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FBIs Albany terror sting begins to unravel
By Bill Van Auken
19 August 2004
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The prosecution on terrorism charges of two Muslim immigrants
in Albany, New York, has begun to unravel with the revelation
that the principal piece of evidence used to justify their entrapment
in an FBI sting operation was falsified.
The two menYassin M. Aref, 34, a Kurdish immigrant, and
Mohammed Mosharref Hossain, 49, a Bangladeshi immigrantwere
arrested in pre-dawn raids on August 5. They have been charged
with providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization,
importing firearms without a license, money laundering and conspiracy.
The conspiracy, however, was entirely an invention of the FBI.
Using a confidential informeranother immigrant promised
leniency on a criminal charge in return for cooperationthe
FBI reportedly drew the two defendants into a fictitious scheme
that involved the selling of a shoulder-fired missile to someone
plotting to assassinate the Pakistani ambassador to the United
Nations.
Hossain had approached the FBI informant earlier, asking for
a loan to bail out his business, a pizza shop. It was then that
the FBI set the sting into motion, inventing the story about the
sale of the weapon and having the informant ask Hossain to hold
the proceeds in return for a portion of the money. The only alleged
role played by Aref, the spiritual leader at an Albany mosque,
was to serve as a witness to the financial transaction.
The key evidence used in FBI affidavits seeking the search
warrants that allowed the sting to go forward was a notebook said
to have been recovered by the US military at a terrorist
training camp in Iraq. It was claimed that the notebook
included Arefs name, together with an out-of-date telephone
number. The FBI said the notation, written in Kurdish, referred
to Aref as commander. This suggested, according to
the FBI, that Aref was associated with Ansar al-Islam, a Kurdish
Islamic fundamentalist movement alleged to have connections with
Al Qaeda.
Earlier this week, however, federal prosecutors were compelled
to admit that this evidence, like the plot itself, was fabricated.
In a letter sent to Judge David Homer on Monday, the US Attorneys
office acknowledged its error.
After obtaining a copy of the original entry late yesterday,
the prosecution wrote, FBI translators who reviewed it concluded
that the Kurdish-language word that precedes Arefs name
in the second-to-last line of the entry is brother,
not commander, as indicated in the [Army] teletype.
Other Kurdish speakers have said that the word used in the
notationkak could also be translated as
mister.
In a bail hearing last week, Judge Homer refused to release
the two men, citing, in particular, the use of the word commander
in the notebook. If true, the judge said, that
evidence carries significant weight to Mr. Arefs ties to
terrorist activities.
Lawyers for the two men said that a new bail hearing has been
set for next week, based on the debunking of the prosecutions
claim.
Equally spurious is the prosecutions claim that the US
Army found the notebook following an attack on a terrorist
camp in Rawah, Iraq, near the Syrian border, in June 2003.
Using helicopter gunships and tanks, the US attackers slaughtered
approximately 80 people. Some of those killed were said to have
come to Iraq from Syria and other neighboring countries on the
eve of the war to resist the US invasion. No proof was ever offered
by the military that those killed were linked to Ansar al-Islam,
Al Qaeda or any other terrorist network.
Following the attack on Rawah, the US military conducted extensive
raids in the town itself, rounding up hundreds of people and ransacking
homes. Yet no evidence has been presented on precisely where the
notebook was found, whether it was on the person of one of those
killed, or in one of the many houses that were searched.
Aref, who came to the US as a political refugee several years
ago, has many relatives still in Iraq, including three brothers.
After the exposure of the governments phony claim concerning
the notebook, the Justice Department filed a motion Tuesday invoking
the Classified Information Procedures Act, a little-used government
secrecy law, claiming that disclosure of further evidence against
the defendants could jeopardize national security.
The law allows prosecutors to withhold evidence from defense attorneys
and the court, submitting merely a summary of what the evidence
allegedly shows.
Attorneys for the two Muslim immigrants responded angrily to
the governments motion. Its kind of shocking,
said Terence Kindlon, who is representing Aref. He told the Albany
Times Union: They had three press conferences announcing
the arrests, one in Washington, D.C., and two in Albany. They
put out all this prejudicial damaging information, much of which
turns out to be based upon demonstrably false information, and
now they want to shut everything down so we cant respond.
As for the governments claim that it made a mistake
in claiming that the notebook referred to his client as commander,
Kindlon remarked, This is the point where the whole thing
starts to sound like a two-bit frame-up.
The government has presented no other evidence tying the two
defendants to terrorism. Reportedly, federal prosecutors included
the claim in their affidavits for search warrants that Hossain
had voiced support for an Islamic extremist group. However, the
groupJamaat el-Islamiis a political party with cabinet
members in the Bangladeshi coalition government.
