mr. Zazi’s behalf.

At the same time, The Denver Post reported on Saturday that Mr. Zazi said in a telephone interview that he had not admitted any link to Al Qaeda, to participation in insurgency training in Pakistan or to involvement in a terrorist plot.

Government officials briefed on the matter have said that as Mr. Zazi voluntarily answered questions on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, he admitted that he had perhaps unwittingly crossed paths in Pakistan with extremists allied with the terrorist organization. There were also indications that Mr. Zazi underwent training in explosives and bomb-making while overseas.

“If it was true, they wouldn’t allow me to leave,” Mr. Zazi told The Denver Post. I don’t think the F.B.I. or the police would allow anyone who admits being a terrorist to go free for one minute.”

In an investigation that went from covert to overt last week, the authorities were moving quickly to check clues and track the movements of Mr. Zazi and those associated with him — even as they moved in federal court to file affidavits in support of the arrests.

On Monday, the authorities raided four residences connected to Mr. Zazi in Queens, and later executed search warrants his home in Aurora, Colo., and the home of his relatives there.

Investigators have copied or mirrored the hard drive of the driver’s laptop computer and are looking for e-mails, downloaded material and any trail of Internet sites that had been visited in an effort to determine whether their suspicions about him are warranted. The search of the hard drive did yield information about searches of sites connected to public gatherings in New York.

However, investigators have not yet determined what Mr. Zazi’s apparent interest in those sites suggests.

Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. has been briefed regularly on the status of the investigation, as has the F.B.I. director, Robert S. Mueller III, and officials at the White House and Pentagon.

Aside from Mr. Afzali’s arrest, several people in New York have been questioned in the case. Three men at a fifth-floor apartment on 41st Avenue, in Flushing, Queens, described how they had been interrogated on at least three separate occasions since their home was raided about 2 a.m. Monday.

Naiz Khan, 26, said he was interviewed for eight hours Thursday at what he believed was the Brooklyn offices of the United States attorney for the Eastern District. He said he voluntarily provided his fingerprints, DNA samples and prints of the soles of his shoes. A roommate, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said he submitted to a similar interrogation.

Each man described how they were repeatedly asked series of questions about Mr. Zazi, who they said had spent the night of Sept. 10 sleeping in their apartment.

As they spoke in their home on Saturday, the men said they were not terrorists. Mr. Khan said he had spoken to Mr. Zazi only occasionally in recent years and the other man said he had yet to meet him. Mr. Khan said he doubted Mr. Zazi was a terrorist and expressed frustration over the fallout from his visit.

“He put us into trouble,” he said. “Why do they have to bother me and my roommates? Why do they have to go to my father’s house?”

A defense lawyer with experience in terrorism cases in New York said that three men that he knew of who had had contact with Mr. Zazi had been questioned and fingerprinted by federal authorities.

Robert Nardoza, a spokesman for the United States attorney in Brooklyn, Benton J. Campbell, would neither confirm nor deny the questioning.

Mr. Khan said he had not retained a lawyer.

As he spoke he displayed a several pages of search warrants that agents left with him after the Monday raid. The court papers outlined two pages of items to be seized, specifying that they wanted anything to do with explosives or their building blocks: chemicals, fusing caps, timers or blasting caps, among other things.

But the papers also listed what the authorities left with: cellphones; a laptop computer; papers and notebooks with Arabic writing; tools; 100 tongue depressors; a Con Edison bill; immigration papers and nine backpacks.

New York officers returned on Tuesday and took a green nylon suitcase from a back bedroom, said Mr. Khan. He said his uncle Faiz Mohammed had packed the backpacks into the green suitcase and was planning to bring them to Karachi, Pakistan, for his children and those of his brother.

Mr. Khan also said the authorities asked him whether he had gone to rent a U-Haul on Sept. 9 in Queens and he emphatically said he did not.

“They said, ‘Did you go to U-Haul?’ and I said, ‘No,’ ” said Mr. Khan. “ ‘Did you pack anything, did you store anything in the U-Haul?’ I said, ‘No.’ ”

Ronald L. Kuby, a lawyer, said that Mr. Afzali, an imam in a mosque in Queens, did not rent any truck from U-Haul, though he, too, was questioned by agents in the recent days.

