Home Front: WoT |
Central Ohio becomes front line in Hamas-linked CAIR's fight for popular support |
2016-11-18 |
[Jihad Watch] The Columbus, Ohio chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) is soliciting the public for any perceived instances of Islamic hate, with assurances of support from the local media and city lawmakers. The appeal comes on the heels of a landslide electoral victory for Donald Trump, whose administration CAIR believes will be "packed with anti-Muslim bigots." "Anti-Moslem" is CAIR-speak for "non-Moslem." CAIR Columbus has stated that verbal assaults against Muslims have risen exponentially since Trump became the president-elect. The allegations of Trump-inspired hate, coordinated and reported directly by CAIR and often without any corresponding police reporting, come as Trump indicates support for a bill that will ostensibly name the Muslim Brotherhood, with which CAIR has been linked, as a terrorist group. CAIR enjoys the complicity of the city of Columbus in its campaign to highlight Islamophobia. City council members did CAIR’s bidding by passing a resolution condemning Islamophobia. Even Ohio State University, the pride of Columbus and a huge influence on local politics, has bowed to prevailing trends and added its support to CAIR. When CAIR complained of two incidents in which women wearing head scarves were allegedly threatened on campus, Ohio State President Michael Drake responded by publishing an open letter condemning such assaults. Yet criminal charges were not filed in either case, and it appears that only one of the victims was an actual student at the university. A virtual immigration nexus exists between Columbus and Somalia that has led to the fact that now the Midwestern town houses the country’s second largest concentration of Somalis. Since then, Columbus has been no stranger to terrorist activity. CAIR Columbus supporters have expressed outrage over the conviction and imprisonment of local Muslims who in 2002 plotted to bomb a Columbus-area mall. Nuradin Abdi, Iyman Faris, and Christopher Paul are known al-Qaeda operatives who each served time for their participation in plots that targeted a variety of public gathering places around the country and in Ohio. On February 11, 2016, local Somali Mohamed Barry attacked four people at a Columbus establishment, the Nazareth Restaurant. CBS News and many other media outlets were quick to call the assault a "lone wolf terrorist attack" in an attempt to distinguish Barry from other violent Islamic jihadists. Journalists refused to name a motive for the attacks, even though Barry returned to the restaurant and began attacking customers with a machete after he was told, upon inquiring, that the owner hailed from Israel. CAIR has been extremely successful in Ohio and elsewhere at dissuading the public from associating Islam with terror attacks. Barry was given the benefit of the doubt by the media regarding his intentions, though the same cannot be said of allegations of attacks initiated by Muslims. These receive the weakest attention and scrutiny from not just the mainstream media, but also from the the highest political office in the land. President Barack Obama urged the nation to show restraint to Muslims following the San Bernardino massacre that killed 14 Americans in December of 2015. Con't. |
Link |
Terror Networks | |
Connecting thread: Ohio terrorist ties to al-Qaida operative revealed | |
2010-04-13 | |
| |
Link |
Home Front: WoT |
Terror Suspect Failed a Test |
2009-12-09 |
![]() Terror suspect David Headley was questioned by an airport inspector in August and deceptive answers about his travels abroad helped officials begin to unravel Mr. Headley's alleged double life. The 49-year-old Chicago man was charged this week for helping plot the terror attack in Mumbai a year ago that killed 166 people. Federal authorities, already suspicious of him, used his return to the U.S. this summer as an opportunity, according to officials. A border inspector asked Mr. Headley about his overseas travel, according to court records and people familiar with the case. Mr. Headley said he was working for a company called First World Immigration Service. First World is a business that allegedly provided Mr. Headley with cover as he traveled to scout terrorist targets for Lashkar-e-Taiba, the group responsible for the November 2008 assault in Mumbai, according to the federal charges. Agents searched Mr. Headley's luggage and found it "contained no papers or other documents relating to such a business," according to court documents. They also searched tax records and found no record of income paid to Mr. Headley by the company, court records show. U.S. officials said Tuesday the questioning at the airport gave a significant boost to the investigation. Authorities said little more about the airport interview, including where it happened or why they