Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

14-Jul-15: Walks for peace, plans to blow people up and execute them on camera

Alexander Ciccolo, the man who called himself Ali Al-Amriki, walks for "peace" in 2012 [Image Source]
Further details are emerging about the threats blunted by security authorities in the US ahead of their July 4 milestone [see "12-Jul-15: What exactly happened over Independence Day?"]

There's further evidence today from Boston of how Islamist ultra-violence penetrates minds and communities that most of us would find astonishing. The man arrested in the report that follows was evidently one of those involved in that wave of pre-July 4 apprehensions.

The father [Image Source]
Reports say he is the officer in charge 
of Boston's 911 call center and was 
a first responder following the
Boston Marathon killings
As this story ripples across parts of the news media today, a key image - of the suspected jihadist taking part in protest events in support of something called "peace" according to the posters and banners that adorn them - we are hearing echoes of how public demonstrations for "peace" and mindless, phenomenally lethal violence frequently find each other here in our area, in the major cities of the US and even in the well-publicized efforts of some of the world's most senior diplomats.
Son of Boston Police Captain Arrested as Possible Terrorist | ABC News | July 13, 2015 | The estranged son of a respected Boston police captain was arrested July 4 by FBI agents as part of a counter-terrorism operation against alleged ISIS-inspired domestic terrorists, federal officials told ABC News today. Alexander Ciccolo, 23, of Adams, Mass., was taken into custody on gun charges after buying two pistols and two rifles from an undercover FBI confidential informant, federal officials said. In a search of his apartment, officials reported they found it loaded with possible bomb-making equipment including a pressure cooker, a variety of chemicals, an alarm clock, along with “attack planning papers” and “jihad” paperwork. FBI agents said he used the name Abu Ali al-Amriki and neighbors said he was a recent convert to Islam.
“This is a very bad person arrested before he could do very bad things,” one senior federal official briefed on the arrest told ABC News... An FBI affidavit said Ciccolo initially planned to travel to “another state” and use a pressure cooker bomb “to conduct terrorist attacks on civilians, members of the U.S. military and law enforcement personnel.” The FBI said the attack location was later changed to a town with a state university and would be concentrated on “college dorms and cafeteria, to include executions of students, which would be broadcast live via the internet.”Ciccolo’s father is Boston police Captain Robert Ciccolo, a veteran commander assigned to Operations at Boston Police headquarters who was one of those to respond to the deadly Boston Marathon bombing in April 2013. According to the FBI, the younger Ciccolo said he was “inspired” by the Marathon bombing and the use of pressure cooker bombs, and told the FBI undercover operative, “Allahu Akbar!!! I got the pressure cooker today.”
Law enforcement officials said Capt. Ciccolo alerted counter-terrorism authorities about a year ago that his son, with whom he had had minimal contact for several years, “was going off the deep end” and “spouting extremist jihadist sympathies...” According to the FBI affidavit, Ciccolo posted a photo of a dead American soldier and wrote, “Thank you Islamic State. Now we won’t have to deal with these kafir back in America.” Kafir is a reference to non-believers of Islam. In a meeting with an FBI cooperating witness, Ciccolo praised the recent terror attack on a beach resort in Tunisia that killed 39 people, according to the FBI affidavit. “Awesome. Awesome, you that ah, that brother in Tunisia was impressive,” Ciccolo allegedly said... According to the affidavit of an FBI agent, the younger Ciccolo recently stated that he is, “not afraid to die for the cause," and that he characterized America as ”Satan” and “disgusting.”
Some of the weapons seized from
the suspect's home [Image Source]
We can only guess at the private agony being experienced right now by the Ciccolo family. But the forthrightness of their very public response is exemplary:
"While we were saddened and disappointed to learn of our son's intentions, we are grateful that authorities were able to prevent any loss of life or harm to others," the statement reads. "At this time, we would ask that the public and the media recognize our grief and respect our desire for privacy."
The criminal complaint papers indicate that Ciccolo ("al Amriki") was under FBI watch since late 2014. They do not say whether the suspected terror offences are being treated as those of a "Lone Wolf" or of a hunting pack.