“He has not been in a U-Haul facility since 2004, when he rented a truck to help move his family,” Mr. Kuby said.






http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/21/us/21terror.html


<font size="5"><center>
Suspected terrorist Najibullah Zazi's
father indicted for conspiring to
destroy bomb materials</font size></center>


2010-02-18T022942Z_01_NOOTR_RTRMDNP_1_India-462528-2-pic0.jpg

<font size="1">Mohammed Zazi, father of
Najibullah Zazi, walks to
the Alfred A. Arraj Federal
Courthouse for a hearing
in Denver, Colorado October
9, 2009. (REUTERS/Mark
Leffingwell/Files)</font size>

The father of suspected terrorist Najibullah Zazi has been indicted in Brooklyn on charges he conspired to destroy his son's bomb-making materials, authorities said Monday.

The charge against Mohammed Wali Zazi stems from a stockpile of chemicals his son allegedly amassed in Denver after visiting beauty supply stores, sources said.

The younger Zazi allegedly planned to use the chemicals to make explosives to blow up the city subways.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_...her_indicted_for_conspiring_to_destroy_b.html



<font size="5"><center>
Najibullah Zazi to Plead Guilty</font size></center>

images



Washington Post via Associated Press
By TOM HAYS and ADAM GOLDMAN
February 22, 2010


NEW YORK -- A law enforcement official says a Colorado air shuttle driver accused of a homemade-bomb plot against New York City has agreed to enter a guilty plea.

The official tells The Associated Press that Najibullah Zazi (nah-jee-BOO'-lah ZAH'-zee) reached the plea deal after cooperating with authorities over the past few weeks. The official wasn't authorized to speak publicly about the plea deal and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity.

The official didn't know what charge Zazi planned to plead to on Monday. Authorities say he received al-Qaida training in Pakistan.

Three other law enforcement officials tell the AP that Zazi had volunteered information to federal prosecutors about an alleged plot to attack New York City with homemade bombs.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/02/22/AR2010022201916.html

 

U.S. citizen accused in Yemen killing had been under FBI watch



PH2010031204313.jpg

Sharif Mobley, seen in a 2002 photo at a barbecue in
Buena, N.J., is accused of killing a hospital guard in
Yemen. (Roman Castro Via Associated Press)



By Karen DeYoung
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, March 13, 2010

Sharif Mobley, a U.S. citizen accused of killing a hospital guard in Yemen, is believed to be a homegrown radical who left this country to make direct contact with al-Qaeda, according to U.S. counterterrorism officials, making him the latest in a string of such suspects.

Mobley, 26, first came to public attention Wednesday, when Yemeni authorities reported that he had grabbed a guard's gun during a medical visit last weekend after being arrested in a sweep of suspected al-Qaeda militants.

Several U.S. officials, all of whom insisted on anonymity to discuss the matter, said that Mobley had been in custody in Yemen for at least several weeks before the shooting and had been known to U.S. and Yemeni authorities for a considerable period prior to that. "He's been a matter of some concern for a while," according to one official.

The officials said that FBI investigations had been underway in Delaware, among the places that Mobley had lived, and in New Jersey, where he was born and was once employed as a maintenance worker in nuclear power plants. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission said Friday that he also worked at nuclear plants in Pennsylvania and at Maryland's Calvert Cliffs but that it had no reason to believe he had had access to sensitive material, news services reported.

The Associated Press quoted Mobley's father as saying his son was innocent.

Revelations about Mobley's arrest came amid rising U.S. concern about the radicalization of American Muslims. Recent cases include that of Army Maj. Nidal M. Hasan, who was charged with killing 13 people at Fort Hood, Tex., in November, as well as that of five young men who were arrested in Pakistan and charged with terrorist offenses in December after their parents reported them missing from their Washington area homes.

This week, a 46-year-0ld Philadelphia woman, a Muslim convert who identified herself online as Jihad Jane, was charged with plotting to kill a Swedish cartoonist who had caricatured the prophet Muhammad.

Many terrorism suspects from the West are said to have frequented jihadist Web sites, and Hasan and others -- including the Nigerian charged with the Christman airline bombing attempt in Detroit -- were in touch online with Anwar al-Aulaqi, a dual U.S.-Yemeni citizen being sought by both governments as a member of al-Qaeda's Yemen affiliate.

Asked if Mobley had also been in touch with Aulaqi, a U.S. official said, "Everyone has."

