This item is available on the Militant Islam Monitor website, at http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/2041
June 24, 2006
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--------------- http://voanews.com/english/2006-06-24-voa14.cfm
Chicago Police Superintendent Phil Cline said the investigation continues, but the Sears Tower has been found to be secure and free of explosives.
The indictment says he asked an FBI informant posing as a member of al-Qaida for guns, uniforms, radios and $50,000 in cash to wage a holy war against the U.S. that would be "just as good or greater" than the September 11, 2001 attacks. A friend of one of the defendants says the group was a sect based on an early 19th century religion that combines Christianity, Judaism and Islam. Five of the suspects are U.S. citizens. The other two men are from Haiti - one a permanent resident, the other an illegal immigrant. Several al-Qaida terrorists who carried out the September 11 attacks had lived and trained in the South Florida area. ------------- US warns of rise in domestic terror cellsAG says group of seven targeted governmentBy Charlie Savage and Bryan Bender, Globe Staff | June 24, 2006 WASHINGTON -- Attorney General Alberto Gonzales yesterday warned of a growing threat from "homegrown" terrorist cells who have no links to Al Qaeda, as more details emerged about seven South Florida men charged with plotting to bomb the Sears Tower in Chicago and an FBI building in Miami. Gonzales said five of the seven men were American citizens, would-be terrorists who decided to go to war against the US government. He compared the men to a group of Canadian citizens arrested earlier this month in Toronto for allegedly plotting terrorist attacks in Canada, and to terror cells of British and Spanish citizens responsible for deadly bombings in London and Madrid. "The terrorists and suspected terrorists in Madrid and London and Toronto were not sleeper operatives sent on suicide missions," Gonzales said. "They were students and business people and members of the community. They were persons who, for whatever reason, came to view their home country as the enemy. And it's a problem that we face here in the United States as well." The men, arraigned yesterday in Miami under heavy security, are members of a religious group who neighbors say lived and practiced martial arts in a warehouse in the city's hardscrabble Liberty City neighborhood. Gonzales said that one suspect is a legal immigrant from an unspecified country, and one is a citizen of Haiti who was living in the country illegally. According to the indictment, Narseal Batiste , a US citizen identified as the group's leader, recruited the other six to join him in preparing to carry out terrorist attacks, including assaults on the 108-floor Sears Tower -- the nation's tallest skyscraper -- and FBI buildings as well as local government offices in Miami-Dade County. John Pistole , the deputy director of the FBI, said the group had come to believe that the US government is illegitimate. "They were separatists in the sense of not believing that the US government had the legal authority to enforce certain laws against them, and so it was from that ideology that some of this stems," Pistole said at the press conference. Little was known about the religious group, such as its origin or membership, and the indictment had few other details about it or the background of the suspects. Despite the government's claims, the indictment held scant evidence that the group was anywhere close to capable of attacking the Sears Tower or any other building. They had no access to explosives and no real contact with Al Qaeda, and they were incapable of obtaining even basic equipment on their own, such as boots. Batiste asked the informant to provide military boots for the group, and gave him a list of their shoe sizes, the indictment said. The informant also was asked to help the men acquire a video camera, a rental car, weapons, binoculars, radios, bulletproof vests, and $50,000 in cash, it said. "In terms of plans, it was more aspirational than operational," Pistole asserted. According to the indictment, the plot began around December 2005 when Batiste met with the undercover informant, whom he believed to be an Al Qaeda operative. Batiste asked the informant for funding, equipment, and training to launch the attacks; eventually, all seven suspects swore allegiance to Al Qaeda, the indictment said. In an indication that the government may have secretly taped some of the group's discussions, the indictment quotes Batiste declaring his intention to wage a "full ground war" against the United States in order to "kill all the devils we can." The operation, he is quoted as saying, would be "just as good or greater than 9/11." The group once discussed destroying the Sears Tower, according to the indictment. They also allegedly discussed bombing FBI buildings in North Miami Beach and four other cities, and videotaped several of the local government buildings in Miami-Dade County. Gonzales said the group intended to carry out the attacks and had taken preliminary steps toward that goal. He said the plot was disrupted under a Justice Department strategy to arrest would-be terrorists as soon as it has gathered enough evidence to convict them of a crime. In a later briefing with reporters, Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty added that the government would rather be criticized for moving too aggressively than face blame for allowing an attack to happen. "We have to do everything within our power to identify the risks and to stop them at the earliest stages of planning," McNulty said. "We have to have a preventative approach." The timing of the arrests raised eyebrows among some Bush administration critics because they coincided with a The White House knew about the banking story in advance because it had been talking with The Times, urging the paper not to publish the information. Agents made the Miami arrests, meanwhile, a month after the final event cited in the indictment -- a conversation in which Batiste allegely told the informant that "he was experiencing delays [in the mission] because of various problems within his organization." Congressman Edward J. Markey, Democrat of Malden and a member of the House Homeland Security Committee, said in a phone interview yesterday that he suspected the Bush administration used the arrests as a distraction from headlines about the secret banking surveillance program, which he said was probably illegal. Gonzales said the administration believed the banking program was legal, and said the decision to arrest the men was made "by the folks in Miami, by the career folks, the career investigators, the career prosecutors" and not by political appointees in Washington. Later, McNulty said "there is no connection" between the Miami arrests and the banking surveillance story. "The [terrorism] case came forward when it was ready." In a Miami press conference, US Attorney R. Alexander Acosta said the decision to arrest the men on Thursday was based on law enforcement considerations, including ensuring they had enough evidence to indict the men, and making sure authorities had identified all of the alleged conspirators. In addition to Batiste, the indictment named Patrick Abraham , Stanley Grant Phanor , Naudimar Herrera , Burson Augustin , Lyglenson Lemorin and Rotschild Augustine as codefendants. The Justice Department did not specifiy which two were not US citizens. There were conflicting reports from neighbors in Miami about whether the group considered themselves to be Muslims or some other kind of spiritual sect. Although several early media reports quoted an unnamed law enforcement source describing the group as "radical Muslims," the indictment did not mention any religious affiliation. A local television station interviewed a relative of one of the men who said that they studied the Bible, not the Koran, and that they called their headquarters a "temple," not a mosque. American Muslim civil rights groups said the group had been unknown to the Muslim community before they were arrested. |
This item is available on the Militant Islam Monitor website, at http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/2041