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Bayonne man who lied to feds investigating would-be terrorists sentenced to 18 months |
2013-06-20 |
A Bayonne man was sentenced today to 18 months in prison for lying to federal officials investigating a North Bergen man and an Elmwood Park man who were planning to kill on behalf of a Somalia terrorist group. Mohamed Osman, 21, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Dickinson R. Debevoise on Sept. 15, 2010, to making materially false statements to investigators in a matter involving international terrorism. Osman could have been sentenced to up to 8 years in prison. In addition to the prison term, Debevoise ordered Osman to serve three years of supervised release. Mohamed Alessa, of North Bergen, and Carlos E. Almonte were convicted of a conspiracy to travel from New Jersey to kill on behalf of al-Shabab, a terrorist group. In April, Alessa, now 23, was sentenced to 22 years in prison and a lifetime of supervised release; and Almonte, now 27, was sentenced to 20 years and the same lifetime of supervision. Osman admitted that during his contacts with Alessa and Almonte he had become aware of their "ideology and beliefs," officials said. Osman also said he had heard Alessa say he would begin killing in the United States if he was unable to do it abroad, officials aid. Osman also admitted that he knew it was against the law to make false statements to the investigators. Authorities say that during a June 2010 interview with members of the FBIs Joint Terrorism Task Force, Osman falsely denied knowing about Alessa and Almontes plans to travel to Somalia to fight against government and multinational peacekeeping forces there. |
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Judge says it was fair to sentence terrorists day of Boston Marathon bombings |
2013-05-22 |
A federal judge has denied the motions of a North Bergen man and Elmwood Park man who argued that their sentencing for a terrorism-related crime on the same day as the Boston Marathon was unfair. The ruling signed today by District Court Judge Dickinson R. Debevoise will let stand the 22-year-sentence he meted out to Mohamed Alessa, 23, of North Bergen and 20-year-sentence received by codefendant Carlos Almonte, 27. After the April 15 sentencings, defense attorneys sought a new sentencing, arguing that the prosecution's knowledge of the bombing allowed them to alter their presentation to focus on the vulnerability of targets in the New York area, rather then on the defendants themselves, according to Debovoise's opinion. In the motion filed April 29, they also argued Debevoise learned of the bombing prior to sentencing the pair that day, but that the defense was not aware of the bombing prior to the sentencing. The judge said that the defense attorneys' recollection of the hearing was faulty. Two assistant US attorneys gave presentations and the one focusing on the vulnerability of targets went first and it was before word of the Boston bombings reached the court, the opinion says. Debevoise notes that the prosecutor then invited the second prosecutor to "talk about the individual characteristics of the defendants." The judge also noted that the sentencing process involved thousands of pages of documents reviewed over a long period of time and his 43-page statement of the reasons for the sentences was compiled long before the bombings. The judge said there was a potential for terrorist attacks by the defendants in the United States and as such, there was no reason the prosecution would not have referred to potential targets while arguing for 30-year sentences, the opinion said. |
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NJ men appeal sentence; argue taint by MA attack |
2013-04-30 |
Two New Jersey men are appealing their prison sentences on terrorism-related charges, arguing federal prosecutors were influenced by the Boston Marathon bombings. Mohamed Alessa and Carlos Almonte were sentenced April 15, around the time of the bombings. The two were arrested in 2010 and pleaded guilty to conspiring to join an armed Islamic group in Somalia with ties to al-Qaida. Defense attorneys filed a joint motion Monday asking to have Alessa's 22-year sentence, and Almonte's 20-year sentence, reconsidered. The judge denied an earlier defense claim that he had received a note about the bombings during the proceedings. The judge said the note related to his wife. Federal prosecutors reiterated the judge's claim that the sentence had nothing to do with the Boston bombings. |
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Parents of accused NJ terrorist blame FBI for son's interest in jihad |
2010-06-25 |
![]() In their first interview together, Mahmood and Nadia Alessa, of North Bergen, detailed their son's psychological problems, his troubled teen years and their belief that the FBI pushed two innocent young men into a terrorist mold. "It's like they're against these two kids, they want them to be terrorists," Nadia Alessa said of federal authorities. "These kids [don't] know what's going on, they don't know anything." They also said many of the government's claims against their son are dead wrong and that authorities have mistaken his anger problems and grandiosity for something much more serious. They said a 2007 trip to Jordan, which the FBI believes was a failed attempt to join the insurgency in Iraq, was a chance for Mohamed Alessa to study abroad. The Alessas also said he was traveling to Egypt on June 5 to meet a 19-year-old Swedish Muslim he planned to marry, not as a way station to jihad in Somalia, as the government alleges. The Alessas also said they did not