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Home Front: WoT
Timeline of Islamicist attacks for New York, 2001 to date
2013-04-19
Barry Rubin, posting over at Yid with Lid, posts an interesting timeline of attacks, planned and foiled, for the New York area since 9/11. When people ask "why would Chechnyan youths come to America and plan terror attacks?", the answer is that of the scorpion to the frog: it's what they do.

Full credit to Barry for the list and a big thank you to the Yid. Barry, in case you're wondering, is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal.
Since September 11, 2001, there have been 18 known terrorist attacks planned in New York City and they all have something in common: the worldview of the perpetrators. In some cases, they were called off by al-Qaeda:

  • In 2002, Iyman Faris, a U.S.-based al-Qaeda operative, planned to cut the Brooklyn Bridge's support cables at the direction of 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

  • In 2003, al-Qaeda had planned to release cyanide gas in New York City's subway system and attack other public places.

  • In 2006, Uzair Paracha, a Brooklyn resident, was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison after he was convicted of attempting to help al-Qaeda operative Majid Khan enter the United States to attack gas tanks. Paracha's father worked with al-Qaida to smuggle explosives - including possibly nuclear weapons - into the United States using the New York office of Paracha's import-export business.

  • Dhiren Barot (aka Issa al-Hindi) was sentenced to life in prison by a United Kingdom court in 2006 after pleading guilty to planning to attack several targets both in the UK and the U.S., including the New York Stock Exchange, Citigroup's headquarters in Midtown Manhattan, and the Prudential Building in Newark, NJ.

  • Shahawar Matin Siraj and James Elshafay plotted in 2004 to place explosive devices in the Herald Square subway station in Manhattan.

  • In July 2006, the FBI revealed it had uncovered a plot involving an attack on a PATH commuter train tunnel connecting New York and New Jersey by Islamists, the placement of suicide bombers on trains, and the destruction of the retaining wall separating the Hudson River from the World Trade Center site in the hopes of causing massive flooding in the city's Financial District.

  • Beginning in 2006, four Islamists plotted to detonate the jet-fuel storage tanks and supply lines for John F. Kennedy Airport in order to cause wide-scale destruction and economic disruption in an attack they intended to dwarf 9/11.

  • In a series of three trials spanning 2008 to 2010, eight Muslims were convicted in Britain of attempting to simultaneously detonate explosives in seven airliners traveling from London to several North American metropolises, including New York.

  • Bryant Neal Vinas, of Long Island, New York, traveled to Pakistan with an intent to die fighting against American forces in Afghanistan. In summer of 2008, Vinas spoke to al-Qaeda about targeting the Long Island Railroad using a suitcase bomb that would be left in a car and set to detonate.

  • In May 2009, four Islamists placed what they believed were functioning bombs outside of Jewish targets in the Bronx neighborhood of Riverdale and additionally constructed plans to fire missiles at military transport planes at Stewart International Airport near Newburgh, NY.

  • In September 2009, the New York City subway system was targeted for attack by three individuals supporting al-Qaeda who planned to set off bombs in the subway during rush hour shortly after the eighth anniversary of 9/11.

  • Faisal Shahzad, a Pakistani-American residing in Connecticut, attempted to detonate a car bomb in Times Square on May 1, 2010.

  • Ahmed Ferhani, an Queens resident born in Algeria, along with Mohammad Mamdouh, a Moroccan immigrant, were arrested in May 2011 in an NYPD operation in which Ferhani purchased a hand grenade, three semi-automatic pistols and ammunition from an undercover detective. NYPD's investigation into the pair revealed their desire to attack a synagogue in New York City.

  • Jose Pimentel, a native of the Dominican Republic and convert to Islam, was charged with plotting to detonate bombs in and around New York City in November 2011.

  • Quazi Mohammad Rezwanul Ahsan Nafis, a 21-year-old native of Bangladesh residing in the U.S. on a student visa, was arrested in October 2012 as he attempted to remotely detonate what he believed was a bomb in front of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in lower Manhattan.

