U.S. Says 'Dirty Bomb' Suspect Padilla Sought to Blow Up Buildings
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, June 1, 2004
More: Media refuse to call him by the Muslim name he prefers, Abdullah al Muhajir
WASHINGTON Jose Padilla, a former Chicago gang member
held as a terrorism suspect for two years, sought to blow up hotels
and apartment buildings in the United States in addition to
planning an attack with a "dirty bomb" radiological device, the
government said Tuesday.
The Justice Department, under pressure to explain its indefinite
detention of a U.S. citizen as an "enemy combatant," detailed
Padilla's alleged al-Qaida training in Afghanistan and contacts
with the most senior members of the terrorist network, his travel
back into the United States and preparations to rent apartments and
set off explosives.
Deputy Attorney General James Comey called the chronicle of
Padilla's plotting "remarkable for its scope, its clarity and its
candor."
The department released documents, based in part on interviews
with Padilla, saying he and an unidentified al-Qaida accomplice
planned to find as many as three apartment buildings supplied with
natural gas.
"Padilla and the accomplice were to locate as many as three
high-rise apartment buildings which had natural gas supplied to the
floors," the government summary of interrogations said. The
alleged accomplice is in custody.
"They would rent two apartments in each building, seal all the
openings, turn on the gas, and set timers to detonate the buildings
simultaneously at a later time," the papers alleged.
Internet Nuke
Comey said Padilla suggested to his handlers that he detonate a
nuclear bomb that he thought he could make from instructions on the
Internet, or that he set off a dirty bomb that would release deadly
radiation in a small area. His handlers did not think either was
feasible, Comey said, and wanted him to focus instead on the
apartment-building plot.
Top al-Qaida officials "wanted Padilla to hit targets in New
York City, although Florida and Washington, D.C. were discussed as
well," the summary said.
One of Padilla's lawyers, Andrew Patel, characterized Comey's
information as "an opening statement without a trial. We are in
the same position we've been in for two years, where the government
says bad things about Mr. Padilla and there's no forum for him to
defend himself."
The Supreme Court is deciding whether the war on terrorism gives
the government power to seize Americans such as Padilla and hold
them without charges for as long as it takes to ensure they are not
a danger to the nation. Comey denied the timing of the disclosure
was an attempt to influence the court.
Florida Again
Comey said Padilla's partner in the attacks was to be Adnan El
Shukrijumah, one of seven suspected al-Qaida operatives who the
Justice Department cited last week as planning attacks on the
United States. Nicknamed "Jafar the pilot," the Saudi native once
lived in Florida and has been sought by federal authorities for
more than a year.
While Comey said the two broke up the partnership because they
couldn't get along, the official said the information learned from
Padilla and others about Jafar's role makes his capture imperative.
"We need to find that guy," Comey said.
Comey said release of the information had no connection to
criticism from some members of Congress and some administration
officials that Attorney General John Ashcroft overstated
al-Qaida's threat.
Rather, Comey said, he acted "because every place I went to
speak, people would say: 'We agree with you with the war on terror,
but we've got a problem with this Padilla thing. I wish I knew more
about it.' And I very much wanted people to know what I knew about
Jose Padilla to address those questions."
Comey said at a news conference that when Padilla stepped off a
plane in Chicago in May 2002, he was a highly trained and fully
equipped "soldier of our enemy" who had accepted his al-Qaida
assignment to kill hundreds of innocent people in apartment
buildings.
'The Threat We Face'
"We have decided to release this information to help people
understand why we are doing what we are doing in the war on terror
and to help people understand the nature of the threat we face,"
he said.
He asserted that if Padilla had been handled by the usual
criminal justice system, he could have stayed silent and "would
likely have ended up a free man."
Padilla was to conduct an Internet search on buildings heated by natural gas, open a bank account and obtain documents
needed to rent an apartment, the government said. The plot called
for blowing up 20 buildings simultaneously, but Padilla allegedly
said he could not rent multiple apartments under one identity
without drawing attention.
The information was provided in response to a query from Senate
Justice Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. Comey said it took
significant time to compile the information and denied the timing
had anything to do with the court case.
"If it was done sooner it would have been released sooner," he
said.
Comey said there were no plans to file the information as an
addendum to the arguments the administration made in the case. And
he said there were no plans to use the material to try to seek a
criminal indictment against Padilla.
Comey traced Padilla's alleged transition into a terrorist as
beginning in earnest in March 2000, when he joined a pilgrimage in
Saudi Arabia and met an al-Qaida recruiter. Two months later, he
met someone in Yemen who arranged training for him in the Afghan
terrorist camps, Comey said.
He said Padilla signed an application joining al-Qaida in July
2000. During his training, Comey said, Padilla met senior al-Qaida
officials including Abu Zubaydah, the network's operations chief in
Afghanistan; and Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, architect of the Sept. 11,
2001, attacks.
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