had become suspicious of Mr. Headley. But court records showed that federal surveillance of Mr. Headley, who is an American, accelerated afterward. Mr. Headley's case is the most potent example of a U.S. born radical. Law enforcement and terrorism specialists said Lashkar's alleged deployment of Mr. Headley underscored the usefulness of recruits with U.S. passports in terror plots. Mr. Headley traveled to India and Pakistan over nearly two years to videotape targets and brief his co-conspirators in the Mumbai attacks, according to the federal charges. Westerners have largely played supporting roles in terror activities, but Mr. Headley's ability to travel freely on a U.S. passport to Pakistan, India and Denmark gave him high value, a U.S. law enforcement official said. "It's exactly the way you'd think al Qaeda would want to use operatives," said Evan Kohlmann, who has testified on Lashkar as an expert witness in U.S. and British courts. Under direction from the Pakistani terror group, Mr. Headley appears to have been a skilled operative leading a carefully cultivated double life. He posed as the representative of the global immigration firm on more than a dozen international missions, including to scout potential attacks in India and Europe. Mr. Headley's cellphone was registered to a dead man, as was his Chicago apartment, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. He changed his name from Daood Gilani in 2006 to further his cover, according to the FBI. Pakistan-based Lashkar has traditionally been focused on the Kashmir region, which Pakistan and India have fought over for decades. But U.S. counterterrorism officials now believe the group's ambitions are global. "There's little question that [Lashkar] would like to extend its reach beyond areas where it has operated in the past," said one U.S. counterterrorism official. "The group has connections to other militants who have shown interest in conducting attacks throughout the region and in the West." Mr. Headley's alleged role in the Mumbai attack represents a significant expansion of Lashkar's use of Westerners, said Evan Kohlmann, who has testified on the group as an expert witness in U.S. and British courts. There are pockets of Lashkar supporters in the U.S., including San Diego and Northern Virginia, as well as cities in Florida and in the Northeast, say current and former counterterrorism officials. Two Georgia men were convicted earlier this year of providing material support to Lashkar and plotting terror attacks in the U.S., as well as meeting with members of a Canadian terrorist cell. The men said they sought to work under Lashkar because it was easier to "climb the ladder" to another terrorist group, said Mr. Kohlmann, who assisted law enforcement on the case. Christopher Paul, a bomb-making expert who pleaded guilty last year to conspiring to bomb U.S. and other targets, discussed attending camps in Pakistan with a senior Lashkar recruiter, and later wrote to a fellow American about the ease of training with the group. The largest known U.S. case involving Lashkar is the Virginia Jihad cell uncovered in 2003, which included Yong Ki Kwon, who converted to Islam as a student at Virginia Tech. After college, he met Lashkar-trained Virginia Jihad leader Randall Royer, who helped Mr. Kwon gain admission to Lashkar training camps. |
Link |
Home Front: WoT |
America's Homegrown Troop Killers |
2008-07-29 |
War On Terror: It's bad enough that Americans are bad-mouthing American troops fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq. But an alarming number of Muslim-Americans are plotting to kill them. It's a story you don't like to hear from the mainstream media: U.S. soldiers increasingly are the prime targets of terrorism, both at home and abroad. And those who want to do them harm include fellow citizens. Thanks to the anti-war crowd, the trend may only worsen. The ACLU recently pressured the Pentagon to shut down a domestic counterterror unit set up after 9/11 to protect troops and bases. And a new congressional report finds that the U.S. government has no "coordinated strategy" to deal with grass-roots jihadists who more and more are meeting, training and conspiring to kill troops over the Internet. In the most recent case, a federal jury last week convicted three Toledo, Ohio, Muslims of plotting to attack U.S. military personnel in Iraq and elsewhere. Mohammed Amawi, Marwan El-Hindi and Wassim Mazloum were learning to shoot guns and make explosives while raising money to fund their plans to wage jihad against U.S. troops. Amawi and El-Hindi are U.S. citizens, and Mazloum immigrated to the U.S. legally from Lebanon. In addition, El-Hindi's two cousins from Chicago face trial next year for conspiring to kill American soldiers. The Toledo case is just the latest in a string of troop-killing plots by homegrown terrorists. Earlier this month, Muslim