Friday, June 05, 2015

05-Jun-15: Seeking truth in Boston

Aftermath of the Tuesday shooting outside a Boston suburban
CVS pharmacy [Image Source]
Right after the death by police shooting of a man in the Boston subirbs on Tuesday morning, June 2, 2015, there was a flurry of media focus on what the dead man's family and friends said about it.

The man who was shot is now known to be Usaamah Abdullah Rahim. The media currently feature a spate of news reports headlining open-ended questions, like "Boston terror suspect's shooting: What we know and don't know" from CNN. For the less disingenuous among us, there is actually quite a lot we do know.

Very shortly after the shooting, on Tuesday, the dead man's brother posted this on Facebook (it's still there now, and archived):
"Your Prayers Requested
This morning while at the bus stop in Boston, my youngest brother Usaama Rahim was waiting for the bus to go to his job. He was confronted by three Boston Police officers and subsequently shot in the back three times. He was on was on his cell phone with my dear father during the confrontation needing a witness. His last words to my father who heard the shots were:
I can’t breathe!
While at the hospital, Usaama Rahim died!
From Allah we come, and to Allah we return.
Imam Ibrahim Rahim"
Google that post and it's evident that huge numbers of people have commented on it, re-posted it and seen it. At the Boston Globe, they call Imam Ibrahim Rahim "a well-known imam" and "well-respected". His personal website explains that the Imam's educational qualifications and training are Saudi Arabian; he lived there for some years. His favourite saying is "Traveling Through A Strange Place, On My Way Back To Allah".

That Facebook post of his has been exquisitely politely termed "a version of the shooting at odds with the official version". It certainly is that.

Two days later, it appears the testimony of the brother, the Imam, even on his own terms, is not what it seemed, He has "stepped back from initial claims he made". Standing "in front of a throng of media in the same parking lot" where his brother had been stopped by police on Tuesday, he "didn’t speak, but [the family's lawyer] told reporters that he regrets his comments and that there’s still a lot left to learn about what happened".

As for the factual, evidentiary basis for the widely published plea he had issued on Tuesday, the explanation is rudimentary, and not too apologetic:
He heard what he believed to be his brother’s last moments from a third party, and in his grief, posted it to social media. "The family wants to be very careful to not engage in rank speculation,” said Sullivan, a Harvard Law School professor. “What the family wants is to enter into a joint relationship with the investigators to get to the truth." [Source]
Better late than never.