  • Raees Alam Qazi and Sheheryar Alam Qazi, Pakistan-born brothers, were arrested by federal authorities in Florida in November 2012 for charges relating to a plan to bomb popular New York City landmarks including Times Square, Wall Street and city theaters.

  • Jesse Morton, a New York City-based Muslim convert, was apprehended in Morocco and pleaded guilty in February 2012 to conspiring to solicit murder, making threatening communications, and using the Internet to place others in fear, most notably through his website Revolution Muslim.

  • Alessa and Carlos Almonte, both of New Jersey, pleaded guilty in March 2011 to conspiring to murder persons outside of the United States on behalf of al-Shabaab, the Somalia-based, al-Qaeda-affiliated terrorist group.

  • And even this list doesn't include the 2007 plot to attack nearby Fort Dix by a half-dozen Islamists since that was handled by the New Jersey authorities.
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Home Front: WoT
FBI, NYPD Arrest 4 in Alleged Plot to Bomb NY Synagogues
2009-05-21
Four New York City men were arrested Wednesday in connection with an alleged plot to blow up New York City synagogues and other city locations, WNBC's Jonathan Dienst was first to learn. Raids by the FBI-NYPD Joint Terrorist Task Force in the Bronx captured the suspected ringleader and three followers in what law enforcement sources are calling a homegrown terrorist plot.

Investigators stress the suspects' meetings had been infiltrated early on and there was "no chance" the alleged plot could succeed. Some officials have called them an "unsophisticated" group.
Leave them alone and they could learn to do better ...
Investigators said several of the suspects are Muslims who allegedly talked about destroying two Jewish temples, including at least one in the Riverdale section of the Bronx. Prosecutors also said the men discussed trying to shoot down military planes at Stewart Airport using stinger missiles.

The men ordered and accepted delivery of materials they believed were bomb-making ingredients, authorities said. But investigators said they made sure the materials the suspects received were inert. Officials tell WNBC they moved in now so the alleged plot could not progress any further.

The four suspects were identified as James Cromitie, David Williams, Onta Williams and Laguerre Payen. The four men are in custody and are expected to be arraigned Thursday in White Plains federal court on terrorism-related counts.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg offered his thanks to the NYPD and FBI. "This latest attempt to attack our freedoms shows that the homeland security threats against New York City are sadly all too real and underscores why we must remain vigilant in our efforts to prevent terrorism," Bloomberg said.

The motives behind the alleged plot are not yet known, but authorities said that Cromitie said his parents live in Afghanistan and he was apparently upset over the U.S. military presence there and in Pakistan.

Since the 9/11 attacks, authorities have arrested suspects in a number of alleged plots against area targets including the Fort Dix New Jersey military base, John F. Kennedy Airport, the Herald Square subway station in Manhattan and the Brooklyn Bridge. Last December, a New Jersey jury convicted five foreign-born men, living and working in the area for years, of conspiring to kill U.S. soldiers at Ft. Dix. Three were brothers from Yugoslavia; the others were born in Jordan and Turkey. The FBI arrested them after 15 months of surveillance after they tried to buy AK-47s and M-16s. The men had claimed they were set up by an unscrupulous informant.

In June 2007, four alleged Muslim extremists -- a 63-year-old former JFK airport cargo employee living in Brooklyn and three others from Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago -- were charged with plotting to blow up fuel lines and gas tanks at the busy Queens airport. All four have pleaded not guilty.

Two men were convicted of plotting to bomb the Herald Square station including a Pakistani immigrant Shahawar Matin Siraj. He is serving 30 years in federal prison for conspiring to blow up the subway station on the eve of the 2004 Republican National Convention in nearby Madison Square Garden.

Al Qaeda operative Iman Faris of Columbus, Ohio, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Kashmir, is serving 20 years in federal prison for planning to destroy American targets including the Brooklyn Bridge, which he cased in 2002 and 2003.

