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To: moonshinner_09
“All my children think about is the day I could be taken away.

Sounds like a child abuser to me.
2 posted on 11/19/2013 10:37:42 AM PST by cripplecreek (REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
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To: cripplecreek

News > National News
Exclusive: US May Have Let ‘Dozens’ of Terrorists in as Refugees
8:50AM Wednesday
November 20, 2013
Exclusive: US May Have Let ‘Dozens’ of Terrorists in as Refugees (Photo Credit: FBI)

(QUANTICO, Va.) — Several dozen suspected terrorist bombmakers, including some believed to have targeted American troops, may have mistakenly been allowed to move to the United States as war refugees, according to FBI agents investigating the remnants of roadside bombs recovered from Iraq and Afghanistan.

The discovery in 2009 of two al Qaeda-Iraq terrorists living as refugees in Bowling Green, Ky. — who later admitted in court that they’d attacked U.S. soldiers in Iraq — prompted the bureau to assign hundreds of specialists to an around-the-clock effort aimed at checking its archive of 100,000 improvised explosive devices collected in the war zones, known as IEDs, for other suspected terrorists’ fingerprints.

“We are currently supporting dozens of current counter-terrorism investigations like that,” FBI Agent Gregory Carl, director of the Terrorist Explosive Device Analytical Center (TEDAC), said in an ABC News interview to be broadcast Wednesday night on ABC News’ World News with Diane Sawyer and Nightline.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if there were many more than that,” said House Committee on Homeland Security Chairman Michael McCaul. “And these are trained terrorists in the art of bombmaking that are inside the United States; and quite frankly, from a homeland security perspective, that really concerns me.”

As a result of the Kentucky case, the State Department stopped processing Iraq refugees for six months in 2011, federal officials told ABC News — even for many who had heroically helped U.S. forces as interpreters and intelligence assets. One Iraqi who had aided American troops was assassinated before his refugee application could be processed, because of the immigration delays, two U.S. officials said. In 2011, fewer than 10,000 Iraqis were resettled as refugees in the U.S., half the number from the year before, State Department statistics show.

An intelligence tip initially led the FBI to Waad Ramadan Alwan, 32, in 2009. The Iraqi had claimed to be a refugee who faced persecution back home — a story that shattered when the FBI found his fingerprints on a cordless phone base that U.S. soldiers dug up in a gravel pile south of Bayji, Iraq on Sept. 1, 2005. The phone base had been wired to unexploded bombs buried in a nearby road...

http://www.wlsam.com/common/more.php?section_id=1&m=58&ts=1384949831&article=766B10B151E611E3B51EFEFDADE6840A&mode=2


49 posted on 11/20/2013 7:11:13 AM PST by KeyLargo
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