FBI learned of Metro terror suspect in January
Updated: October 28, 2010 - 04:28 pm
WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI learned last January that a Pakistani-born man arrested in the D.C. subway-bomb sting was trying to make contact with terrorist groups to help him participate in jihad against U.S. forces overseas, according to a court record.
FBI agent Charles A. Dayoub said in an affidavit unsealed Thursday that Farooque Ahmed, 34, of Ashburn, Va., and an unnamed associate hoped to fight in Afghanistan or Pakistan early next year.
Dayoub also said the FBI subsequently learned that Ahmed either bought, or tried to buy, weapons in May 2008 and February 2009 and is believed to have used firearms to train for his goal of traveling to Afghanistan to kill Americans.
Ahmed was arrested Wednesday and accused of casing Washington-area subway stations in what he thought was an al-Qaida plot to bomb and kill commuters. Dayoub said Ahmed, a naturalized citizen, has lived in this country since 1993.
The bombing plot was a ruse begun in mid-April, the FBI said, but Ahmed readily handed over video of Northern Virginia subway stations, suggested using rolling suitcases rather than backpacks to kill as many people as possible and offered to donate money to al-Qaida's cause overseas.
There was no immediate detail on the identity of Ahmed's unnamed associate, though Dayoub said Ahmed also was accompanied by an unnamed associate on some of his trips to case subway stations. A Justice Department official, who requested anonymity to discuss details of the case, said the same unnamed individual that wanted to join Ahmed in jihad also accompanied to the subway stations.
But the FBI and White House have said that the public was never in danger because FBI agents had Ahmed under tight surveillance before the bomb plot sting was begun and until his arrest. Combined with the absence of any arrest so far of an Ahmed associate, this assurance raised the possibility that the unnamed associate may have been cooperating with the FBI, but Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd declined to discuss the associate. Boyd wouldn't say whether other arrests were possible or not.
Ahmed's lawyer, federal public defender Kenneth Troccoli, declined to comment on the case Thursday.
Dayoub's 17-page affidavit, submitted to support a search warrant application, details the meetings between Ahmed and individuals he believed were al-Qaida operatives and the activities he undertook in support of the fake plot. The people posing as al-Qaida members were really working for the government, according to a federal law enforcement official.
Ahmed was lured by an e-mail to the first meeting detailed, on April 18, in the lobby of a hotel near Washington-Dulles International Airport, Dayoub wrote. As the FBI secretly videotaped the encounter, Ahmed accepted a Koran that contained "documents providing code words for locations to be use for future meeting," the affidavit said.
Ahmed told a purported al-Qaida operative he had come to the meeting because "he wanted to fight and kill Americans in Afghanistan," Dayoub wrote.
According to Dayoub, Ahmed said he was willing to be a martyr and hoped to participate in jihad - or holy war - in Afghanistan or Pakistan in January, 2011. But first he wanted to attend the Hajj, a religious pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia., later this year.
"Ahmed told both Operative-1 and Operative-2 he was attending Hajj this year and that they should all go in order to complete the five pillars of Islam before making the 'top mark' - by which I believe Ahmed mean 'becoming a martyr'," Dayoub wrote.
Ahmad told the operatives he had trained with various firearms to prepare for jihad, studied martial arts for four years, learned knife and disarming techniques and could teach these skills to others and purchase additional firearms, Dayoub wrote.
The agents who searched Ahmed's suburban townhouse Wednesday were looking for computers, associated equipment, software and instruction manuals for the equipment, according to Dayoub's warrant application. They also applied to seize Ahmed's 2005 Honda Accord and all assets in his bank account.
Ahmed has been indicted on charges of attempting to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization, collecting information to assist in planning a terrorist attack on a transit facility, and attempting to provide material support to terrorists.
According to the indictment:
•Ahmed took video of four Northern Virginia subway stations - Arlington Cemetery, Courthouse, Pentagon City and Crystal City, which is near the Pentagon - and monitored security at a hotel in the District of Columbia. In a series of meetings at hotels in Northern Virginia, Ahmed provided the videos to someone he believed was part of a terrorist organization and said he wanted to donate $10,000 to help the overseas fight and collect donations in a way "that would not raise red flags."
•In a Sept. 28 meeting in a Herndon, Va., hotel, Ahmed suggested that terror operatives use rolling suitcases instead of backpacks to blow up the subway. During that same meeting, Ahmed said he wanted to kill as many military personnel as possible and suggested an additional attack on a Crystal City subway station.
Ahmed is merely the latest alleged example of homegrown terrorism and FBI stings directed at the problem.
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