Officials said Mobley's mother was of Somali origin. Several Somali Americans are thought to have traveled to Somalia to join the al-Shabab militia. Although senior militia leaders are closely linked to al-Qaeda, many in the rank and file are said by U.S. officials to be fighting for nationalistic reasons confined to Somalia.

But officials said they did not think Mobley had traveled to the region as what one called a "wannabe" soldier in Somalia. He obtained a Yemeni visa ostensibly to study Arabic, the official said, but "went to hook up" with al-Qaeda.

At the State Department on Friday, spokesman P.J. Crowley said that U.S. consular officials in Yemen were attempting to verify Mobley's identity but had not yet been able to meet with him.

But other officials indicated that U.S. law enforcement at least had access to interrogations of Mobley after his initial arrest. "There would be an interest by the U.S. government to see what he knows, what his experience was like" with al-Qaeda, another official said. His current situation, the official said, "may change his thinking, now that he has gone from [being picked up in] a sweep to a murder charge."


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/12/AR2010031204241.html
 
NRC: Terror Supect Did 'Grunt Work' At Nuclear Plants



">
 
Last edited:
<font size="5"><center>
Pakistan indicts 5 Americans on terror charges</font size>
<font size="4">

The young men from Virginia, arrested in December,
deny the charges and claim they were
tortured in custody, a lawyer says</font size></center>


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Pakistani police officers leave a police station with detained American Muslims January 2010. (K.M.
Chaudary, Associated Press)

The Los Angeles Times
By Alex Rodriguez
March 17, 2010


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan
A Pakistani court Wednesday indicted five young Americans from the Washington, D.C., area on charges of plotting terrorist attacks in Pakistan.

The men have been held in the eastern city of Sargodha since their arrests in December. If convicted, they could be sentenced to life in prison.

The five men, ages 18 to 24, are U.S. citizens of Pakistani, African and Egyptian descent. They lived within blocks of each other in Alexandria, Va.

Police say the men left their homes in late November and flew to Pakistan with the hope of waging jihad, or holy war, against American forces in Afghanistan. Khalid Khawaja, one of the lawyers representing the men, said they were also charged with plotting attacks in Afghanistan, and with funding banned Pakistani extremist organizations.

Khawaja said the men deny the charges and allege that police beat them and tortured them with electric shocks while they were in custody. Efforts to reach Sargodha authorities late Wednesday afternoon were unsuccessful.

Khawaja said authorities claim that they have taped confessions from the men, as well as maps detailing potential targets for terrorist attacks, including an air force base in western Punjab, Pakistan's most populous province.

Their case was continued to March 31, when prosecutors will begin presenting evidence against the men.

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times


http://www.latimes.com/news/nation-and-world/la-fg-americans-indicted18-2010mar18,0,2235167.story
 

The Seattle Plot: Jihadists Shifting
Away From Civilian Targets?​


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Strategic Forecasting, Inc. (STRATFOR)
By Scott Stewart
June 30, 2011



On June 22 in a Seattle warehouse, Abu Khalid Abdul-Latif pulled an unloaded M16 rifle to his shoulder, aimed it, and pulled the trigger repeatedly as he imagined himself gunning down young U.S. military recruits. His longtime friend Walli Mujahidh did likewise with an identical rifle, assuming a kneeling position as he engaged his notional targets. The two men had come to the warehouse with another man to inspect the firearms the latter had purchased with money Abdul-Latif had provided him. The rifles and a small number of hand grenades were to be used in an upcoming mission: an attack on a U.S. Military Entrance Processing Station (MEPS) in an industrial area south of downtown Seattle.

After confirming that the rifles were capable of automatic fire and discussing the capacity of the magazines they had purchased, the men placed the rifles back into a storage bag intending to transport them to a temporary cache location. As they prepared to leave the warehouse, they were suddenly swarmed by a large number of FBI agents and other law enforcement officers and quickly arrested. Their plan to conduct a terrorist attack inside the United States had been discovered when the man they had invited to join their plot (the man who had allegedly purchased the weapons for them) reported the plot to the Seattle Police Department, which in turn reported it to the FBI. According to the federal criminal complaint filed in the case, the third unidentified man had an extensive criminal record and had known Abdul-Latif for several years, but he had not been willing to undertake such a terrorist attack.

