Posted on 07/26/2002 11:00:47 AM PDT by aristeides
Excerpt:
The al-Qaida terrorist network may have infiltrated the U.S. Navy getting access to bases, uniforms, refueling procedures and more.
Federal authorities in the Seattle area are holding a drilling Naval reservist, a non-U.S. citizen, suspected of having ties to Islamic radicals with known connections to al-Qaida.
Construction Mechanic 3rd Class Semi Osman, 32, was arrested May 17 at his home in Tacoma, Wash., on charges of illegally trying to become a U.S. citizen and possession of a handgun whose serial number was obliterated or altered, according to court documents.
Please let me know if you want ON or OFF my ping list!. . .don't be shy.
Praying hard for our country...
If we have that long.
Let's face it, we are incredibly vulnerable. If someone wanted to commit a bio-warfare atrocity, they don't need bombs or expensive delivery systems. A food booth at a well attended parade in a large city would suffice....
And I wonder how many ambulance drivers, reserve police officers, telephone installers, municipal utility (water/electricity) workers, and FEMA officials are mo-slimes? No, I guess I shouldn't think about that...
Archy, think you can find a photo of this turkey?
There ought to be an arrest photo available. I'll see what I can dig up, abnd check and see if anything is on the wires.
-archy-/-
An incomplete background check is the same as a failed background check.
Those who fail background checks should be denied positions of trust and responsibility. If they are from any group, not just a profiled group, I would deny them any entrance to the military or to other positions of trust & responsibility BECAUSE they will have been ASKED to assist in completing a total background check. If they will not assist to the total satisfaction of all questions, then they have self-disqualified.
That's part of it, I think. But there's more:
Seattle Muslim denies allegations of ties to terror network
'I'd never heard of al-Qaida until 9/11,' he says, breaking silence
Wednesday, July 17, 2002
A Seattle Muslim now under FBI investigation for possible ties to Osama bin Laden's terror network says federal authorities and the media never bothered to contact him or his brother before the allegations were circulated within government circles or printed in headlines.
Had he been given a chance, Mustafa Ujaama, 34, says he would have told them:
"I'd never heard of al-Qaida until 9/11," he said, adding that when he learned that terrorists had acted in the name of Islam, he responded, "That's not Islam."
In his first interview with any news media, Ujaama said he and his brother, James, are the victims of a misplaced government crackdown on terrorism -- and he maintains that neither did anything wrong.
In fact, neither has been charged, detained or even interviewed by federal agents.
"I have not been invited by the FBI to answer any questions," said Ujaama, adding that he feels he's already been convicted in the media.
"Muslims have become the new victims of this modern-day McCarthyism," said Ujaama, an auto mechanic and car salesman who helped found the now-defunct Dar-us-Salaam Mosque, which has been the center of a federal investigation that included 100 Seattle-area Muslims but has narrowed to a half-dozen members of the mosque. Senior government officials have confirmed that a grand jury investigation is under way.
The brothers, born with the surname Thompson, are widely known in the Central District, where James Ujaama once helped form a group to encourage black youths to start their own businesses.
Mustafa Ujaama said yesterday that his mother, Peggy Thompson, raised him and his brother to be outspoken about their beliefs, and to always follow their heart. He said he and his brother lived by those principles as they worked to launch legitimate businesses and to clean up the drug-ridden neighborhood where they established the mosque.
Last week, the Los Angeles Times reported that federal officials had circulated a report describing activities associated with the Seattle mosque and identified an American and his brother, both Muslim converts, who could be seeking to "locate possible sites for a terrorist operation."
The FBI report also said a British citizen held at Camp X-ray in Guantanamo Bay said that a man, thought to be James Ujaama, recruited him to attend an al-Qaida training camp, the paper reported.
The newspaper did not name the brothers, but reported that militants from the mosque were said to be planning to establish a terrorist training camp in rural Oregon. There, members of the Seattle mosque and others were said to have engaged in target practice.
Another key connection between alleged terrorist activities and the mosque was said to be Semi Osman, a Tacoma car mechanic now in federal custody on immigration and weapons charges. Prosecutors say he entered into sham marriages to become a U.S. citizen and may have done so to facilitate terrorism, though none of the charges against him is specific to terrorist activities.
Osman was stopped by an Oregon police officer, who discovered that two other men in the car were from England. The two men were later identified as associates of a radical cleric in London who has ties to al-Qaida, and federal officials speculated that they were scouting the area for a training camp.
The officials also reported that instructions on how to poison water sources were found in Osman's apartment, the newspaper reported.
"I heard that, and I thought of my daughter and her little friend dying from poison, and it made me sick," Ujaama said. "I would never do anything like that."
Ujaama, on advice of his attorney, would not speak in detail about visits to a ranch near Bly, Ore., but confirmed that he and others from the mosque had spent time there. Osman, his wife and two children lived at the ranch for several months in 1999.
Ujaama said Osman, a West African mechanic with a British passport, had taken his family to Oregon to live the simple life of a potato farmer and planned to raise sheep for use in Muslim religious ceremonies.