Others have been charged with material support for terrorism. Two American born Muslim converts, Bronx jazz musician and martial arts expert Tarik Shah and emergency room doctor Rafiq Sabir, who had worked in New York and Florida, were convicted in 2007 of conspiring to provide material support to Al Qaeda.

Queens resident Mohammed Junaid Babar, who immigrated to the U.S., pleaded guilty in 2004 to supporting Al Qaeda and has since testified against terror suspects who plotted attacks in London.
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Home Front: WoT
Manhattan Subway Bomb Plotter Sentenced to 30 Years in Prison
2007-01-09
A Pakistani immigrant was sentenced on Monday to 30 years in prison for hatching an unsuccessful plot to blow up a busy Manhattan subway station as revenge for wartime abuses of Iraqis.

Shahawar Matin Siraj, 24, was arrested Aug. 27, 2004, on the eve of the Republican National Convention. Though there was no proof he ever obtained explosives or was linked to any terror organizations, prosecutors said his intentions were ominous: He wanted to blow up the Herald Square subway station, a bustling transportation hub located beneath Macy's flagship department store.

Defense attorneys had sought to convince U.S. District Judge Nina Gershon that Siraj's sentence should not exceed 10 years, arguing in recent court filings that their client was "not a dangerous psychopath but more of a confused and misguided youngster." Prosecutors countered that the defendant deserved at least 30 years behind bars as the "driving force" behind a "workable terrorist plot."
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Home Front: WoT
Judge to rule on would-be NYC subway bomber
2007-01-08
Shahawar Matin Siraj was either a naive stooge lured into a phony bomb plot or a homegrown terrorist determined to inflict misery on New Yorkers as revenge for wartime abuses of Iraqis. Lawyers for Siraj - convicted of conspiring to blow up one of the city's busiest subway stations - and prosecutors painted the conflicting portraits recently in court papers in advance of his sentencing Monday in federal court. Defense attorneys have sought to convince a judge that Siraj's sentence should not exceed 10 years since the attack never came close to being carried out.

Siraj, a 21-year-old high school dropout at the time of his August 2004 arrest, "is not a dangerous psychopath, but more of a confused and misguided youngster," the defense team argued in its papers.
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Home Front: WoT
NYC Bomb Plotter Guilty
2006-05-25
A Pakistani immigrant was convicted yesterday of plotting to wreak havoc in the heart of the city by blowing up the Herald Square subway station.
After a four-week trial, a Brooklyn federal jury needed just 10 hours to find Shahawar Matin Siraj guilty of conspiring to place an explosive device inside a garbage can or under a bench.

The Islamic-bookstore employee - whose lawyers presented a defense that he was merely a dimwitted dupe - sat emotionless until the jury forewoman read out read out the panel's verdict on the four-count indictment.

"Guilty, your honor," the juror told Judge Nina Gershon, prompting Siraj, 23, to let out a brief sigh, close his eyes and slightly drop his head into chest.

Siraj was busted Aug. 27, 2004, just days before the Republican National Convention was set to kick off.

The goal of the blast - as he stated on numerous video and audio recordings that the NYPD secretly captured - would have been to cause economic harm, not carnage and death.

His sinister scheme was unraveled by a wired-up paid NYPD informant, Osama El Dawoody, who Siraj thought was part of an Islamic brotherhood ready, willing and able to pull off a terrorist strike.



Both Siraj and his co-conspirator James Elshafay - a diagnosed schizophrenic who pleaded guilty shortly after their arrest and testified against Siraj - were caught discussing nitty-gritty details of their plan, including targets, how big the bomb should be, how to get nuclear materials and different disguises to use when they planted the bomb.

"The verdict is an important milestone in safeguarding New York against plotters, whether homegrown or foreign," Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said.

But Siraj's lawyer, Martin Stolar, insisted his client was entrapped, saying, "This was a manufactured crime.

"This is not somebody who is a terrorist."