convert and al-Qaida trainee Christopher Paul, a U.S. citizen also from Ohio, pleaded guilty to planning to use bombs to blow up U.S. military bases overseas. In March, Hassan Abu-Jihad, a Muslim convert and former U.S. sailor, was convicted on federal charges of sending classified information on naval ship movements to an al-Qaida Web site, and arranging to obtain weapons to attack U.S. military installations. Last year, six Muslim men, including a naturalized U.S. citizen from Jordan, were charged with plotting to attack troops stationed at Fort Dix in New Jersey. In 2005, three black Muslim converts from Torrance, Calif., were jailed for planning to attack Army recruiting stations. In 2003, a group of Virginia jihadists, some of whom were born in the U.S., were busted for training to kill U.S. troops in Afghanistan. Last week, a student in Tampa, Fla., pleaded guilty to terror charges after police found him and a co-defendant with pipe bombs near a South Carolina naval brig holding enemy combatants. His plea deal says he produced terror videos "to be used against those who fight for the United States." Homegrown American jihadists are waging a battle against U.S. troops right here at home not in Anbar province or Kandahar but right here, in Torrance, Toledo and Tampa. The Pentagon ought to make force protection a priority over the privacy concerns of the ACLU crowd, who by turning the military into the enemy has put the lives of troops at risk on American soil. It shouldn't apologize for monitoring Islamists who pose a threat to facilities. |
Link |
Home Front: WoT |
Ohio Man Expected to Plead Guilty to Terrorism Charge |
2008-06-03 |
![]() Paul, born Christopher Kenyatta Laws, grew up in Worthington, OH. He is accused of conspiring with convicted terrorists Iyman Faris and Nouradin Abdi to use Weapons of Mass Destruction against tourists in Germany. Christopher Paul is expected to plead guilty on Tuesday at Noon. According to court documents there is no minimum penalty for the crime. The maximum penalty Paul could face is life in prison, a $250,000 alternative fine, 5 years supervised release, and a $100 special assessment. |
Link |
Home Front: WoT |
Terror-Funded MSA at Ohio State |
2008-04-28 |
![]() February 20, 2006 proved to be an eventful day for the Muslim Students Association (MSA) at The Ohio State University. Not only did that date mark the conclusion of their weekend-long Leaders of Tomorrow conference, but that was also the day that their conference sponsor, Kindhearts, was raided by federal law enforcement and closed by order of the Department of the Treasury for financing terrorism, freezing its assets. According to the US government, Kindhearts, which was established following the closure of the Holy Land Foundation and the Global Relief Foundation, was not only engaged in providing millions for HAMAS in Lebanon and the West Bank, it had hired as a fundraising specialist the man identified by HAMAS head Khaled Mishal as the designated HAMAS bag man in the US, Mohammed El-Mezain. (For additional background on Kindhearts and its multiple connections to the international terrorism finance network, see Joe Kaufmans FrontPage article, The Black Hearts of Kindhearts) Kindhearts, however, was not the only terror-connected sponsor of the OSU MSA conference. Also supporting the MSAs conference was its local parent organization, Masjid Omar Ibn El-Khattab, known affectionately in the Central Ohio area as Masjid Al-Qaeda. The mosque nearby the OSU campus was home to the largest known Al-Qaeda cell in the US since 9/11, with two former members Iyman Faris and Nuradin Abdi already convicted and serving prison terms for their participation, and another cell member Christopher Paul currently awaiting trial. The third identified sponsor of the MSA conference, Ilmquest Productions, is the media arm of the Al-Maghrib Institute (profiled last year here at FrontPage, Jihad U). Ilmquest not only publishes and markets DVDs and CDs of Al-Maghrib scholars, but also a long-line of other extremist speakers, including Bilal Philips, Khalid Yasin, and Yemeni Al-Qaeda cleric Anwar Al-Aulaqi. As noted recently here at FrontPage, the Ohio State MSA is no stranger to controversy. Three months after 9/11, the Associated Press reported that the OSU MSA was under federal investigation for its MSA News email list that regularly published news releases by a whole host of Islamic terrorist organizations, and also for encouraging readers to purchase videos from a terrorist support website: Ohio State University's Muslim Student Association produces and distributes MSA NEWS, which publicizes events featuring controversial speakers and has included news releases from terrorist groups such as the Algerian Armed Islamic Group, which is on the State Department's list of terrorist organizations Americans are forbidden to support or finance, and the