Many of the reputed links between the Seattle mosque and known terrorist sympathizers, however, appear to stem from the activities and travels of James Ujaama.
James Ujaama, 36, is a University of Washington graduate who self-published at least three books while living in Seattle. One is a novel, "Coming Up," that charts the course of two friends: Andre and Hakim. The former becomes a drug dealer, the latter a successful businessman.
He also wrote a book on becoming a entrepreneur, and another called "Young People's Guide to Starting a Business Without Selling Drugs."
He has lived in London, off and on, for the past six years. In a brief interview with the Seattle Post-Intelligencer Monday night, he said he builds Web sites for hire and has a software business that has an office Karachi, Pakistan.
Ujaama is also listed as the founder of stopamerica.org, a Web site critical of U.S. foreign policy. The Web site, associated with a group known as Global Alliance for US Foreign Policy Change, lists offices in Los Angeles, Karachi and London.
"America's foreign policy-makers have brought hate to the people of the United States," reads a statement on the site attributed to him. "We the people of the United States charge this government and their coalition with conspiracy to commit genocide and crimes of terrorism against Muslim people in our names."
None of the Web site content espouses violence, although some messages posted to a bulletin board do.
According to various published reports attributed to unnamed federal agents, James Ujaama delivered laptop computers to the Taliban prior to Sept. 11; associated with radical Sheik Abu Hamza Al-Masri, an al-Qaida recruiter wanted in Yemen on terrorist charges; and helped set up a Web site for a radical Muslim in England.
James Ujaama called accusations against him "bogus" but declined to discuss any of the accusations in detail.
Mustafa Ujaama said there was nothing unusual in his brother's activities, including his move to London after failing to sell a screenplay in Los Angeles.
"I told him, 'Man, America is not the place. I know some people (in London) who can help,'" Mustafa Ujaama said.
James Ujaama converted to Islam in England; Mustafa had converted to Islam six years earlier, drawn by its concept that there is "no middleman" between a man and his god. He said their chosen name means "cooperative economics" in Swahili.
James Ujaama is now in the United States, but he has said he wants to clear his name and to return to London to be with his 2-year-old daughter.
"She's my life -- my little girl," he said in a telephone interview.
James Ujaama was arrested in December 1999 by Renton police after he was accused of shoplifting a $170 VCR from a Wal-Mart store. Court records show he failed to appear for a hearing, and a warrant for his arrest is outstanding. At the time, he was reportedly working as a cabdriver during a visit to Seattle.
Neither Mustafa Ujaama nor his mother said they would speak for James' political views or try to explain the details of his life, other than to say that he would never call for violence.
James Ujaama may have attended al-Masri's Findlay Park Mosque in North London, but so do thousands of Muslims who cannot, under Islamic law, be turned away, his brother said. Al-Masri, meanwhile, has said that he knows no one in Seattle.
Yesterday, Mustafa Ujaama said he is a U.S. Army veteran who considers America to be "a beautiful place." Yet in recent weeks, he said, he and his family have been "vilified."
"Guilt by association -- that's what's going on," he said.
He said that he has been followed by FBI agents and recently was stopped without cause by Seattle police while driving with his son. The Seattle officer told him, "I'm just trying to figure out what the FBI wants with you," but then let him go without a ticket, saying "OK, Mr. Ujaama, have a nice day."
On another occasion, Mustafa Ujaama said he walked up to a van parked near his home and saw a man inside, operating high-tech equipment that he took to be surveillance gear.
He said some people in his community have been shying away from him since his former mosque was identified in media reports last week.
He said the newspapers and television shows might just as well have listed his name, too.
"There's no such thing as that mosque without Mustafa," he said.
He said he insisted that the mosque remain open around the clock -- an unusual and controversial move -- so people would always have a place to pray, a hot meal and a warm place to sleep. Though he lived miles away in Southeast Seattle, Mustafa Ujaama opened the storefront mosque on a tough block in the Central District because he felt it was needed there most.
On Monday, a longtime family friend, Charlie James, called a news conference, saying the brothers would make a statement in their own defense.
His announcement was the first instance where the brothers were specifically named and publicly linked to the investigation of activities at the mosque.
The event was later canceled, and Mustafa Ujaama said the family friend acted in good faith but without clearing the move.
Yesterday, Peggy Thompson, sitting in a Capitol Hill living room surrounded by more than 100 framed pictures of her family, said news reports about her sons have shaken her family.
The news has been especially hard on her own mother, who is in her 80s and in fragile health.
"All it is, is gossip that destroys people," she said. "Our country attacks first and tries to make up for it later, since Sept. 11.
"I hope the FBI stops playing games, but I'm sure quite a few more people are going to be hurt before this is over."
P-I reporter Chris McGann can be reached at 206-448-8169 or chrismcgann@seattlepi.com
Uh-oh.
