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Home Front: WoT
Pop: U.S. 'Falsely' Charged Man with al-Qaida Tie
2013-11-14
[An Nahar] A father said Tuesday that federal prosecutors have falsely accused his Pakistain-born son of planning to join an al-Qaeda-linked bad turban group that was trying to topple Syria's Bashir al-Assad in that country's civil war.

Javed Sheikh rejected FBI statements that his 29-year-old son Basit Javed Sheikh was on his way to Leb, where he'd connect with members of the group Jabhat al-Nusra, when he was tossed in the slammer
Drop the rosco, Muggsy, or you're one with the ages!
at Raleigh's airport. The U.S. government considers the radical Islamic group a foreign terrorist organization

"These are false allegations," Javed Sheikh said in a brief telephone interview. "It's in the court and I hope they will justify the position and all these are false accusations. No reality in that."

Javed Sheikh says he has confidence that U.S. courts will handle the case fairly. Court documents describe Basit Sheikh as a Pakistain native with permanent, legal residency in the U.S.

Basit Sheikh was assigned two federal public defenders to represent him. They are unable to comment on Sheikh's behalf due to a rule established by local federal judges prohibiting them from discussing active cases, said Elizabeth Luck, a spokeswoman for the federal public defender's office in Raleigh.

Sheikh's case is at least the third this year in which the U.S. government has charged U.S. residents with providing material support to a terrorist group based on their alleged efforts to join Jabhat al-Nusrah.

Sheikh was assigned two federal public defenders to represent him and they did not return messages seeking comment Tuesday.

Abdella Ahmad Tounisi, an 18-year-old from suburban reliably Democrat Chicago, aka The Windy City or Mobtown
... home of Al Capone, a succession of Daleys, Barak Obama, and Rahm Emmanuel,...
, was arrested in April at O'Hare International Airport as he prepared for the first leg of a trip to join the group, authorities say. The American-born Tounisi pleaded not guilty.
"Wudn't me."

Sheikh told an FBI informant he was going to join Jabhat al-Nusra in Syria, where a 3-year-old civil war has killed more than 100,000 people, an FBI agent said in a sworn affidavit.

In August, Sheikh began an online relationship with an undercover FBI employee on a Facebook page promoting Islamic extremism, the affidavit said. Sheikh told the covert informant he had traveled to Turkey last year hoping to join the fight in Syria, but became dispirited by his experience with people who claimed to be part of the Free Syrian Army.

If convicted, Sheikh could be sentenced to up to 15 years in prison and fined $250,000.

In September, federal authorities in northern Virginia released a U.S. Army veteran accused of fighting alongside the jihadi group after a secret plea deal. Eric Harroun, 31, had faced up to life in prison. But defense lawyers argued there was confusion about which rebel group Harroun had joined, that Harroun traveled to Syria planning to fight with the Western-backed Free Syrian Army, and that fighting with the FSA was not a crime.

The Sheikh case points out the "hypocrisy" of prosecuting people who support an anti-Assad group the government judged as snuffies while the B.O. regime favors other fighters in the same bloody conflict, said Jeff Addicott, director of the Center for Terrorism Law at St. Mary's University in San Antonio.

The anti-Assad forces include some "that are out-and-out terrorist groups, that are designated by our state department as linked to al-Qaeda. Some of them aren't," Addicott said. "The hypocrisy is that you're going to prosecute someone for taking up arms against the Assad regime that may simply be caught up and labeled as a member of one of these Islamic groups."
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Home Front: WoT
Judge overrules release order on terrorism suspect
2013-05-03
A U.S. District judge today ordered that an Aurora teen continue to be detained on terrorism-related charges, reversing a decision a day earlier by a magistrate judge to allow him to go home to his family on 24-hour confinement.

U.S. District Judge Edmond Chang agreed with prosecutors that Abdella Ahmad Tounisi posed a danger and flight risk.

The ruling reverses U.S. Magistrate Judge Daniel Martin’s decision Thursday to release Tounisi to home confinement on electronic monitors. The release was put on hold after prosecutors quickly appealed the decision to Chang.

Martin had appointed Tounisi’s father to act as custodian to try to ensure he stayed out of trouble.

But Chang said he had “little confidence the family and community can control the defendant,” calling the 18-year-old “a planner” who was able to set up a post office box and obtain a second passport after his family had taken away his first one.

The reversal left Tounisi’s family distraught.
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Terror Networks
Judge OKs release Illinois man charged with terror
2013-05-02
A federal judge has agreed to release an Illinois teenager charged with trying to support a foreign terrorist organization.

U.S. Magistrate Daniel Martin ruled Thursday that 18-year-old Abdella Ahmad Tounisi could be released under home confinement. The Aurora man was friends with a man charged last year with trying to bomb a Chicago bar.

The FBI says Tounisi was trying to join a terrorist group in war-torn Syria when he was arrested at an airport. He was nabbed after contacting a sham website that the FBI set up purporting to hook up would-be fighters with terrorists.

The judge warned Tounisi at a hearing to take the allegations seriously.

Tounisi allegedly hoped to join an al-Qaida-affiliated group fighting Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime in a bloody civil war.

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Home Front: WoT
FBI: Aurora man, 18, tried to join group linked to al-Qaida
2013-04-21
[SUNTIMES] An 18-year-old from Aurora who was incarcerated
I ain't sayin' nuttin' widdout me mout'piece!
at O'Hare Airport planned to travel to war-torn Syria and hoped to join a "jihadist bad boy" group tied to al-Qaeda, federal authorities said Saturday.

Abdella Ahmad Tounisi, who was linked to a man charged with trying to bomb a reliably Democrat Chicago, aka The Windy City or Mobtown
... home of Al Capone, a succession of Daleys, Barak Obama, and Rahm Emmanuel,...
bar last year, was arrested before boarding the plane.

Tounisi, a U.S. citizen, was taken into custody without incident late Friday by the Chicago FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force. He had gone through airport security, headed for a flight to Istanbul, Turkey, according to the FBI, which said Tounisi hoped to join Jabhat al-Nusrah, an al-Qaeda-affiliated group fighting Syrian Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
The Scourge of Hama...
's regime in a civil war.

Tounisi was charged with attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization.
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Home Front: WoT
FBI: Ill. man planned to join Syrian extremists
2013-04-20
The FBI has arrested an 18-year-old suburban Chicago man who U.S. authorities say was planning join an al-Qaida-affiliated group operating in Syria.

The FBI says Abdella Ahmad Tounisi (ab-DUH'-lah AH'-med too-NEE'-see), of Aurora, Ill., was arrested Friday night as he tried to board a flight from Chicago's O'Hare International Airport to Turkey.

Tounisi, a U.S. citizen, is charged with one count of attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization.

According to the criminal complaint, Tounisi carried out research online about Jabhat al-Nusrah, or Nursa Front. Nusra Front is the most effective rebel faction fighting Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime. The group is affiliated with al-Qaida in Iraq.

The FBI says a bureau employee posing as a recruiter for the group exchanged emails with the suspect.
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