While the behavior of Abdul-Latif and Mujahidh in this plot demonstrates that they were amateur “wannabe” jihadists rather than seasoned terrorist operatives, their plot could have ended very differently if they had found a kindred spirit in the man they approached for help instead of someone who turned them into the authorities. This case also illustrates some important trends in jihadist terrorism that we have been watching for the past few years as well as a possible shift in mindset within the jihadist movement.


Trends

First, Abu-Khalid Abdul-Latif and Walli Mujahidh, both American converts to Islam, are prime examples of what we refer to as grassroots jihadists. They are individuals who were inspired by the al Qaeda movement but who had no known connection to the al Qaeda core or one of its franchise groups. In late 2009, in response to the success of the U.S. government and its allies in preventing jihadist attacks in the West, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) began a campaign to encourage jihadists living in the West to conduct simple attacks using readily available items, rather than travel abroad for military and terrorism training with jihadist groups. After successes such as the November 2009 Fort Hood shooting, this theme of encouraging grassroots attacks was adopted by the core al Qaeda group.

While the grassroots approach does present a challenge to law enforcement and intelligence agencies in that attackers can seemingly appear out of nowhere with no prior warning, the paradox presented by grassroots operatives is that they are also far less skilled than trained terrorist operatives. In other words, while they are hard to detect, they frequently lack the skill to conduct large, complex attacks and frequently make mistakes that expose them to detection in smaller plots.

And that is what we saw in the Seattle plot. Abdul-Latif had originally wanted to hit U.S. Joint Base Lewis-McChord (formerly known as Fort Lewis and McChord Air Force Base), which is located some 70 kilometers (44 miles) south of Seattle, but later decided against that plan since he considered the military base to be too hardened a target. While Abdul-Latif and Mujahidh were amateurs, they seem to have reached a reasonable assessment of their own abilities and which targets were beyond their abilities to strike.

Another trend we noted in this case was that the attack plan called for the use of firearms and hand grenades in an armed assault, rather than the use of an improvised explosive device (IED). There have been a number of botched IED attacks, such as the May 2010 Times Square attack and Najibullah Zazi’s plot to attack the New York subway system.

These were some of the failures that caused jihadist leaders such as AQAP’s Nasir al-Wahayshi to encourage grassroots jihadists to undertake simple attacks. Indeed, the most successful jihadist attacks in the West in recent years, such as the Fort Hood shooting, the June 2009 attack on a military recruitment center in Little Rock, Ark., and the March 2011 attack on U.S. troops at a civilian airport in Frankfurt, Germany, involved the use of firearms rather than IEDs. When combined with the thwarted plot in New York in May 2011, these incidents support the trend we identified in May 2010 of grassroots jihadist conducting more armed assaults and fewer attacks involving IEDs.

Another interesting aspect of the Seattle case was that Abdul-Latif was an admirer of AQAP ideologue Anwar al-Awlaki. Unlike the Fort Hood case, where U.S. Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan had been in email contact with al-Awlaki, it does not appear that Abdul-Latif had been in contact with the AQAP preacher. However, from video statements and comments Abdul-Latif himself posted on the Internet, he appears to have had a high opinion of al-Awlaki and to have been influenced by his preaching. It does not appear that Abdul-Latif, who was known as Joseph Anthony Davis before his conversion to Islam, or Mujahidh, whose pre-conversion name was Frederick Domingue Jr., spoke Arabic. This underscores the importance of al-Awlaki’s role within AQAP as its primary spokesman to the English-speaking world and his mission of radicalizing English-speaking Muslims and encouraging them to conduct terrorist attacks in the West.


Vulnerabilities

Once again, in the Seattle case, the attack on the MEPS was not thwarted by some CIA source in Yemen, an intercept by the National Security Agency or an intentional FBI undercover operation. Rather, the attack was thwarted by a Muslim who was approached by Abdul-Latif and asked to participate in the attack. The man then went to the Seattle Police Department, which brought the man to the attention of the FBI. This is what we refer to as grassroots counterterrorism, that is, local cops and citizens bringing things to the attention of federal authorities. As the jihadist threat has become more diffuse and harder to detect, grassroots defenders have become an even more critical component of international counterterrorism efforts. This is especially true for Muslims, many of whom consider themselves engaged in a struggle to defend their faith (and their sons) from the threat of jihadism.