Siraj faces life in prison when he is sentenced on Oct. 5, but both Stolar and prosecutors believe he will receive a much lighter prison-stint.
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Home Front: WoT
Pakistani immigrant convicted in NYT bomb plot
2006-05-25
A Pakistani immigrant was convicted on Wednesday of plotting to blow up a New York City subway station in a case that shed light on police investigation tactics since the Sept. 11 attacks. Shahawar Matin Siraj, 23, faces a maximum life sentence after a Brooklyn federal court jury convicted him of conspiring to place and detonate an explosive on the city's mass transit system, among other charges.

During the five-week trial, Siraj claimed he was entrapped by an overzealous police informant twice his age, Egyptian Osama Eldawoody, 50, who met the younger man in an Islamic bookstore while spying on mosques for the New York police. During the trial, prosecutors played taped conversations between the two men in which the younger man discussed plans to bomb the Herald Square subway station in midtown Manhattan.

Siraj's defense attorney Martin Stolar argued his client was "not the brightest bulb in the chandelier" and was easily led by Eldawoody. Siraj questioned new powers granted to police after they lobbied for increased surveillance of mosques they believed could harbor Islamic extremists. Eldawoody testified in 2003 and 2004 he served as the "eyes and ears" of the police and was paid more than $100,000 to report about daily mosque activities, including prayers.

Prosecutors said Siraj had the will to carry out a plot supporting his extremist views. Their case was strengthened by the testimony of a co-conspirator who pleaded guilty in the case and an undercover police officer who said Siraj openly supported al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

The police department considered the case an example of a wider focus on suspects such as Siraj who are not affiliated with any major extremist groups. "The verdict is an important milestone in safeguarding New York against terrorist plotters whether home-grown or foreign," said New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly.
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Home Front: WoT
Pakistani behind subway bombing plan: prosecutor
2006-05-24
NEW YORK: A Pakistani immigrant who claims a paid informant lured him into a phony bomb plot actually did the dirty work himself, picking a busy Manhattan subway station as a target, drawing diagrams and doing reconnaissance, a prosecutor argued. Shahawar Matin Siraj “did all those things on his own, of his own volition,” Todd Harrison, the assistant US attorney, said on Monday during closing arguments in the man’s trial. Siraj was arrested on the eve of the 2004 Republican National Convention on charges he wanted to attack a subway station in Herald Square, a dense shopping district that includes Macy’s flagship department store.

The jury was expected to begin deliberating on Tuesday after hearing four weeks of testimony. The jurors will have to decide whether the suspect was planning the attack of his own accord or, as the defence argues, was pushed to do it by the police informant. In Monday’s closing arguments, the prosecutor argued that Siraj had become enraged over US policies in the Middle East long before he met the informant in 2003. “He was angry and he wanted to blow something up,” Harrison told jurors in federal court in Brooklyn. “It’s not that complicated.” Martin Stolar, the defence attorney, accused the informant, Osama Eldawoody, of brainwashing and entrapping his impressionable 23-year-old client by taking him under his wing and convincing him it was his duty as a Muslim to wage a holy war against American oppressors.
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Home Front: Politix
Closing arguments in NYC subway trial
2006-05-23
A prosecutor at the trial of a Pakistani immigrant charged with plotting to blow up the Herald Square subway station used his closing argument yesterday to urge the jurors to ask themselves a question:

How would they react if someone who shared their anger and passion about a closely held political opinion suggested that they bomb a busy subway station to get their point across?

The prosecutor, Todd Harrison, an assistant United States attorney, told the jurors he believed that each of them, whether the opinion was about the war in Iraq, the Abu Ghraib prison scandal or the new Medicare plan, would say, "Are you crazy?"

"I've got political opinions, but I don't think putting a bomb in crowded subway system in New York City is the way to go," Mr. Harrison said, adding what he thought the jurors would answer: "Thanks, but no thanks."

Mr. Harrison said the four-week trial in Brooklyn federal court boiled down to that simple question and suggested that the jurors use their common sense today, when they begin to weigh the fate of the man charged in the plot, Shahawar Matin Siraj, 23.

One of Mr. Siraj's lawyers, Martin R. Stolar, sought to present a more complex picture in his closing argument. He contended that the plot was driven by a paid police informer, a 50-year-old Egyptian-born man he had sought to portray throughout the trial as a canny and greedy manipulator and the real mastermind.