provide the FBI with the October 2006 tip that started the government's investigation. They said their son, an animal lover who once kept 13 cats, In some stories, having 13 cats might be considered an omen. is a misguided young man who had been monitored by the FBI since age 16 and was encouraged by an undercover agent to act like a terrorist. This claim, which others in North Jersey's Muslim community have repeated, irks FBI officials. Michael Ward, the special agent in charge of the FBI's Newark division, said agents often consult the Muslim community and ask for help in turning young lives around. But Ward said that when troubled teens get into their 20s and go from "aspirational to operational," there is only so much that outreach can accomplish. He stressed that he was not specifically addressing the investigation into Almonte and Alessa. "They evolved, they went deeper into the radicalization process, and I don't believe that, here at these last stages, there's anything we could've done," Ward said of the two young men. Nadia Alessa, a Palestinian from the West Bank, gave birth to her only child in July 1989 while visiting friends in North Bergen. She and her husband, an ethnic Palestinian from Jordan, then returned to Kuwait, where he owned a billboard advertising business. After Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in August 1990, the family was evacuated by American officials to the United States because Mohamed was a citizen. "The United States saved my life," Mahmood Alessa said. As a child, their son displayed "anger management" problems that a battery of psychologists and psychiatrists tried to treat. Still, he bounced in and out of almost a dozen different Catholic, Muslim, local and boarding schools, they said. In February 2005, North Bergen High School officials placed him on home instruction because he presented safety concerns for other students and staff, district spokesman Paul Swibinski said. In August 2005, his mother said he was arrested in Jersey City for defacing a Coptic Christian church with the words "allahu akbar," which means "God is great" in Arabic. He was released without charges, she said. He moved to the alternative school KAS Prep in September 2005 and became even more belligerent. He allegedly threatened to blow up the school, a claim Nadia Alessa said was a lie told by another student. Mahmood Alessa said his son came home and cried after fellow student told him, "you look like [al-Qaida leader Osama] bin Laden." Officials at KAS Prep reported Mohamed Alessa's threats to the New Jersey Department of Homeland Security. In January 2006, police officers the Alessas weren't clear on what agency came to the modest second-floor apartment, arrested their son and put him in the Hudson County Juvenile Detention Center in Secaucus for one month for his threats. A judge dismissed him as "a stupid kid," Nadia Alessa said, and released him. Mohamed Alessa claimed he had exclusively read the Quran while in juvenile detention and emerged a self-professed pious Muslim. He asked his mother, who does not wear traditional garb or head coverings, why she didn't cover herself. "My son is not that religious," she said. "He like to talk, he like to show. What I think, both of them, they're having a problem. They want to be famous." His brand of piety seemed to preclude regular attendance at mosque, and he resisted efforts by local Muslim elders to help him. Walid Bejdough, a former spokesman for the Islamic Center of Passaic County, said Mahmood Alessa asked him several years ago to counsel his son to come to mosque and stay out of trouble. Bejdough arranged to meet the young man, but Mohamed Alessa never showed up. Mohammad Abbasi, a spokesman for the North Hudson Islamic Educational Center, said he met Mohamed Alessa for the first time at a Teaneck mosque just before he was arrested. He said he didn't come across as pious or observant but noted, "It's almost like a fad for kids his age." Abbasi also questioned whether the FBI should have followed the young pair. Agents had come to him before about problem kids, he asked, why not with these two? Mohamed Alessa met Carlos Almonte at the Garden State Plaza mall in 2004 or 2005, Nadia Alessa said. The younger man approached Almonte, asked for a cigarette and they became fast friends, she said. Over time, Almonte learned Arabic from Nadia Alessa's nieces, she said, but he became interested in Islam on his own. Mohamed Alessa insisted that Almonte accompany him on a trip to Jordan in February 2007 to study at the Oxford School, an English-language institution in Amman. Almonte later told an undercover officer that the men tried to become mujahedeen in Jordan but were denied, according to court documents. Mahmood Alessa said the claim is false. His brother rented an apartment for them, took away their passports and provided food for them. The Alessas provided a report card to back their claim, but school officials could not be reached. Mohamed Alessa trusted his friends too much and was "very susceptible to outside influences," said Mahmood Alessa's lawyer, Frank Lucianna. Nadia Alessa said she treated Almonte like a son, but said she was leery of a series of men she believed to be undercover agents. The FBI had been aware of Mohamed Alessa since at least October 2006, and neighbors said agents had asked about him then, court documents show. One such friend was a quiet Egyptian named Basem, who started coming around the house in January, Nadia Alessa said. She said Basem would wait at the house for hours while her son showered, which she considered suspicious. Comments by Almonte and Mohamed Alessa to Basem, an undercover New