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Al Qaeda Terror Plot Widens



Sep 22, 2009 11 Comments ›› The Assassin

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Hello everybody, this is The Assassin, and this is my first post. I will be watching you as much as you are watching me. Don’t f- with PatDollard.com, don’t f- with ACTIVE, don’t f- with “The Jihadi Killer Hour”, don’t f- with Pat Dollard, don’t f- with Erik Wong, and don’t f- with anyone in ACTIVE, or my national and highly mobile Assassination Team will assassinate you. Literally? Why, of course not…

The Los Angeles Times:

Reporting from Washington and New York – Federal authorities have tied as many as a dozen people to a suspected Al Qaeda-linked bomb plot on U.S. soil as they continue to gather evidence to indict on terrorism charges the young Afghan immigrant at the center of the case, law enforcement officials said Monday.

Authorities said that they did not know the exact number of potential suspects or many of their identities, but that they had been connected through electronic intercepts, surveillance, seized evidence and interviews.

A federal law enforcement official and others, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the high level of secrecy surrounding the investigation, said the suspects appeared concentrated in the New York area, with possibly others in the suspect’s home state of Colorado and elsewhere.

Of particular interest are several individuals that Najibullah Zazi, 24, had met or communicated with on a trip to New York two weeks ago.

In interviews and court filings, federal law enforcement officials said they feared that Zazi was meeting in New York with co-conspirators in a possible plot to bomb subway stations or other crowded civilian targets.

The disclosures came as Zazi, of Aurora, Colo., and two other men arrested Saturday night made their first court appearances Monday on charges of making false statements to federal authorities.

Zazi, his father Mohammed Wali Zazi, 53, and Ahmad Wais Afzali, 37, of Queens, N.Y., were held in custody on orders by judges in Colorado and New York.

Several of the officials said it was likely that Najibullah Zazi will be charged with providing material support to a known terrorist organization based on his admission that he trained in weapons and explosives at an Al Qaeda camp in Pakistan last year. That admission was cited in an FBI affidavit unsealed over the weekend.

The affidavit also alleges that authorities found images on Najibullah Zazi’s laptop of nine pages of notes on making explosives and fuses, apparently in his own handwriting. In addition, the affidavit alleges that authorities have found other information linking Zazi to the suspected plot, including his fingerprints on a small electronic scale and double-A batteries, which are often used in making bombs.

One federal law enforcement official said more serious charges were being considered for Zazi as leverage to get him to cooperate in the investigation and provide information on others who may be involved.

Zazi, who had been monitored by authorities for some time after returning from a trip to Pakistan, was stopped on a New York bridge on Sept. 10 after driving from Colorado on what he said was a trip to settle a business deal that had gone sour.

New York police checked his car and allowed him to leave, according to court documents. Soon after, police showed pictures of Zazi and several others to Afzali, the imam of a Queens mosque who had worked as a police informant in the past.

Zazi and his father later talked by phone with Afzali, who told them of his contact with New York City police detectives.

Zazi flew back to Colorado and agreed to be questioned by FBI agents, who interviewed him for three days. Zazi abruptly stopped cooperating with authorities on Saturday, prompting his arrest.

The false statement charges against the three men result from their conversations with authorities about what they knew about the alleged plot or had told one another about the investigation.

In announcing the charges on Sunday, Assistant Atty. Gen. David Kris emphasized that authorities had “no specific information regarding the timing, location or target of any planned attack.”

The three Afghan-born men, all legal residents of the U.S., have maintained their innocence. They face up to eight years in prison if convicted on the false statement charges.

Zazi and his father, both shuttle drivers at Denver International Airport, were handcuffed for their court appearances Monday afternoon, wearing the same casual street clothes in which they were arrested.

Zazi told Judge Craig Shaffer he didn’t wish to exercise his right to have diplomatic officials from his home country intervene but might do so in the future. It wasn’t clear whether those officials would be from Afghanistan, where he was born, or Pakistan, where he lived as a child.

Zazi will remain in federal custody at least until Thursday, when a detention and preliminary hearing is scheduled.