It was the informer, he said, who treated the younger man like a son and entrapped him by inflaming his political passions with pictures from Abu Ghraib and talk of abuses of Muslims in America and in the Middle East.

He said that his client was not "the brightest bulb in the chandelier" and that it was the informer, Osama Eldawoody, who had convinced him that it was his duty as a Muslim to wage jihad against the American economy, though he urged him to avoid killing.

"The problem here is the firebrand who stirred the pot is a government agent, not some stranger or imam," Mr. Stolar told the jury during his two-hour summation. "And the law does not allow the government to create a crime; it just is not permitted. That is why the defense of entrapment exists."

Throughout the arguments, Mr. Siraj appeared downcast, seated between two of his three lawyers. His fingers were laced together on the defense table, and he was wearing a blue pinstripe suit and a light gray open-collared shirt.

His mother, who prayed in the courtroom hallway during much of the trial, fingering light-green prayer beads and sometimes chanting, sat in the back row of the courtroom, rocking slightly back and forth.

In his opening statement at the trial, Mr. Stolar had acknowledged that his client had taken part in the plot along with another man and Mr. Eldawoody, a nuclear engineer who secretly recorded more than 30 hours of conversations, mostly with Mr. Siraj. The other man, James Elshafay, 21, pleaded guilty and testified against Mr. Siraj.

Mr. Stolar has argued that the government manufactured the crime, noting that Mr. Eldawoody had told the two men that he was part of a nonexistent terrorist group and would supply the explosives. Mr. Stolar stressed to the jury that if they found that his client was not predisposed to commit an act of violence, they should find him not guilty.

Mr. Stolar conceded that many of the statements his client made on the recordings were "despicable stuff" — the young man praised Osama bin Laden and the 9/11 attacks, said he approved of suicide bombings in Israel and Palestine and repeatedly talked about killing Jews.

"But the verdict you make is not because you dislike the man, it's because you follow the law," he said. "If your verdict sheet could say 'reluctantly not guilty,' that's the box I want you to check."

Earlier in the day, another prosecutor, Marshall Miller, hammered away at Mr. Siraj's entrapment defense. He detailed statements by Mr. Siraj that he said undercut the argument that he was not predisposed to violence before he met Mr. Eldawoody.

Mr. Miller cited the testimony of an undercover detective who had frequented the Islamic bookstore where Mr. Siraj worked nearly a year before the young man first met Mr. Eldawoody in September 2003.

The detective, who wrote dozens of reports about his conversations with Mr. Siraj, was called to rebut the testimony of Mr. Siraj, who testified that he had never talked about violent jihad or support for terrorism until he met Mr. Eldawoody.

The detective, testifying under a pseudonym, recounted statement after statement that Mr. Siraj had made long before he met the informer, including saying that he hoped Al Qaeda operatives would attack America again and that he would carry out a suicide bombing for revenge if someone killed his family. The detective quoted Mr. Siraj in one of his reports as saying that bin Laden "was a talented brother and a great planner" and said he hoped he "planned something big for America."

Mr. Miller told the jurors they had heard "conversation after conversation of the defendant spouting violent jihad and describing his own violent activities" long before he met Mr. Eldawoody.

Addressing the entrapment defense directly, he argued that the prosecution of Mr. Siraj was justified because he was disposed to carrying out an attack. "If there are people out there who are ready and willing to bomb the subway system, then law enforcement should be out there trying to arrest them before attacks happen," he said.

Mr. Stolar dismissed the government's arguments about his client's statements, saying that just because Mr. Siraj said he could understand suicide bombings in Israel, that does not mean "he is predisposed to blowing up a subway station in New York."

"It's his First Amendment right to have and express that opinion," Mr. Stolar said. "It does not mean that it makes him disposed toward killing or a violent crime."
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Home Front: WoT
Officer Details His Work Undercover Amid Muslims
2006-05-19
A young police detective testified yesterday at the Herald Square bombing plot trial that he was recruited from the Police Academy 13 months after 9/11 to work deep undercover in the Muslim community to investigate Islamic extremists.