Islamic Salvation Front, a fundamentalist political party banned in Algeria. Two years later, the OSU MSA played a critical role in hosting the Third National Conference on Palestinian Solidarity, whose keynote speaker was none other than now-convicted Palestinian Islamic Jihad leader and former University of South Florida professor, Sami Al-Arian. And more recently, the OSU MSA jointly sponsored an event to counter last Octobers Islamofascism Awareness Week featuring notorious wife-beating advocate and Muslim Brotherhood leader Jamal Badawi, Interfaith Relations A Muslim Perspective. The event was paid for by the university through student fees. As I reported here at FrontPage, Fatwa Fraud, Badawi was one of the featured speakers and an honored guest last July at a terrorist confab in Doha, Qatar honoring HAMAS spiritual leader Yousef Al-Qaradawi and attended by HAMAS head Khaled Mishal. College students and administrators would do well to consider that Islamic terrorism and extremism are not phenomena distant and far removed from American college campuses (even though Ohio State professor John Mueller contends there is no threat from Islamic terrorists). In fact, Islamic terrorism and extremism might be closer than they would ever realize as close as the nearest Muslim Student Association. |
Link |
Home Front: WoT |
Somali man gets 10-year sentence in Columbus mall plot |
2007-11-28 |
Nuradin Abdi's plan to blow up a Columbus shopping mall was no more than an idle threat, spoken in frustration, his attorney said yesterday. But federal prosecutors said those words were a small part of the case against Abdi, who was sentenced yesterday to 10 years in prison for conspiring to support terrorists. Abdi, 35, was arrested four years ago today and will receive credit for serving that time in the Franklin County jail. He will spend the remaining six years of his sentence in federal prison and then be deported to his native Somalia. The sentence, imposed by U.S. District Judge Algenon Marbley in Columbus, was in keeping with a plea bargain reached in July, when Abdi pleaded guilty to one of four counts against him. Defense lawyer Mahir Sherif told the court that Abdi, who lived on the North Side and worked at a cell-phone business, was frustrated by the U.S. military action in Afghanistan when he met with two co-conspirators at an Upper Arlington coffee shop in August 2002 and mentioned bombing a shopping mall. "He made the statement, but did he really intend to follow through? No, he did not," Sherif said. Assistant U.S. Attorney Robyn Jones Hahnert countered by saying the case against Abdi was "much bigger in scope than one isolated comment at the Caribou Coffee shop." In his guilty plea, Abdi admitted he lied to immigration officials in 1999 to receive a travel document that he used in an unsuccessful effort to visit a camp in Ethiopia for what prosecutors called "military-style training in preparation for violent jihad." The government said Abdi befriended Iyman Faris and Christopher Paul, both of whom met with him at the coffee shop. Faris, a Pakistani immigrant linked to a terrorist plot to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge, pleaded guilty in May 2003 to providing material support for al-Qaida. Paul, a Worthington native, was charged in April with plotting to bomb European tourist resorts. He is scheduled for trial in January 2009. Prosecutors said Abdi admitted conspiring with Faris and Paul to support foreign terrorists, even supplying Paul with credit-card numbers stolen from cell-phone customers to help fund the activities. Abdi's attorney said his client wanted the court to know that he "does not hate America" and that the principles of his Islamic faith include opposition to violence. He said Abdi wanted to apologize to Muslims "all over the world who may suffer indirectly from the consequences of his actions." Fred Alverson, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's office, said the government continues to investigate the possibility that the terrorist cell was larger than the three local men charged so far. "Other people are being looked at," he said. |
Link |
Home Front: WoT |
Columbus area man held as al Qaida bomb suspect |
2007-04-12 |
