Posted on 07/21/2010 5:06:21 PM PDT by Cindy
SNIPPET: "WASHINGTON A US man has been charged after he compiled a hit list of 15 people he believed had harmed Muslim civilians and deserved to die, court documents showed Wednesday.
Paul Rockwood and his wife Nadia were charged with lying to federal investigators about the compilation and content of the list, which Nadia Rockwood delivered to an unnamed individual in April at her husband's request."
SNIPPET: "According to plea agreement documents obtained by AFP Wednesday, Paul Rockwood converted to Islam around late 2001 and soon "became a strict adherent to the violent jihad-promoting ideology of cleric Anwar al-Awlaki."
SNIPPET: "Rockwood began researching explosive devices, and by late 2009 was discussing "committing acts of domestic terrorism, including... the use of mail bombs and the possibility of killing targets by gunshot to the head."
By early 2010, Rockwood "formalized" a list of some 15 specific targets, which may have included US soldiers. The list has not been released.
Nadia Rockwood was aware of her husband's radicalization, the documents said.
Both husband and wife subsequently lied to investigators about the content of the list, which was obtained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Joint Terrorism Task Force."
(Excerpt) Read more at google.com ...
Update: Al Aulaqi has been killed.
NOTE The following text (including photo caption) is a quote:
www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2012/november/in-alaska-a-domestic-terrorist-with-a-deadly-plan/in-alaska-a-domestic-terrorist-with-a-deadly-plan
Paul Rockwood, seen here in a surveillance image, lived in the small fishing village of King Salmon. He had begun compiling a list of targets in the U.S. military he might assassinate in the name of jihad.
North to Alaska
Part 3: A Domestic Terrorist With a Deadly Plan
11/09/12
By the time he moved to Alaska in 2006, Paul Rockwood, Jr. was an ardent follower of the American-born radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who he met at a Virginia mosque in late 2001.
Shortly after he settled with his family in the small fishing village of King Salmon to work for the National Weather Service, our agents in Anchorage were aware that Rockwood had begun compiling a list of targets in the U.S. military he might assassinate in the name of jihad.
If you were wearing a U.S. military uniform, said Special Agent Doug Klein, who worked the case from Anchorage, as far as Rockwood was concerned, you were a target.
A military veteran himself, Rockwood believed it was his religious duty to kill those who desecrated Islam. In 2009, he began sharing his deadly plans with an individual he thought held similar views. But that person was actually an undercover operative employed by our Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) in Anchorage.
For a time, JTTF personnel wondered how determined Rockwood was about his plans. But one day when he was with our undercover in Anchorage he identified the building of a cleared defense contractor and said, This is the kind of building I want to blow up, Klein said. Thats when we knew he was a serious threat.
Keeping track of Rockwood was difficult, however, because King Salmon is some 300 miles from Anchorage and only accessible by airplane. And with only a few hundred residents, outsiders would be immediately spotted, so attempts at surveillance were impractical. We couldnt use 90 percent of the traditional investigative techniques we use in the Lower 48, Klein explained.
In addition, small, regional airlines in Alaska are not regulated by the Transportation Security Administration, so anyone can fly with weapons. On Rockwoods frequent trips from King Salmon to Anchorage, Klein said, he could have had a gun or a bomb and we never would have known.
During those Anchorage visits, Rockwood met the undercover operative and discussed buying electronics and downloading schematics of cell phones to make bomb detonators. At one meeting, he said he was getting ready to relocate to the mainland and had plans to steal a cache of explosives in Bostonwhere he grew upthat would help him go operational.
By early 2010, Rockwood had formalized his hit list to include 15 specific targetsall outside Alaskaand he gave the list to his wife, Nadia, who was aware of his intentions.
Even with no overt acts of terrorism to charge him with, it was decided that for the sake of public safety, Rockwood and his wife could not be allowed to leave Alaska. In May 2010, JTTF agents questioned Rockwood and his wife as they attempted to fly out of Anchorage. Both denied any involvement with a hit list or terrorist plot.
The couple was charged with making false statements to the FBI in a domestic terrorism investigation, and in July, Rockwood was found guilty and sentenced to eight years in prisonthe maximum sentence under the law. His wife was also found guilty and received five years of probation.
We can never be sure if he would have acted, Klein said, but Rockwood was clearly a threat, not only to the individuals on his list but to the entire community.
Next: The shot that pierced the Alaska pipeline.
Resources:
- Press release
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