Concur. See following:
Seattleite accused of ties to terror in custody
James Ujaama surrendered in Denver, family says
Tuesday, July 23, 2002
Federal agents in Denver yesterday took into custody a Seattle Muslim reportedly under investigation by the FBI for suspected ties to the al-Qaida terrorist network, his family members said.
James Ujaama, a Seattle author and activist well-known in the city's black community, surrendered to police and federal agents who had surrounded his aunt's red-brick home, relatives said.
FBI Special Agent Ray Lauer of the Seattle field office would neither confirm nor deny that the 36-year-old Ujaama had been taken into custody or arrested. An FBI official in Denver declined to comment, saying an announcement would be made this morning.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Floyd Short and Andy Hamilton, who handle terrorism prosecutions in Seattle, also declined to comment late yesterday. Because James Ujaama is from Seattle, his case would likely take place in U.S. District Court here after his transfer from Denver.
A neighbor of Ujaama's aunt, Richard Mertineit, said yesterday afternoon that police had the residential street blocked off.
"There were officers meandering around the street, and they had their guns pulled and aimed at the house," Mertineit said.
In Seattle, Ujaama's mother, Peggi Thompson, contacted the Seattle Post-Intelligencer yesterday to say that her son had been picked up. She got a phone call from another son, Mustafa, who also was in Denver and had been briefly detained.
"Everyone is in shock," Thompson said last night. "We don't know what we need to do now."
Thompson said she spoke with an FBI official who said her son had been picked up as a material witness after a federal warrant was issued by the Eastern District of Virginia. She said she was told he would go before a judge today.
Mustafa Ujaama said: "This had to happen. It's just part of the process. My brother had to get arrested. He's a martyr. A hero. The fall guy."
Family members said James Ujaama was taken to a detention center in the Denver area, a city where the brothers had spent their early years; Mustafa said he had moved into his aunt's house three months ago, but had been spending time in Seattle to take care of family matters.
Mustafa Ujaama had just arrived yesterday in Denver after driving from Seattle. About the time officers were surrounding the house where his brother was, Mustafa said he was in the parking lot of a strip mall.
"We went to get milk," Mustafa Ujaama said in a telephone interview. "Next thing we knew there were cops everywhere. They had their guns drawn and flashlights and everything. It was scary, just like the movies. They said they were going to keep us until my brother was arrested."
When Mustafa asked if he, his wife, Chakira, or a friend -- all of whom were in the same car -- were under arrest, he was told "No."
Back at the house, which is owned by James' aunt, James walked out without incident, his family said. Relatives said he didn't want any harm to come to four children -- the youngest 1 and 4 years old -- who were in the house at the time.
For a week, James Ujaama and Mustafa Ujaama have been linked in the media to a federal investigation of terrorism centered on a Seattle mosque.
Until yesterday, federal agents had made only one arrest and that man has yet to face any terrorism charges. Both Ujaama brothers have denied any links to terrorism.
"My brother and I are not terrorists," James Ujaama said in a seven-page statement released to the P-I on Friday. "and we should not have been charged in the media and harassed."
Mustafa Ujaama said in an interview with the P-I last week: "I'd never heard of al-Qaida until 9/11."
But media reports say a federal investigation has focused on the brothers and the now-defunct Dar-us-Salaam Mosque. Mustafa helped to found the mosque.
Among those who attended the mosque was Semi Osman, who is in federal custody. Osman is accused of filing false immigration papers and owning a gun whose serial number had been rubbed off, but doesn't face any terrorism charges.
The Los Angeles Times has reported that a confidential government report said Osman, a British citizen who says he is from Sierra Leone, was found to have instructions on poisoning water sources, papers by Abu Hamza al-Masri of London, a fundamentalist sheik, and "various other items associated with Islamic radicalism."
Al-Masri is thought to be an al-Qaida recruiter and is wanted in Yemen on terrorist charges.
Federal authorities also say they believe Osman and several Seattle Muslim radicals wanted to set up a terrorist-training camp on a ranch near Bly, Ore.
Mustafa Ujaama has acknowledged that he and others from the Seattle mosque visited the ranch. But heeding the advice of an attorney, he would not offer details.
Published reports attributed to unnamed federal agents have said James Ujaama delivered laptop computers to the Taliban before Sept. 11, associated with al-Masri and helped set up a Web site for him in England.
James and Mustafa Ujaama were born James Ernest and Jon Thompson. Their mother worked for a social service agency and got them involved in community activism.
Mustafa Ujaama, a mechanic and car salesman, converted to Islam several years ago, saying he was drawn to the religion's concept that "no middleman" stands between God and the faithful. His brother converted to Islam after moving to London six years ago.
Peggi Thompson said she was relieved that her son Mustafa was not taken into custody but is worried about James.
"This is all so unreal to me," she said. "It scares the hell out of me."
P-I reporter Scott Sunde contributed to this report
I was surprised a few years ago when I rented an apartment to an Australian that just got out of the U.S. Navy. Before then, I didn't realize the armed forces accepted non citizens.
Noted. Sounds like he ticked off the raghead supporters once too often.
-archy-/-
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