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Ex-US sailor convicted of spying |
2008-03-05 |
A former US navy sailor has been convicted of spying and supplying a pro-al-Qaeda website with information on American warship movements. Hassan Abujihaad, 32, was found guilty of providing material support to terrorists and disclosing secret national defence information. He was arrested last year in Phoenix, Arizona. Abujihaad, a Muslim convert previously known as Paul Hall, faces 25 years in jail when he is sentenced on 23 May. |
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Ex-gang member plays key role in case against terror suspects |
2007-12-02 |
William Chrisman had three wives and nine children to support, he had a felony criminal record, and he struggled with panic attacks. Nevertheless, after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, he was determined to assist the federal government. He became an informant for the FBI, and his work helped authorities charge two men -- both Muslim converts, like Chrisman -- who were suspected of supporting terrorism. One of them, Derrick Shareef, 23, pleaded guilty Wednesday to plotting to set off grenades in an Illinois shopping mall. The other, Hassan Abujihaad, a former Navy sailor, has pleaded not guilty to charges that he gave terrorists secret information about the location of Navy ships and ways to attack them. The role of Chrisman, 34, a former gang member, was revealed last week during a two-day hearing to determine what evidence can be admitted when Abujihaad's trial begins in February. Chrisman left gang life more than a decade ago and converted to Islam while in prison for attempted armed robbery and possession of a stolen car. Now a sheep farmer in Illinois, Chrisman said that he had wanted to join the military since the 1991 Persian Gulf War, but that his criminal record prevented him from enlisting. After the Sept. 11 attacks, he walked into an FBI office and offered his services. Since then, he has helped out on several cases. In the fall of 2006, Chrisman said, authorities asked him to contact Shareef, who was working at a video store in the Chicago area. Shareef had nowhere to live and accepted an offer to move in with Chrisman the same day they met. Chrisman says the arrangement was not so unusual, since Muslims are supposed to offer shelter for three days. "It was a burden on my wives," Chrisman said in court. "Some of his behaviors were not good around my children." Shareef discussed violent jihad, or holy war, and mentioned Abujihaad, describing him as a father figure whom he met in 2003 at a mosque in Phoenix and lived with for about seven months in 2003 and 2004, Chrisman said. Abujihaad had been under federal investigation since 2004. Chrisman, who secretly tape-recorded his conversations, said Shareef told him Abujihaad had passed along information about Navy ships. "He told me that Abujihaad was on the ships in the Middle East and that he passed along information to a Web site," Chrisman testified. Abujihaad denies that. Chrisman also said Shareef told him that he and Abujihaad had discussed a plot to attack a military base in San Diego or a recruiting station in Phoenix. According to Chrisman, Shareef said Abujihaad even dispatched him to scope out the recruiting station. Abujihaad, who was not charged over that alleged plot, taught Shareef about Islam and what he called defensive jihad, which meant they could attack military bases if American Muslims were attacked or rounded up, FBI Special Agent David Dillon testified. Prosecutors said Abujihaad made coded references to al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in recorded phone calls. Abujihaad repeatedly warned Shareef to be discreet, talking in code about "cold meals" and "fresh meals" that authorities said were references to outdated and viable plots. He referred to Osama bin Laden as "under the black leaves," logistical support as "L" and "7" as an upper level of paradise for those who die on the battlefield, prosecutors said. Attorneys for Abujihaad have argued that the calls and other evidence, such as e-mails, should be thrown out because of a judge's ruling in another case in September that struck down portions of the USA Patriot Act. |
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Feds: Ex-Sailor Spoke of Attacking Ships |
2007-07-24 |
![]() Hassan Abujihaad discussed sniper attacks on military personnel last year and in 2003 or 2004 discussed attacking recruitment sites, federal prosecutors said. It was unclear yet whether Abujihaad would face new charges based on those allegations. Prosecutors have told Abujihaad's attorneys that they might use the discussions to try to introduce evidence of uncharged conduct. ``It's an ongoing conspiracy to engage in attacks on U.S. military personnel,'' prosecutor Stephen Reynolds said in U.S. District Court. Abujihaad's lawyers reacted skeptically. ``The government will have a tall task claiming there is a conspiracy out of that,'' defense attorney Robert Golger said. Abujihaad, 31, pleaded not guilty in April to providing material support to terrorists with intent to kill U.S. citizens and disclosing classified information relating to the national defense. He has been held without bail since his arrest in March in Phoenix, where he worked at a UPS warehouse. Abujihaad is charged in the same case as Babar Ahmad, a British computer specialist arrested in 2004 and accused of running Web sites to raise money for terrorism. Investigators found information about the location of U.S. Navy ships on a computer belonging to Ahmad, who is to be extradited to the U.S. Abujihaad exchanged e-mails with Ahmad while serving on the USS Benfold, a guided missile destroyer, in 2000 and 2001, according to an FBI affidavit. In those e-mails, Abujihaad discussed naval briefings and praised Osama bin Laden and those who attacked the USS Cole in 2000, according to the affidavit. |
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US former sailor accused of spying for terrorists | |||
2007-03-22 | |||
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According to the indictment, Abujihaad was in contact throughout 2001 with British nationals based in London that operated websites supporting people engaged in acts of terrorism. Abujihaad allegedly sent via e-mail in the spring of 2001 information on the movement of US Navy ships deploying for operations against the Taliban and Al-Qaeda. At the time he was serving as an enlisted man aboard one of the ships.