York City police officer whose real name is unknown, figure prominently in the federal criminal complaint against them. "We'll start doing killing here, if I can't do it over there," Mohamed Alessa allegedly said in November 2009. Nadia Alessa said that if her son uttered threats against Americans, it was with Basem's encouragement. But Ward said that the FBI looks for suspects to back up their claims with actions before making an arrest. "If we're looking at an investigation and all we have is rhetoric, it's just strong language. We're not going to take a case to fruition just on that," he said. Mohamed Alessa told his parents that he wanted to fly to Europe to marry Siham Abedar, the young Swedish woman. They would not allow it, but he later told them that she had gone to Egypt to study and he would join her there and stay with Basem. Nadia Alessa said that on the last night before her son and Almonte left for Egypt, Basem ate at her house and reassured them in familiar terms. "I told him, 'I hope, Basem, you're going to be good caring for these two kids.' He said, 'Don't worry, Aunt.' " Almonte and Mohammed Alessa were arrested on June 5 at John F. Kennedy International Airport and charged with conspiring to kill, maim and kidnap outside the United States. Mahmood Alessa said he can't sleep and has lost weight because he has been unable to contact his son since the arrest. He and his wife have received only one communication from jail, a handwritten letter from Almonte, whom they regard as a second son. In it, he writes, "All I want is for me and Mohamed to have a decent life. I know we don't deserve this." |
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Jersey jihadist Almonte is terror at spelling, too | |||
2010-06-11 | |||
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A frazzled-looking Almonte, his hands in cuffs and his legs in shackles, kept his eyes locked to the floor during the brief court appearance.
Almonte and Alessa, 20, were collared Saturday at Kennedy Airport. Prosecutors say they were planning to catch a flight to Africa to wage jihad alongside Al Qaeda-linked militants. On his Facebook page, Almonte revealed his hatred of the West in a series of barely comprehensible rants. "As for the west they deserve [whatever] comes to them becuz they choose there leaders whom in turn effect the policy," he wrote in one posting. The "Juice" photo was first reported by the Jawa Report. | |||
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'Jersey Jihadist' turned against own brother over Islam |
2010-06-09 |
![]() On May 23, 2009, Almonte began "preaching to [18-year-old Elvin] about the Islamic religion" in the living room of their Elmwood Park home, police reports say. When Elvin told Carlos he would not follow Islam, his 220-pound older brother allegedly flew into a rage. "Carlos became angry and they both began fighting," the report says. Their mom, Sabrina, tried to intervene, but Elvin mistook her left arm for Carlos' and viciously bit into it, the report says. Moments later, Carlos grabbed the frame and slammed it into the back of his brother's head, the report says. Carlos, who by then had changed his name to Omar, fled after the incident - and his brother and mom called the cops. He was collared eight days later after a car he was riding in with Alessa was stopped by Port Authority cops on its way into the Lincoln Tunnel. The cops were tipped off by the FBI that the pair was heading into the city to "disrupt the Israeli Day Parade," a source told the Daily News. "They did not have weapons or anything like that," the source added. "They were probably just going to be jerks, which is what they are." Cops had been alerted that there was a warrant out for Almonte's arrest. They held him for Elmwood Park officers. Alessa, who had no ID on him, was detained and then released, the source said. Almonte, the son of Dominican immigrants, told cops he worked at the apparently fictitious Yeshiva Service Center in Fair Lawn, N.J. "I can see him [saying] that as a sick joke," Ingrasselino said. Almonte was charged with assault and possession of an unlawful weapon - and was released after posting $500 bail. Almonte's sister defended her brother yesterday, saying Alessa led him to terror. "He never showed any signs," Ingrid Almonte said minutes after their mother was escorted out of the home crying hysterically and placed into a waiting ambulance. "This guy Mohamed brought a lot of trouble....My father didn't want him in the house. He brainwashed [Carlos] and tried to convert us too." The 20-year-old son of Palestinian parents, Alessa also had a dark past. He was radicalized in his early teens and boasted about wanting to mutilate gays, subjugate women and blow up his school. Alessa's endless threats prompted North Bergen school officials to bar him from classes - and report him to the feds. "He was exhibiting this crazy, radicalized behavior," a source told the Daily News. "He was threatening classmates, threatening staff - all as part of this radicalized terroristic behavior." Within months of enrolling at North Bergen High School in 2004, Alessa was deemed so dangerous he was barred from attending classes. School officials placed Alessa on "home instruction," forcing him to be taught alone at the North Bergen Public Library under the watchful eye of a school security guard. He transferred in the fall of 2005 to KAS Prep, an alternative school for troubled teens in North Bergen, but his vile threats only intensified. "Everyone tried to help this kid. He's just an angry, young man," a school official told The Bergen Record. |
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