This is the knife, one of 3 said to have been bought online by Rahim,
in the previous week, that was removed from the scene of the
Boston shooting [Image Source]
What's known about Usaamah (or Osama) Abdullah Rahim, now
deceased, is quite a lot, though not enough:
Meanwhile the views of the family, friends and advocates of the dead man remain open to alternative interpretations:
  • Rahim’s neighbor told The Boston Globe Rahim "was a kind man who lived with his wife in an apartment on Blue Ledge Drive... "He was sweet. I saw a sweetness [to] him... Who knows what was in his head?" [source]
  • Arab American Association of New York: Linda Sarsour, its executive director, speaking of the surveillance video, says "I don’t know what it shows or doesn’t show. Questions still remain." She says [Telegraph UK, June 4, 2015] that "the dead man was black, not Middle Eastern as some reports claimed". And on her Facebook page, she goes further, calling what happened "the murder of Usaama Rahim, a Black Muslim brother from Boston. He was shot by Boston Police and FBI. Before you post the media's perspective or government's - there are many unanswered questions. They have added a national security component to divide and conquer the movement. At the end of the day, a Black man was shot on a bus stop on his way to work and we should treat this like any other case of police violence. All we want is answers to our questions..."
  • Ummah Wide ("a digital media startup focused on stories and cultures that transcend the global borders and boundaries of the Muslim, Interfaith and Human family"): Its executive editor Dustin Craun writes "Usaama Rahim, #479 Killed by US Police in 2015 & the First Victim to Be Instantly Named a Terrorist... Unfortunately, this case is also another example of how far media outlets will go to fit police narratives". And this: "Boston has a long history of spying and policing African Amerian communities more than any other community in Boston, so it is not surprising that the African American Muslim community would become the focus of local FBI & Boston PD spying."
  • Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR): Ibrahim Hooper, its spokesman, asks "Were there any video cameras or body cameras of the incident? How do you reconcile the two versions of the story, the family version being that he was on his normal commute to work at a bus stop?” [TIME Magazine, June 2, 2015]
  • CAIR's Civil Rights Litigation director issued a statement that included this: "It is our duty to question every police-involved shooting to determine if the use of deadly force was necessary, particularly given the recent high profile shootings of African-American men. We are asking for an independent and thorough investigation..."
  • A woman who says she is Rahim's aunt and who identified herself only as Karen said to reporters yesterday (Thursday): "There was no plot. There was no scheming... As you all know, with the current slaughter of black men that's going on across the nation, that's enough to make any black man feel threatened... There's a lot of black men and black people that are angry at the cops and putting things out on social media about the cops... When you add Islam, everybody in the media wants to put 'terrorism' in there." [NBC News, June 4, 2015]
  • The family lawyer: "We’d simply ask that you respect this born and bred American family... They have lost someone and whatever you think he may or may not have done, they lost a loved one. They are grieving..." [Boston Globe, June 4, 2015]
  • Ismail Abdurrashid from the Mosque for the Praising of Allah, Roxbury, MA [Boston Herald, June 4, 2015]: "He enjoyed studying his religion... He was very studious. There’s nothing about him that would have struck me or anyone from amongst us to be odd... He sometimes sat in the front row for Friday sermon at the Roxbury mosque. He wore the traditional Sunnah dress and a long beard... He was a very typical, American young adult... the all-American boy..."
Now, about those born-and-bred all-American references, Rahim graduated from Brookline High School in Boston in 2007, after spending ninth grade going to a Saudi Arabia high school [source]. A New York Times investigation ["Portrait of Suspect in Boston Is Disputed", NYT, June 4, 2015] observes about this 'sweet', 'All-American' young man what we have not seen elsewhere:
[H]e did little to hide his extreme views, which may have developed in South Florida. “Usaamah was tuned in a lot with online Islam,” said Yahya Abdullah Rivero, who attended mosque with Mr. Rahim in Miami. “He kept an ear to everything that was mentioned about Islam online. I know he used to listen to some extreme imams online” ...[He and Wright] maintained Facebook pages under assumed names where they posted photos of Islamic militants and “liked” the pages of radical clerics, strict Islamic law and the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL... Mr. Rahim appears to have posted under the name Abu Sufyaan on a page where he “liked” the Islamic State in Iraq in 2012, and also “liked” radical clerics, Sharia law and guns... Mr. Rahim was the youngest of five siblings. His older brother Ibrahim told The Boston Globe in 2007 that their father, Abdullah Rahman Rahim, joined the Nation of Islam in 1974, then converted to mainstream Islam in 1978.
The Boston Herald reported yesterday [here] that Rahim "called his father before he was fatally shot Tuesday to tell him goodbye". 

As Linda Sarsour might have put it, we "don’t know what it shows or doesn’t show. Questions still remain". But we know quite a lot. We can expect the law enforcement agencies do too.