But, even if the third man had chosen to participate in the attack rather than report it to the authorities, the group would have been vulnerable to detection. First, there were the various statements Abdul-Latif made on the Internet in support of attacks against the United States. Second, any Muslim convert who chooses a name such as Mujahidh (holy warrior) for himself must certainly anticipate the possibility that it will bring him to the attention of the authorities. Abdul-Latif and Mujahidh were also somewhat cavalier in their telephone conversations, although those conversations do not appear to have brought them to the attention of the authorities.

Perhaps their most significant vulnerability to detection, aside from their desire to obtain automatic weapons and hand grenades, would have been their need to conduct preoperational surveillance of their intended target. After conducting some preliminary research using the Internet, Abdul-Latif quickly realized that they needed more detailed intelligence. He then briefly conducted physical surveillance of the exterior of the MEPS to see what it looked like in person. Despite the technological advances it represents, the Internet cannot replace the physical surveillance process, which is a critical requirement for terrorist planners. Indeed, after the external surveillance of the building, Abdul-Latif asked the informant to return to the building under a ruse in order to enter it and obtain a detailed floor plan of the facility for use in planning the attack.

In this case, the informant was able to obtain the information he needed from his FBI handlers, but had he been a genuine participant in the plot, he would have had to have exposed himself to detection by entering the MEPS facility after conducting surveillance of the building’s exterior. If some sort of surveillance detection program was in place, it likely would have flagged him as a person of interest for follow-up investigation, which could have led authorities back to the other conspirators in the attack.


A New Twist

One aspect of this plot that was different from many other recent plots was that Abdul-Latif insisted that he wanted to target the U.S. military and did not want to kill people he considered innocents. Certainly he had no problem with the idea of killing the armed civilian security guards at the MEPS — the plan called for the attackers to kill them first, or the unarmed still-civilian recruits being screened at the facility, then to kill as many other military personnel as possible before being neutralized by the responding authorities. However, even in the limited conversations documented in the federal criminal complaint, Abdul-Latif repeated several times that he did not want to kill innocents. This stands in stark contrast to the actions of previous attackers and plotters such as John Allen Mohammed, the so-called D.C. sniper, or Faisal Shahzad, who planned the failed Times Square attack.

Abdul-Latif’s reluctance to attack civilians may be a reflection of the debate we are seeing among jihadists in places like Afghanistan, Pakistan and even Algeria over the killing of those they consider innocents. This debate is also raging on many of the English-language jihadist message boards Abdul-Latif frequented. Most recently, this tension was seen in the defection of a Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan faction in Pakistan’s Kurram agency.

If this sentiment begins to take wider hold in the jihadist movement, and especially the English-speaking jihadist community in the West, it could have an impact on the target-selection process for future attacks by grassroots operatives in the West. It could also mean that commonly attacked targets such as subway systems, civilian aircraft, hotels and public spaces will be seen as less desirable than comparably soft military targets. Given the limitations of grassroots jihadists, and their tendency to focus on soft targets, such a shift would result in a much smaller universe of potential targets for such attacks — the softer military targets such as recruit-processing stations and troops in transit that have been targeted in recent months.

Removing some of the most vulnerable targets from the potential-target list is not something that militants do lightly. If this is indeed happening, it could be an indication that some important shifts are under way on the ideological battlefield and that jihadists may be concerned about losing their popular support. It is still too early to know if this is a trend and not merely the idiosyncrasy of one attack planner — and it is contrary to the target sets laid out in recent messages from AQAP and the al Qaeda core — but when viewed in light of the Little Rock, Fort Hood and Frankfurt shootings, it is definitely a concept worth further examination.






<a href="http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20110629-seattle-plot-jihadists-shifting-away-civilian-targets">The Seattle Plot: Jihadists Shifting Away From Civilian Targets?</a> is republished with permission of STRATFOR.

 

4 Georgia men charged with plotting
to make ricin for terror attack





ricin.jpg


Castor beans from which Ricin is extracted


Reuters
By Colleen Jenkins
November 2, 2011


Federal authorities on Tuesday arrested four Georgia men accused of plotting
to buy explosives and produce a deadly biological toxin to attack fellow U.S.
citizens and government officials.

The Justice Department said the men were members of a fringe domestic militia
group and had planned to manufacture ricin for use in their attacks.

The men attended meetings starting in March where they discussed carrying
out crimes, including murder, in order to undermine federal and state
government, prosecutors said. The targets included local police, federal
government buildings and employees of agencies such as the Internal
Revenue Service.

