Prosecutors accused Faraj of submitting an immigration affidavit saying he would financially support Amir Abdulrazzak whom they called a suspected al-Qaida associate. They said the basis for that belief was that Abdulrazzak had stayed at a house in Bosnia believed to be owned by a man who had contacts with an unidentified person whom they called Osama bin Laden's chief terrorism coordinator. Prosecutors declined to name that person.
Prosecutors told the magistrate that Faraj worked in Croatia for a charity front organization that had ties to Osama bin Laden. Faraj's duties included running foreign recruits to camps in Bosnia, they said.