A final note. When the Imam brother of the dead man posted his Facebook note, he used an oddly familiar turn of phrase. That provoked this  comment over at PJmedia:
“I can’t breathe” were the last words of Eric Garner, a Staten Island man selling cigarettes who was put in a chokehold by a New York police officer and died last year. Those words have been a rallying cry of protesters in cases of black men killed by police.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

22-Apr-13: A reflection on the killings in Boston and how it all might have ended so much better

Before the bombs [Image Source]
The words "Boston Marathon" are never again going to be as innocent sounding as they were until a week ago. The thought-provoking opinion piece below comes from The Investigative Project website, published today in the wake of the tragic series of terrorist acts that changed Boston's present and future during this turbulent past week.
The Boston Bombing and the Case for FBI Stings 
With a few lucky breaks, last week's Boston Marathon bombing could have had a dramatically different outcome. Had Tamerlan or Dzhokhar Tsarnaev sought help building their bombs on jihadist web forums, FBI agents likely would have detected it. They would have sent in an undercover operative or an informant. And the Tsarnaevs would have been arrested as they tried to detonate their bombs, which had been rendered inert by the FBI. And it would have elicited howls of protest from Islamists and their supporters. Instead, four people are dead, including the MIT police officer killed in Friday's shootout, and more than 150 people are injured. Many have lost limbs. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was charged Monday with using a weapon of mass destruction.  
It is easy to imagine the reaction had investigators discovered him and his brother sooner. "Entrapment!" defense attorneys would argue. "The FBI is fabricating terror threats, using hapless stooges incapable of harming anyone," Islamist advocacy groups would say. 
We know this because this is how the scenario has played out dozens of times in recent years. But last week's bombing shows you don't need to be a master criminal to murder and maim innocent people. The ingredients to build the pressure-cooker bombs came straight out of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula'sInspire magazine. The brainchild of American-born operative Samir Khan – killed in a 2011 drone strike along with fellow American Anwar al-Awlaki – Inspire offered suggestions for small-scale, homegrown jihadi attacks in each issue. 
Instructions for the pressure-cooker bomb came from an article headlined "Make a bomb in the kitchen of your Mom." A subsequent article referred to that recipe and advised that pressure cooker bombs should be "placed in crowded areas and left to blow up. More than one of these could be planted to explode at the same time. However, keep in mind that the range of the shrapnel in this operation is short range so the pressurized cooker or pipe should be placed close to the intended targets and should not be concealed from them by barriers such as walls." 
The Boston Marathon bombs blew up within 12 seconds of each other, about a block apart. The Tsarnaevs succeeded in carrying out an attack where others have come close, but failed. At least two other would-be terrorists came chillingly close to attacks that likely would have triggered more casualties than were suffered in Boston. Faisal Shahzad parked an explosive-laden car in Times Square. But he made mistakes in the chemical composition and it failed to detonate. 
In Texas, Naser Jason Abdo had copies of Inspire magazine in his hotel room, and ingredients for pressure-cooker bombs, when police swooped in. Abdo was nabbed thanks to an alert gun store owner who took notice and called authorities after Abdo arrived by taxi cab to a fairly remote outlet and acted suspiciously. 
His plan was to detonate the bombs at a restaurant popular with Fort Hood personnel and then shoot survivors as they scrambled out of the debris. He did it out of a sense of religious duty. 
But, as we have repeatedly chronicled, FBI sting operations meant to interdict terrorists before they strike, are condemned routinely as misguided and unnecessary. Islamist advocacy groups like the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) say the FBI is creating terrorists who otherwise would not turn violent. 
The FBI, "by using informants acting as agent provocateurs, has recruited more so called extremist Muslims than al-Qaida themselves," CAIR-Michigan Director Dawud Walid said in 2010. The use of informants are among "self-deluding initiatives that seem to seek terror-case quotas," CAIR Chicago's Ahmed Rehab wrote in 2009. 
"What the FBI came and did was enable them to become actual terrorists, and then came and saved the day," CAIR-San Francisco's Zahra Billoo said in 2010. The FBI "is creating these huge terror plots where they don't exist." 
But Ali Soufan, a former FBI supervisory special agent and a veteran of some sting operations, defended the practice as vital for national security. 
"As you can't prosecute someone just for professing a desire to kill Americans, and you can't read minds to determine if they really intend to carry out their threats, either you wait to see if the real al Qaeda gets in contact—and hope you can track them—or you intercede," he wrote in a Wall Street Journal book review. "Most Americans would no doubt prefer the latter option to taking a serious gamble with civilian lives." 
How many Boston Marathon attacks does it take to emphasize that point? How many dead 8 year olds,exchange students or innocent young women are enough to make interdiction acceptable? 
In these stings, agents are careful to give the target an out – offering other ways to serve the cause of jihad without killing innocent people. But the suspects reject those or there wouldn't be a prosecution. In Portland, Mohamed Mohamud would not budge from his ambition to blow up a bomb at a crowded downtown Christmas tree lighting ceremony packed with women and children. He was arrested after trying to detonate the bomb, only to discover the FBI rendered it inoperable. 
On Feb. 17, 2012, Amine El-Khalifi thought he was about to become the first suicide bomber in America. He planned to shoot guards at the entrance to the U.S. Capitol, force his way in, and detonate a suicide bomb packed into his jacket. He practiced the attack in a hotel room three days earlier. FBI agents arrested him as he walked alone, carrying the MAC-10 automatic and wore the bomb jacket. 
Who would prefer leaving El-Khalifi alone to his own devices? Who doesn't wish the Tsarnaevs had met a similar fate?
Two men wearing caps [Image Source]