His father, who was given a public defender, also will remain in custody until arrangements are made for electronic monitoring in his Aurora apartment.

Afzali also appeared in court Monday, neither handcuffed nor shackled. Clad in traditional Islamic garb, he spoke only to briefly answer a magistrate’s questions on whether he understood the charges against him. He blew kisses to relatives, and they waved back.

Outside the court, defense attorney Ronald Kuby portrayed Afzali as a scapegoat in a “bootstrap case created by the government to cover up their own failings.”

Kuby said federal agents had failed to hide their surveillance of Zazi, allowing the case to become public and prompting the searches of apartments in Queens early last week.

He said authorities needed someone to blame and charged Afzali with tipping Zazi off to investigators’ interest in him and some other men.

The charges against Afzali allege that during his phone conversation with Zazi, he warned that authorities had been asking about him and some of his acquaintances. In the same conversation, Afzali noted that the phone call was being monitored, according to the FBI affidavit.

Six days later, the FBI alleges that Afzali denied telling Zazi about his conversations with investigators.

Kuby said it made no sense that Afzali would have lied about a phone conversation that he already had acknowledged was being monitored.

“Why on earth is the imam going to lie to the FBI about the contents of a conversation that he knows they recorded?” Kuby said.


  • guamleo

    :twisted:

    I personally do not believe any of this is real it is a fals flag operation or some kind of publicity plot by the administration to try to distract people from his misdeeds!

  • http://thecaptiansquarters.blogspot.com/ Capt-Dax
  • http://www.accdf.com aboutTObegin

    just like this General that went to Afghanistan, he is doing exactly what obama wants him to do….demanding more troops or we will loose….obama is making the public want out and to abandon that mission so obama does not have to make that call and look like he lost the war!!!!

    -aTb
    Never Surrender, Never Abandon our Troops!

  • vincenzo4

    Want to see the mentality that everyone thinks is progressive, kewl, intellectual and trendy? The mentality and value set that allowed this world wide scourge to grow exponetially and commit worse genocide that Hitler? Here’s a real complicit legislator, one whose verbals and non-verbals are quite revealing: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LuyvFAnnHQI

  • Double Tap

    Aurora, that figures. Damned cesspool where even the roaches are gang-bangers.

  • cuchieddie/former 11B40

    Now pay attention folks, the gubbermint knows best. And don’t forget to report anyone you see who is wearing a back pack. That goes for school kids as well. We will win this war.

  • Carry on

    To bad the O team got rid of torture. Maybe they will just tickle them to get confessions. Dumb as m###f###

  • Storm 0311

    This feels “off” to me.

    I think of diversions or triggers to other things when I read this.

    A call for police state power maybe?

    This stinks of manipulation of the great unwashed peasents.

    Something else is about to fall out if they are actually calling this Al Quida in America.

    We have had episodes of sudden Jihad syndrome that got explained away and covered up.

    Why now?

  • ignifer

    JUST a thought or two..
    if getting out of afghanistan without looking like a failed war president and false flags to usher in police state / martial law powers etc etc were different but interlocking goals this perhaps would accomplish both…
    ” we have to get out of afghanistan 6 thousand miles from home so we can fight ‘al qaeda in america’here on our own soil etcetc…now show me your papers and follow orders like good little sheep…”

    or something like that…

  • checkers

    What seems “off” to me is that if this is so darned important why is so much info leaked to the public? Are our intelligence personnel this stupid?
    Something is just not right here. I would think that we would have a well honed machine ready to hose these guys down for info, not send police across the nation scattered about willy nilly watching mass transit, theaters, etc..
    Unless they really screwed up and are that scared something is up that has been missed?
    Or, they are setting something else up? It is an awful lot of mission time to devote on a national level when there are likely other ongoing investigations.
    And how convenient Obama is in NYC for the next 3 days of this manhunt?
    Is this an FBI operation, Homeland Security? CIA? Who operates these types of in-country manhunts? Who is ultimately in charge here?

    • Storm 0311

      I strongly believe this is to take or eyes off something else
      Or
      To slide us into a state of mind to actually swallow the police state.

      To them bigger government is the only answer.