Federal prosecutors in Connecticut are involved because the computer server handling the Internet traffic is located that state. | |||
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Ex-U.S. sailor arrested on terror charges |
2007-03-09 |
A former sailor in the U.S. Navy has been arrested in Phoenix and charged with supporting terrorism with the intent to kill U.S. citizens. Federal prosecutors say Hassan Abujihaad, who was charged Wednesday, exchanged e-mail messages, while serving on a U.S. Navy destroyer in 2001, with the administrator of a Web site that supports terrorist causes, The New York Times reported Friday. Abujihaad is accused of contacting the man to purchase DVDs promoting the cause of Muslim separatists in Chechnya in Russia and other regions and in 2001 sharing information about his ship's whereabouts and vulnerabilities. Abujihaad, who is scheduled for transfer to Connecticut, was arrested as part of an investigation into an alleged terrorist network operating out of Britain, the Times said. The arrest stems from e-mail records discovered in the possession of the Web site operator, Babar Ahmad, who was indicted by a federal grand jury in 2004 for organizing the purchase of possible terrorist tools. He is scheduled to be extradited from Britain. |
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Fifth Column |
Former Navy Sailor Arrested on Terrorism Charges, Flash, he's not Amish |
2007-03-08 |
Former Navy Sailor Arrested for Allegedly E-Mailing Military Secrets to Suspected Terror Operatives WASHINGTON A former Navy sailor was arrested Wednesday for allegedly e-mailing military secrets including detailed information on Navy battle groups and their missions to a suspected terrorism financier that were later posted on Web sites used to raise funds for Al Qaeda. Hassan Abujihaad, 31, of Phoenix, is accused in a case that began in Connecticut and followed a suspected terrorist network across the country and into Europe and the Middle East. How incredibly racist, didn't we allow Nazis to serve in our military during WWII? He was arrested in Phoenix on charges of supporting terrorism with an intent to kill U.S. citizens and transmitting classified information to unauthorized people. Abujihaad, who is also known as Paul R. Hall, is charged in the same case as Babar Ahmad, a British computer specialist arrested in 2004 and accused of running Web sites to raise money for terrorism. Ahmad is scheduled to be extradited to the U.S. to face trial. During a search of Ahmad's computers, investigators discovered files containing classified information about the positions of U.S. Navy ships and discussing their susceptibility to attack. Abujihaad, a former enlisted man, exchanged e-mails with Ahmad while on active duty on the USS Benfold, a guided-missile destroyer, in 2000 and 2001, according to an affidavit released Wednesday. He allegedly purchased videos promoting violent jihad, or holy war. The investigation was run out of Connecticut because Ahmad allegedly used an Internet service provider there to host one of his fundraising Web sites. Kevin O'Connor, the U.S. attorney for Connecticut, had no comment Wednesday night. Does anyone CAIR? Ahmad was arrested in 2004 but the case against Abujihaad apparently received a boost in December following the arrest of Derrick Shareef, 22, of Genoa, Ill., near Chicago, who was accused of planning to use hand grenades to attack holiday shoppers at a mall. FBI: Salt Lake City murders, no story here There was no answer at the Phoenix apartment where Abujihaad lives Wednesday night and neighbors did not seem to know him. Court records to not say when he will be sent to New Haven, Conn., for arraignment in federal court. Translation, "seems like a nice guy so we let him go" |
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BREAKING NEWS: |
2007-03-07 |
Hassan Abujihaad, 31, was arrested today in Phoenix on federal charges of terrorism and espionage. The former U.S. Navy sailor went by the name Paul Hall. The federal complaint alleges that he gave classified information about Navy battle group movements to a London-based group that supported Islamic terrorists including Al-Qaeda. The Navy battle group was engaged in anti-terror operations. Federal prosecutors say Abujihaad was stationed on the U.S.S. Benfold in the Middle East which was one of the ships thats movement was revealed. Emails by Abujihaad allegedly praised Osama bin Laden and the 2000 attack on the U.S.S. Cole and said such tactics were working and taking their toll. |
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Former sailor praised the USS Cole bombing | ||
2004-08-14 | ||
A former U.S. sailor who sent e-mail messages to a radical Islamic Internet site while a crewman on a Navy destroyer in the Middle East was identified Friday as a communications specialist and Muslim convert, according to sources familiar with the investigation and Navy records. But a woman speaking on behalf of Hassan Abujihaad, who left the Navy in January 2002, denied Friday that he had posted anti-American views on the site, as authorities assert, or did anything wrong.
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