The meetings were monitored by FBI agents with the assistance of a
confidential informant, according to prosecutors. Two of the men also met
with an undercover agent to discuss buying explosives and weapons parts,
prosecutors said.

The men are Frederick Thomas, 73; Dan Roberts, 67; Ray H. Adams, 65; and
Samuel J. Crump, 68. Thomas is from Cleveland, Georgia, and the other three
men are from Toccoa.

At a meeting at Thomas’ house in March, Thomas said he had enough weapons
to arm everyone at the table and that he had compiled a “Bucket List” of
government employees, politicians, corporate leaders and media members he
felt needed to be “taken out” to “make the country right again,” according
to court documents.

“There is no way for us, as militiamen, to save this country, to save Georgia,
without doing something that’s highly, highly illegal. Murder,” Thomas said
during the meeting, court records show.

During a meeting in September, Crump said he wanted to make 10 pounds
of ricin and disperse it in various U.S. cities, according to prosecutors.
Authorities said he described one scenario in which the toxin would be blown
from a car traveling on Atlanta highways.

Last month, Adams allegedly gave Crump a sample of the beans used to
produce ricin, prosecutors said.

Ricin can cause death from exposure to as little as a pinhead amount. Most
victims die between 36 hours and 72 hours after exposure, and there is no
known antidote.

The most famous case of ricin poisoning was in 1978 when dissident Bulgarian
writer Georgi Markov was killed when an assassin in London jabbed him with
an umbrella that injected a tiny ricin-filled pellet.

“These defendants, who are alleged to be part of a fringe militia group, are
charged with planning attacks against their own fellow citizens and
government,” Sally Quillian Yates, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of
Georgia, said in a statement.

“While many are focused on the threat posed by international violent
extremists, this case demonstrates that we must also remain vigilant in
protecting our country from citizens within our own borders who threaten
our safety and security,” she said.







http://news.nationalpost.com/2011/1...ith-plotting-to-make-ricin-for-terror-attack/


 

FBI: 'Terror Attack' Plot Disrupted in Minnesota​

Raid in rural America prevented 'potential tragedy,' FBI says​


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The Federal Bureau of Investigation's Minneapolis division announced Monday it believes a terrorist attack was disrupted when local and federal authorities arrested Buford Rogers, 24, in a Friday raid.

Agents discovered "gun and explosive devices" at Rogers's Montevideo, Minn., residence, according to the FBI.


"The FBI believes that a terror attack was disrupted by law enforcement personnel and that the lives of several local residents were potentially saved. The terror plot was discovered and subsequently thwarted through the timely analysis of intelligence and through the cooperation and coordination between the aforementioned agencies," said the FBI's release.

FBI Special Agent in Charge J. Christopher Warrener said in a released statement that authorities were able "to prevent a potential tragedy in Montevideo."


FE_PR_0506_Montevideo.jpg

Montevideo is a small town near Minnesota's border with South Dakota. Its population was just over 5,000 in 2010, according to data recorded by the U.S. Census bureau.

The Associated Press reported Saturday that police found Molotov cocktails, in addition to pipe bombs and a Romanian AKM assault rifle, during the Friday raid. Rogers reportedly admitted to shooting the gun, and was charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm.

Rogers was convicted of 3rd degree burglary in 2011 in neighboring Lac qui Parle County and sentenced to 58 days in jail and five years of probation, according to online records.


<iframe src="http://embed.newsinc.com/Single/iframe.html?WID=1&VID=24801340&freewheel=69016&sitesection=usnews&width=646&height=363" height="363" width="646" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0"></iframe>​




SOURCE


 
Undercover stings used to fight domestic terrorism

Undercover stings used to fight domestic terrorism
By ROXANA HEGEMAN | Associated Press
2 hrs 32 mins ago

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The arrest of a Kansas man accused of trying to bring what he thought was a car bomb into a Wichita airport marked the culmination of a months-long undercover sting in what has become a successful and widely used domestic counterterrorism tactic.

Court documents detail Terry Lee Loewen's alleged conversations with undercover FBI agents over six months. The discussions began with vague sentiments about his desire to commit "violent jihad" against the U.S. before turning into a detailed, concrete plot in which the agents recruited him to use his airport access to plant a bomb in a martyrdom operation.

Loewen, a 58-year-old avionics technician who worked at the airport for Hawker Beechcraft, was arrested Friday on charges including providing support to al-Qaida and attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction. He remains jailed, and prosecutors expect to take their case to a grand jury Wednesday.