The detective, a Muslim who came to America from Bangladesh when he was 7, testified that he was a 23-year-old college graduate when he was plucked from the academy in October 2002. He took an apartment in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, where, he testified, his assignment was to be a "walking camera" among Muslims there.

He said he had no contact with the Police Department other than through his handler, to whom he reported by e-mail at first. During two years of living in Bay Ridge, he was involved in "numerous" investigations, he testified, and was at times shadowed by a field team to ensure his safety.

The Police Intelligence Division's program to post detectives overseas has been widely publicized. But this detective's testimony yesterday in federal court in Brooklyn provided the closest look yet at how the division is using undercover investigators to penetrate mosques, bookstores and other places where Muslims gather in the city.

His testimony confirmed what many Muslims have believed since the Sept. 11 attacks: that law enforcement agencies have worked to infiltrate their community during terrorism investigations. It also revealed the extraordinary steps the department took to create a fictitious identity so a Muslim investigator could live for years in an insular neighborhood where people have become highly suspicious of the authorities.

Beyond the detective's testimony, police officials yesterday would not discuss the scope of the program and provided no details about its structure, its guidelines or its successes or failures. The witness was identified only by a pseudonym — Kamil Pasha — to protect continuing investigations.

The detective was the final witness at the four-week trial of Shahawar Matin Siraj, 23, a Pakistani immigrant who is charged with plotting to blow up the Herald Square subway station in 2004. His lawyers have argued that he was entrapped by a paid police informer, a 50-year-old Egyptian-born nuclear engineer who they say was the driving force behind the plot. They have argued that their client was an inept dupe who was not predisposed to commit an act of terrorism until the informer inflamed him.

The undercover detective was called as a witness to rebut the defense arguments that the informer had drawn Mr. Siraj into the plot. He told the jury about statements Mr. Siraj had made long before he met the informer, which prosecutors contend show he had often spoken about violence and terrorism. The detective was not involved in the investigation of Mr. Siraj but came across him during his undercover work.

Much of the detective's testimony focused on Mr. Siraj's statements, but strands of information about the detective and his work were interlaced with his answers. And while prosecutors sought to limit testimony about the detective's background, objecting several times to questions by one of Mr. Siraj's lawyers, Martin R. Stolar, the judge, Nina Gershon, overruled the objections.

The detective testified that he graduated from the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and entered the Police Academy in July 2002. In the middle of October, roughly halfway through his academy training, he left early when he was recruited to join the Intelligence Division, where he was assigned to the Special Services Unit, which runs the undercover program.

Within three weeks, according to his testimony, he made his first appearance at the Islamic Society of Bay Ridge, a mosque on Fifth Avenue in Brooklyn, next door to the Islamic bookstore where Mr. Siraj worked. He testified that he spent time there periodically. Mr. Stolar, while questioning the detective, indicated that his reports showed he had seen Mr. Siraj 72 times over the two years, mostly in the bookstore.

He testified that he started looking for an apartment and a job. At one point Mr. Siraj's uncle was going to help him find work. With a coterie of young men who sometimes frequented the bookstore, he got involved in essentially proselytizing Islam.

He also testified that at one point he had Mr. Siraj over to his apartment. But he said he never wore a secret recording device.

The detective said he was not given any special training to work undercover but was taught about self-defense, weapons, surveillance and undercover safety.

He said, "I was told to act like a civilian — hang out in the neighborhood, gather information."

He said he was told "never to push for information," but instead to "take a back seat" and "observe, be the ears and eyes."

A slight man in a gray suit, a white shirt and a rust-colored patterned tie, the detective said he had never before testified in court. In fact, his youth and, perhaps, naïveté were in evidence at several points in the morning, including when he said he had never heard of suicide bombings before Mr. Siraj raised the subject, one he seemed to discuss often.

