Four Charged in JFK Bomb Plot
The Department of Justice is charging four people – including one U.S. citizen – with conspiring to blow up one of the nation's busiest airports.
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According to federal prosecutors, the four men in January 2006
began plotting to use explosives to destroy buildings, fuel tanks
and fuel pipelines at John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK).
The airport daily handles more than 1,000 flights – about
half of which are international – and annually handles around
45 million passengers.
The four being charged are:
- Former JFK employee Russell Defreitas, a U.S. citizen and
native of Guyana. Defreitas, a former airport cargo worker at JFK,
was arrested in Brooklyn, N.Y., by agents from the FBI Joint
Terrorist Task Force (JTTF).
- Abdul Kadir, a citizen of Guyana who has served as a member of
the Guyanese Parliament. According to the Justice Department, Kadir
is in custody in Trinidad.
- Kareem Ibrahim, a citizen of Trinidad. Ibrahim also is in
custody in Trinidad.
- Abdel Nur, a citizen of Guyana.
According to the Justice Department, the U.S. government plans
to seek the extradition of Kadir, Ibrahim and Nur.
An International Network
Federal prosecutors allege that the plot hatched by Defreitas,
Kadir, Ibrahim and Nur tapped into an international network of
Muslim extremists from the United States, Guyana and Trinidad, and
utilized the knowledge, expertise and contacts of the conspirators
to develop and plan the plot and obtain operational support and
capability to carry it out.
For example, federal prosecutors allege that the conspirators
dispatched Defreitas from Guyana to conduct video and photo
surveillance of JFK airport on four occasions in January. During
the surveillance and using his knowledge of airport operations from
his prior employment, Defreitas allegedly identified targets and
escape routes and assessed airport security.
According to the criminal complaint, the four men also obtained
satellite photographs of JFK airport and its facilities from the
Internet and traveled frequently between the United States, Guyana
and Trinidad to discuss their plans and to solicit the financial
and technical assistance of others.
“The Most Hurtful Thing to the United
States”
According to the criminal complaint filed by Justice Department
prosecutors, the four men used their connections to present their
terrorist plot to radical groups in South America and the
Caribbean, including senior leadership of Jamaat Al Muslimeen
(“JAM”), which was responsible for a deadly coup
attempt in Trinidad in 1990. As the complaint alleges, Kadir and
Nur were longtime associates of JAM leaders.
Allegedly, Kareem also was preparing to send an emissary
overseas to present the plan to other extremists.
According to the Justice Department, an informant working with
law enforcement agents began monitoring the plot at its early
stages and made numerous recorded conversations with the
defendants. In a recorded conversation following one of the
surveillance missions to JFK airport, Defreitas predicted that the
attacks would result in the destruction of “the whole of
Kennedy,” that only a few people would survive the attack and
that because of the location of the targeted fuel pipelines, part
of Queens would explode.
“Anytime you hit Kennedy, it is the most hurtful thing to
the United States,” Defreitas said during a recorded
conversation, according to the Justice Department. “To hit
John F. Kennedy, wow ... They love John F. Kennedy like he’s
the man ... If you hit that, this whole country will be in
mourning. It’s like you can kill the man
twice.”
In a later recorded conversation with his co-conspirators in
May, Defreitas compared the plot to attack JFK to the attacks on
the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, allegedly stating,
“Even the Twin Towers can’t touch it.”
He allegedly added: “This can destroy the economy of
America for some time.”
Plot Sought to Inflict Economic
Damage
In discussing the plans, Kadir allegedly stressed the goal of
causing economic damage and suggested minimizing the killing of
innocent men and women. In one conversation, Kadir and Defreitas
allegedly discussed the need to disable the airport control tower
from which airport security monitors the fuel tank locations.
Kadir, an engineer by training, explained that the tanks were, most
likely, double tanks, requiring two explosions to provide enough
oxygen to ignite the fuel inside the inner tank.
“The defendants sought to combine an insider’s
knowledge of JFK Airport with the assistance of Islamic radicals in
the Caribbean to produce an attack that they boasted would be so
devastating to the airport that ‘even the twin towers
can’t touch it,’ Kenneth Wainstein, assistant attorney
general for National Security at the Justice Department said.
“Like the Fort Dix case several weeks ago, this plot
highlights the evolving nature of the terrorist threat we face, and
our investigation into both plots highlights how our agents and
prosecutors are refining their capability to detect and preempt
such plots before they advance to a dangerous
stage.”
“Unfathomable Damage, Deaths and
Destruction”
Roslynn Mauskopf, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New
York, asserted that the alleged bomb plot, if successful, would
have “resulted in unfathomable damage, deaths and
destruction,” due to the fact that JFK is one of the nation's
busiest airports and is located in one of the nation's most densely
populated areas.
“But, thanks to the extraordinary efforts of law
enforcement, the defendants’ plan never reached the
operational stage, and the public was never at risk,”
Mauskopf said. “We remain unwavering in our commitment to
stop terrorist plots before they become terrorist acts and will
spare no effort to secure the safety of the
public.”
The arrests of the four men were the result of a joint
investigation involving federal, state and local agencies. Mauskopf
added that the investigation is continuing.
“This announcement demonstrates, once again, that there
are people continuously plotting violence against our vital assets
and our homeland,” said Michael Balboni, deputy secretary for
public safety with the New York State Department of Homeland
Security. “This investigation and the arrests that are
related to it prove that the cooperation of state, local and
federal law enforcement can produce real results that help to make
our state and nation safer.”
If convicted of conspiring to attack JFK with explosives, Defreitas, Kadir, Ibrahim and Nur each face a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
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