The case resembles a string of investigations conducted by the FBI since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks that have prompted controversy over whether law enforcement's tactics involve entrapment and violate civil liberties.

One such case involved an undercover agent pretending to be a terrorist who provided a teenager with a phony car bomb, then watched him plant it in downtown Chicago. In Boston, a man was sentenced to 17 years in prison for plotting with undercover agents to fly remote-controlled planes packed with explosives into the Pentagon and U.S. Capitol.

The FBI insists the stings are a vital, legal tool for averting potentially deadly terrorist attacks — and juries have returned tough sentences.

Dan Monnat, a prominent Kansas defense attorney who isn't representing Loewen, said the 21-page criminal complaint against Loewen doesn't contain enough information to find his guilt or evidence of FBI entrapment. But he questioned the FBI's tactics.

"If the fragile mental state of an otherwise upstanding individual is exploited to commit a crime that the individual otherwise would not have taken steps to commit, how does that make us safe and why spend taxpayer money on prosecution?" Monnat said Saturday.

"If that is what happened here, we have to ask ourselves is grooming terrorists the best use of our taxpayer money for security if the person otherwise would never have taken further steps in furtherance of terrorism. What is the point?"

But entrapment defenses have failed in various cases. In a 2009 case in New York, a federal judge said she was not proud of the government's role in nurturing an alleged conspiracy in which four men were convicted in a plot to bomb synagogues and shoot down military planes with missiles. The men were each sentenced to 25 years in prison.

In an unsuccessful appeal, the defense argued the men were harmless dupes led astray by an FBI informant who infiltrated a mosque. With the encouragement of the informant, one of the men hatched the scheme to blow up the synagogues in the Bronx and to shoot down military cargo planes with missiles.

The appeals court found the government's tactics didn't rise to the level of "outrageous misconduct."

Court documents don't specify what initially led investigators to Loewen, though he allegedly told an undercover agent during one online exchange: "hey I read Inspire magazine; I believe in staying informed." Inspire, an English-language online magazine, is produced by al-Qaida affiliates. It includes such things as bomb-making instructions and endorsements of lone-wolf terror attacks.

He also allegedly told the undercover agent he'd downloaded tens of thousands of pages about jihad, martyrdom operations and Sharia law, and printed out an al-Qaida manual — online activity that often draws law enforcement's attention.

U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom declined to discuss the case Saturday. But in May, he told students during an event at Wichita State University that authorities monitor extremists groups' websites, including Inspire magazine.

"Do not go to this website," Grissom said. "You will be on our list."

In Loewen's case, court documents paint an undercover operation in which Loewen and two FBI agents posing as conspirators ultimately hatched a plot to place a vehicle full of explosives at the Wichita airport. He allegedly timed it to cause "maximum carnage" and death, according to an FBI affidavit.

In early October, one undercover agent told Loewen he'd just returned from overseas after meeting with individuals connected with al-Qaida, and that the "brothers" were excited to hear about his access to the airport. When the agent asked if he'd be willing to plant a bomb, Loewen allegedly told him the plans were "like a dream come true for me, and I never expect things this good to occur in my life."

Over the coming months, he allegedly conspired with the agents. Loewen, who once claimed to know nothing about explosives, assisted an undercover agent assemble a bomb — but with inert explosives — using components he took from his employer. Two days later, an undercover agent picked Loewen up at a local hotel, went to another location to get the fake bomb and drove to Wichita Mid-Continent Airport.
Loewen was arrested early Friday as he twice tried to use his badge to gain entry to the tarmac.

In a letter dated Wednesday that prosecutors say Loewen left for a family member, Loewen said he expected to be martyred for Allah by the time the letter was read. He wrote that his only explanation was that he believed in jihad for the sake of Allah and his Muslim brothers and sisters, though he said most Muslims in the U.S. would condemn him.

"I expect to be called a terrorist (which I am), a psychopath, and a homicidal maniac," the letter said.

The Wichita Eagle newspaper, citing police, reported Saturday that Loewen has had at least one brush with the law, a concealed-carry violation at the airport in 2009.

Loewen has been described by a relative and a neighbor as a good person who largely kept to himself. His wife attended his initial court appearance Friday but refused to talk with reporters, as did his attorney.

http://news.yahoo.com/undercover-stings-used-fight-domestic-terrorism-230404894.html
 
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