Tuesday, October 04, 2011

4-Oct-11: Luck, wisdom, thoroughness? US again escapes mass terror damage

Rezwan Ferdaus, alias Dave Winfield, alias Jon Ramos
From Reuters, a report this morning of yet another lucky escape from the deadly machinations of jihadist terrorists in the United States:
A man accused of plotting to fly explosives-packed remote-controlled model planes into the Pentagon and the U.S. Capitol pleaded not guilty Monday. The bail hearing that had been scheduled for Rezwan Ferdaus, of Ashland, was delayed for several weeks because his lawyer, Catherine Byrne, asked for more time to prepare.
Authorities said Ferdaus, a 26-year-old Muslim American with a physics degree from Northeastern University, was arrested in Framingham last week after federal agents posing as al-Qaida members delivered what he believed was 24 pounds of C-4 explosive. They said the public was never in danger from the plot... Also in attendance were the parents of Tarek Mehanna, another Massachusetts man arrested in a different terror plot. They said they did not know Ferdaus' family but went to show their support. Mehanna is scheduled for trial later this month; authorities say he conspired to provide material support to al-Qaida and kill U.S. troops in Iraq. [More]
From a Boston-area news channel, some background about the accused and the charges.
  • Aged 26, with a Bangladeshi background, he is a 2008 graduate of Northeastern University in Boston, where he earned a degree in physics. Graduated from Ashland High School in 2003. 
  • Ferdaus used the aliases "Dave Winfield" and "Jon Ramos" 
  • Mother is a health coordinator; father is an engineer. 
  • "Despite living in the neighborhood for 14 years, none of their neighbors seemed to know much about them." 
  • Charged with a plot to damage or destroy the Pentagon and U.S. Capitol as well as attempting to provide support and resources to foreign terrorist organization al Qaeda 
  • Arrested by undercover agents posing as terrorists. He thought he was going to receive 25 pounds of C-4 explosives. 3 hand grenades. 6 fully automatic AK-47 rifles. He wanted to have remote control drone airplanes, packed them with explosives, crash them into the targets. The planes are about 5 feet long with a 4 foot wingspan. 
  • Instead, he was busted.  
  • He traveled to DC in May 2011 and chose sites where he would launch these drone planes filled with explosives. Was planning to attack DC for 2 years. He wanted to kill women and children and as many Americans as possible. 
  • "Ferdaus was also the drummer for the band Goospimp Orchestra."
Doesn't look much like a terrorist. What does that mean?