A North Side man joined al-Qaida and tried to help the terrorist group blow up U.S. government buildings abroad and European resorts frequented by Americans, a federal indictment released yesterday in Columbus says. Christopher Paul, 43, who shared an apartment with convicted terrorist Iyman Faris, is charged with conspiring to support terrorists, conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction and providing support to terrorists. Paul was one of three Columbus men that federal authorities had been investigating. Faris, who shared an apartment with Paul at 676 Riverview Dr., is now serving a 20-year prison sentence for plotting to topple the Brooklyn Bridge. Nuradin Abdi is awaiting trial, charged with plotting to blow up a Columbus-area mall. The indictment released yesterday says Paul trained in weapons and other explosives during trips to Afghanistan and Pakistan, tried to recruit people for a "violent jihad," and met with al-Qaida members with personal connections to Osama bin Laden. The indictment by the federal grand jury described Paul as a man so eager to fight that he told an al-Qaida member that he would continue to plan violence even if the group scaled back its military operations. It further says that Paul had traveled abroad as early as 1990 to receive terrorist training. Paul "offered himself to persons in Pakistan and Afghanistan associated with al-Qaida as an individual dedicated to committing violent jihad." While in Pakistan he met a former pilot of bin Laden's and became friends with Khalifah LNU, an al-Qaida member who was responsible for logistics at the group's training camps in Afghanistan. He received weapons training while there. In April 1998, Paul went hiking with "several co-conspirators" in Burr Oak State Park in Glouster, Ohio, about 78 miles southeast of Columbus. They were training, the indictment states. Later, the indictment charges that from 1999 to 2000, Paul planned to bomb European tourist resorts that Americans frequent. He also plotted against governmental facilities such as embassies and U.S. military bases in Europe. While there, he trained fellow conspirators to use explosives. At his home in Columbus, authorities found a night-vision scope, laser range-finder and "military survival knife." Subsequent searches found things like books and manuals on how to make explosives and improvised booby traps. Officials also found a letter to Paul's parents, in which he said he would be "on the front lines" and it explained how they could get information on "jihad." Family members would not comment about the arrest last night. |
Link |
Home Front: Culture Wars |
Grand jury indicts 11 in eco-terrorism |
2006-01-21 |
![]() The 65-count indictment, unsealed yesterday in U.S. District Court in Eugene, Ore., accuses the Earth Liberation Front (ELF) and the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) members of committing acts of terrorism in Oregon, Wyoming, Washington, California and Colorado from 1996 through 2001 -- including conspiracy, arson, attempted arson, the use and possession of a destructive device, and destruction of an energy facility. Eight persons were arrested before the indictment was handed up, and three are thought to be outside the United States. Cancel their passports. "The trail of destruction left by these defendants across the Western United States caused millions of dollars in damage to public and private facilities," Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales said. "Today's indictment proves we will not tolerate any group that terrorizes the American people, no matter its intentions or objectives." The indictment said the group committed arson with improvised incendiary devices made from milk jugs, petroleum products and homemade timers in a series of attacks in the five states. The targets included U.S. Forest Service ranger stations, Bureau of Land Management wild horse facilities, meat-processing companies, lumber companies, a high-tension power line and a ski facility in Colorado. According to the indictment, Joseph Dibee, Chelsea Dawn Gerlach, Sarah Kendall Harvey, Daniel Gerard McGowan, Stanislas Gregory Meyerhoff, Josephine Sunshine Overaker, Jonathan Mark Christopher Paul, Rebecca Rubin, Suzanne Savoie, Darren Todd Thurston and Kevin M. Tubbs conspired to commit the acts as part of a group they called "the family," identified as members of ALF and ELF. Their parents must be so proud. The indictment follows a series of arrests last month in Oregon, Arizona, New York and Virginia. FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III described the investigation and prevention of extremism in animal rights and environmental causes as one of the bureau's highest domestic terrorism priorities. "We are committed to working with our partners to disrupt and dismantle these movements, to protect our fellow citizens and to bring to justice those who commit crime and terrorism in the name of animal rights or environmental issues," he said. The two organizations are accused in 17 separate attacks: 12 in Oregon, 2 in Washington and one each in Wyoming, Colorado and California. Bizzy hands are happy hands. The cases are being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's Office in Oregon and were investigated by the FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Eugene Police Department, Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, Oregon State Police, Portland Police Bureau, Oregon Department of Justice and the Lane County, Ore., Sheriff's Office. Thank you. |
Link |