Mr. Stolar seemed incredulous. "You had never before heard of suicide bombings taking place in Israel?" he asked.

"I grew up with a very peaceful religion," the detective responded. "All of these comments — radical beliefs — came to me when I took this assignment." He added: "Where in Islam does it say you can blow up a train station?"

Over the course of the day, his poise on the stand grew. Most police officers make their trial debuts in less-charged atmospheres, perhaps in traffic or criminal court. For the witness yesterday, however, as the first Muslim undercover to testify, the stakes were far higher.

In fact, the stakes at the trial are perhaps higher still for the department, as evidenced by the presence for much of the proceedings of the department's highest ranking lawyer, S. Andrew Schaffer, the deputy commissioner for legal matters, and an aide. Also frequently present has been a civilian Intelligence Division analyst and for the last three days, as the possibility of the detective's testimony grew, a lieutenant from the department's press office.

Several questions about the investigation remained yesterday. When the undercover detective began visiting the Bay Ridge mosque in 2002, the Intelligence Division was governed by a 1985 consent decree stemming from a civil lawsuit. The decree limited police surveillance of political activity and religious services.

The guidelines set by the decree, which were loosened in February 2003, required that certain paperwork be filed before such an investigation could be conducted. It was unclear yesterday whether the guidelines were followed.
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Home Front: WoT
Undercover officer testifies in 2004 bomb plot case
2006-05-18
An undercover police officer testified yesterday that a Pakistani immigrant charged with plotting to blow up the Herald Square subway station in 2004 had said two years earlier that he hoped Al Qaeda operatives would blow up New York City and "the American people."

Prosecutors called the officer as a witness in United States District Court in Brooklyn in an effort to undermine the case presented by lawyers for the immigrant, Shahawar Matin Siraj, 23. Mr. Siraj, who testified in his own defense over the last two and a half days, and his lawyers have argued that he was entrapped by a paid police informant.

The lawyers have contended that their client, whom they portrayed as an inept dupe, was not predisposed to commit an act of terrorism until he met the informant, Osama Eldawoody, 50, in late 2003. They have said the older man was the driving force behind the plot and inflamed Mr. Siraj with pictures, including some of American soldiers abusing prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.

But yesterday, the officer, a slightly built man wearing a dark gray suit, a pale blue shirt and a luminous crimson tie, testified about a series of conversations he had with Mr. Siraj between 2002 and early 2003 in which he said the young man talked supportively about terrorism.

The officer testified that Mr. Siraj had said that America would be attacked again soon. "The mission was not completed on 9/11," he reported Mr. Siraj saying, because "Wall Street was not attacked."

The officer, who is expected to continue his testimony today, identified himself only by a pseudonym, Kamil Pasha, saying that he remains involved in undercover operations.

The defendant had testified earlier that the man he knew as Kamil was of Bangladeshi descent, but the officer provided no details about his background and few about his work history. He said only that he had been an officer working undercover for about three and a half years and had never before testified in court. He said that he first met Mr. Siraj in the Islamic bookstore where the young man worked in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, in November 2002.

The officer testified that in December 2002, he and Mr. Siraj discussed news reports that warned of five Al Qaeda operatives entering the United States illegally from Canada.

"The defendant said he was happy that they were here and he hoped that they blew up the city and the American people," the officer said.

The officer also testified that Mr. Siraj had defended suicide bombings in Palestine, saying they were acts of revenge committed by people whose family members had been raped and killed. "The defendant said that if anyone did that to his family, he would do the same thing, meaning a suicide bomb," the officer said.

Mr. Siraj's lawyers, who rested their case after his testimony ended yesterday, had asked the judge to bar the officer's testimony, contending that the statements he would cite by Mr. Siraj were protected by the First Amendment, essentially as political views. But Judge Nina Gershon of United States District Court ruled that they were admissible to rebut Mr. Siraj's claim that he was induced by Mr. Eldawoody.
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Home Front: WoT
Pakistani immigrant plotted to bomb Herald Square subway in 2004
2006-05-03
Prosecutors at the trial of a Pakistani immigrant accused of conspiring to bomb the Herald Square subway station in 2004 played a secretly recorded videotape for the jurors in the case today. The tape showed the man talking about the plan with a police informer and another man, who has since admitted to taking part in the plot.