In addition to invoking the state secrecy law, the government
has filed a motion to push back deadlines for trial proceedings,
indicating that it has yet to translate evidence from a years
worth of surveillance tapes. This includes discussions between
the defendants and the informant in both Arabic and Urdu. Apparently,
Aref does not even understand the latter language.
There is every indication that the case in Albany is a politically
inspired frame-up, timed to coincide with the Bush administrations
ratcheting up of terrorist alerts. That no terrorist conspiracy
existed besides the one invented by the FBI itself was largely
obscured in the governments trumpeting of another success
in the war on terror.
Now that the scheme is falling apart, the invocation of national
security is meant to hide this state conspiracy from the
general public.
A debacle for the government in Detroit terror
case
The exposure of the fabricated evidence in the Albany case
coincides with the disintegration of the governments single
successful post-September 11 conviction at trial of defendants
accused of terrorist-related offenses.
The case involved government claims that four Arab immigrants
arrested in the Detroit, Michigan, suburb of Dearborn were part
of an Islamic fundamentalist sleeper cell that was
prepared to carry out terrorist attacks. Two of the four men were
convicted on charges of providing material support to terrorism
and fraud. Both of the other two men were acquitted on the terrorism
charges, while one of them was convicted of fraud for possessing
false documents.
The case, hailed by the Bush administration at the time as
its greatest triumph in the war on terror, has turned into a complete
debacle for the government.
US District Judge Gerald Rosen in Detroit is threatening to
throw out the convictions of Karim Koubriti, 25, and Adel-Ilah
Elmardoudi, 38, because of the prosecutions withholding
from the defense of crucial evidence that would almost certainly
have led to a verdict of not guilty on the terrorism charges.
The Justice Department, meanwhile, has relieved the chief prosecutor
in the case, Assistant US Attorney Richard Convertino, and is
conducting a criminal investigation against him on charges of
prosecutorial misconduct.
For his part, Convertino has filed his own lawsuit against
the Justice Department and Attorney General John Ashcroft, charging
them with gross mismanagement of anti-terrorist cases
and with launching the probe against him in retaliation for critical
testimony he gave to a Senate committee. He further accuses the
Justice Department of illegally leaking information related to
the case, including the identity of a key informant.
The exculpatory evidence withheld by the prosecution undercuts
virtually every aspect of its case. The key prosecution witness,
Youssef Hmimmsa, testified that he was asked to join the supposed
terrorist cell and told of plots to target airliners with Stinger
missiles. In return for this testimony, he received a drastically
reduced sentence on a 10-count felony indictment involving credit
card fraud and other offenses.
One of the documents withheld from the defense was a letter
from Milton Butch Jones, a convicted drug gang leader
who was imprisoned with Hmimmsa. While the two were in jail, Jones
said, Hmimmsa told him that he had made up the story about the
terror cell.
A videotape presented as a key piece of evidence in the prosecution
case has also been thoroughly discredited. The FBI portrayed the
tape as evidence of surveillance of sites targeted for terrorist
attacks. The scenes on the tape included casinos in Las Vegas,
Disneyland and other tourist destinations.
A man appearing in the videoa Tunisian immigrantwas
interviewed by the government in January, months after the Detroit
trial ended, and established that the tape just what it seemed,
an amateur film made during a school trip.
Justice Department officials have acknowledged that the mans
testimony has led them to reevaluate the tapes
significance.
The tape was made public after Convertino violated a federal
court gag order on the case by giving an interview to the Associated
Press. It has been shown repeatedly on national television, with
newscasters echoing Convertinos charge that Las Vegas authorities
were shown the tape in 2002along with another one made in
1997 and allegedly found with Al Qaeda suspects in Spainbut
refused to announce a terror alert. Convertino charged that city
officials suppressed news of the tapes out of concern for the
potential economic impact of a terror alert.
Las Vegas authorities have denied the charge, insisting that
they did not believe the tapes were indicative of a terrorist
threat.
Largely lost in the medias coverage of the controversy
is the fact that the government had already concluded the tape
records were nothing more than a tourists travels, and that
the case in which it featured as evidence is being exposed as
a frame-up.
Instead, the grainy images of Las Vegas have been broadcast
over and over again to suggest that there was a terrorist threat,
where none existed, and to question why the public was not warned.
See Also:
Specter of a police state
FBI "anti-terror" task force targets Bush administration
opponents
[18 August 2004]
Two sting operations raise
disturbing questions about US terror alert
[11 August 2004]
Terror scare paves way for police-state
measures
[5 August 2004]
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