The immigrant, Shahawar Matin Siraj, 23, agrees to guide a bomber into the Herald Square subway station at West 34th Street, which he has visited on a number of occasions as he developed the plot. He agrees to check the area in advance of the bomber's entry into the station and to point out to him where to place one or two back-pack bombs.

But speaking in disjointed English, he refuses to place the bombs himself, saying he does not want to be blamed for any deaths. He also says he needs to ask his mother.

"I will work with those brothers, that's it," he says, on the black and white video, which was projected on a large screen on the courtroom wall and lasted about 45 minutes. "As a planner or whatever. But to putting there? I'm not sure."

Later he explains to the informer, Osama Eldawoody, a 50-year-old Egyptian who was naturalized as a United States citizen: "I don't want to carry neither I want to put it, from my hands. What if that guy who will be going to come out of the train will be Muslim. Thing about every single thing."

He says several times that he wants only to cause economic damage, not to kill anyone.

The government has sought to portray Mr. Siraj as a dangerous man bent on carrying out a devastating attack. His lawyers, however, contend that the young man, who came to New York from Karachi, Pakistan, in 1999 to join his parents, was duped.

They have said that when a fuller picture is presented, it will be clear that Mr. Siraj was manipulated by the police informer, who they contend orchestrated the plot for money, nearly $100,000 that the Police Department paid him over two years and nine months, much of it while he was working on this case.
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Home Front: WoT
Would-be Boomer Befuddled by Bay Ridge Osama
2006-01-25
"It had originally been your plan to put a bomb in the 34th Street subway station?" Brooklyn Assistant U.S. Attorney Todd Harrison asked Pakistani-born defendant Shahawar Matin Siraj in federal court.

"Yes, that's correct," Siraj, 23, sniffed nonchalantly. The suspect then gave similar responses to a string of questions about his alleged mastermind role in the potentially devastating terror scheme.

Siraj was busted in August 2004, just days before the Republican National Convention at Madison Square Garden, above the hub for the transit system around Herald Square. Siraj also allegedly devised an elaborate scheme to launch bloody attacks on two other Manhattan subway stations, the Verrazano Bridge, Staten Island police station houses and a jail — "to teach these bastards a good lesson," according to court papers.

Siraj and an alleged accomplice were reportedly incensed over the U.S. prisoner-abuse scandal at the now-infamous Abu Ghraib jail in Iraq.
Thank you, media.
The suspect — who had been living as an illegal alien in Jackson Heights, Queens, at the time — proclaimed he was "ready for jihad," the papers said. The alleged fiend was foiled after a confidential informant — identified by Siraj's lawyer as an Egyptian man named Osama Doaudi — caught Siraj and his accomplice, James El Shafay, on video and audiotape discussing the meticulous plot.
Finally, an Osama we can like.
Doaudi, working for the feds, first approached Siraj at his uncle's Islamic bookstore in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, sometime in 2004, authorities said.
Bay Ridge? Used to be heavily Scandanavian. My folks were born there. My grandparents are now spinning in their graves.
A video even catches the trio driving by Penn Station on a reconnaissance mission and talking about what type of backpacks they should use to carry bombs, according to Siraj's lawyer, Martin Stolar.

Stolar argued that the case was clearly based on entrapment. Siraj claimed that after his bust, a federal agent told him he would be meeting with a "prosecutor" and "said they would help you if you told the truth. "I never used this word 'prosecutor' before," Siraj insisted. "I thought he was my lawyer. That's why I speak to him. I was shocked, stressed, confusion."
Well, it's not the government's fault if you don't know what "prosecutor" means. Ignorance of the law, etc. Interesting, though. What he's pretty much saying is, "I spilled everything about the plot because I thought the guy was my public defender, and they'd never be able to use it against me." Ooops!
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