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Muslim arrested in Beltway case (John Muhammad)
WorldNetDaily ^ | October 24, 2002 | Art Moore

Posted on 10/24/2002 5:21:19 AM PDT by Michael2001

TACOMA, Wash. – Two men wanted for questioning in the D.C.-area sniper case were arrested early this morning at a rest stop near I-70 in the vicinity of Myersville, Md., about 45 miles northwest of the nation's capital, according to news reports.

John Allen Muhammad, 41, and stepson Lee Malvo, 17, were transported to Montgomery County, where the sniper task force is headquartered.

A rifle was found in Muhammad's car, reported WUSA-TV in Washington, D.C.

Neighbors who several years ago lived near Muhammad in Tacoma, Wash., described him last night as the head of a devout Muslim family who was prone to domestic violence, according to Seattle's KOMO-TV.

Federal sources said Muhammad and Malvo were known to speak sympathetically about the men who attacked the United States on Sept. 11, but the officials believe neither man to be associated with the al-Qaida terrorist network, the Seattle Times reported.

In connection with the sniper case, however, the FBI reportedly is searching "Camp Ground Zero USA" in Marion, Ala., a militant Islamic training camp with possible links to al-Qaida. Last night Fox News reported that FBI sources said "they are not at liberty to comment" and cannot confirm or deny their agents are investigating the camp.

WorldNetDaily reported two days after the D.C.-area shootings began Oct. 2 that FBI profilers believed the case fit no regular category and could find no motive other than terrorism. The shootings, which have caused an economic slowdown in the area, started four days after al-Qaida warned the U.S. that it would strike economic targets, WND reported last Thursday. A former CIA operative told WND in a story published Saturday, that the nature of the killings and Pentagon involvement in the probe support the terrorism theory.

In March 1999, Muhammad abducted his children and took them to the Caribbean after separating from his wife earlier that year, KOMO said. The children, a 12-year-old son and two younger daughters, now reportedly are in protective custody in Maryland.

As the focus of the Maryland-based sniper probe moved to the Pacific Northwest yesterday, task force head Charles Moose announced that Muhammad, also known as John Allen Williams, was being sought for information related to the case.

Moose told reporters last night that it should not be assumed that Muhammad "is involved in any of the shootings we are investigating," but is wanted for federal firearms violations and may have information material to the sniper probe.

Muhammad, described as about 6 feet 1 and 180 pounds, was believed to be traveling with a juvenile and considered "armed and dangerous," Moose said.

The Montgomery County, Md., police chief also gave a message to the sniper.

Moose said "our inability to talk has been a concern for us as well as for you," noting several attempts to establish a connection.

"You have indicated that you wanted us to do and say certain things," Moose said in his message to the sniper. "You asked us to say, 'We have caught the sniper like a duck in a noose.' We understand that hearing us say this is important to you."

The solution, Moose said, "remains to call us and get a private toll free number established," or write to a post office box address.

The police chief's references apparently were related to a note found at the site of Saturday's shooting near Richmond, Va., and another at Tuesday's Montgomery County attack both of which included a demand for $10 million.

Seattle's KOMO radio reports that Muhammad is a veteran of the Persian Gulf War.

A former soldier who says he recognized Muhammad in a photo on TV news last night said he served with Muhammad in the Army.

Randy Lyons, of Bothell, Wash., told KING-TV that he knew Muhammad as an "outstanding soldier" who had a "very pretty wife and kids."

Authorities said they also were searching for Muhammad's stepson, John Lee Malvo, a citizen of Jamaica, according to CNN and Fox News.

Fox said the two men are linked to a blue or burgundy 1990 Chevy Caprice with New Jersey license NDA-21Z, which matched the car in which they were found asleep.

Fox News also reported that warrants related to the D.C. case issued yesterday in Montgomery, Ala.

A telephone call from the sniper alerted investigators to look into a Sept. 21 fatal shooting at a liquor store in Montgomery, according to the Seattle Times.

An official said a piece of paper found at the Alabama shooting scene was traced to Malvo, who then was linked to a Tacoma house where he had been living with Muhammad.

Muhammad was based at nearby Fort Lewis, Wash., in 1994-95 and lived in a Tacoma neighborhood where a backyard search for ballistic material was conducted yesterday, according to Peggy Bellows, an editor for the Tacoma News Tribune.

FBI agents also conducted a search yesterday in Bellingham, Wash., related to two persons of interest in the D.C. sniper case, at least one of whom is "not a U.S. national," according to the mayor of the city in northwestern Washington state.

Agents in Tacoma recovered two shell casings along with a tree stump with bullet holes in the backyard of a fourplex, said KOMO-TV in Seattle.

The material was to be transported by air to Washington, D.C., according to news reports.

Bellingham mayor Mark Asmundson told Seattle's KING-TV that his police department began cooperating yesterday morning with FBI agents interested in two men who were residents of the city, near the Canadian border, in the past year and a half.

One was a student at Bellingham High School and the other was an older man, according to Asmundson.

A KOMO-TV report later confirmed that the student was Malvo.

The two were most recently in Bellingham nine months ago, Asmundson said.

"Being near the border, we've had our share of unusual characters in Bellingham," Asmundson said.

In Tacoma, sources confirmed that the search there was related to the D.C. sniper case, according to KIRO-TV.

Fort Lewis spokesman Lt. Col. Joseph Piek said the FBI had asked for help from the base, KOMO-TV reported.

The backyard search was conducted by consent of the property owner, said FBI spokesperson Melissa Mallon on the scene late yesterday afternoon. Local television news reports said the owner is not a person of interest.

"There is no immediate danger for anybody in this neighborhood," Mallon said. "If there were, we would let people know."

Tacoma mayor Bill Baarsma said in an interview with KING-TV in Seattle that he was called out of a meeting at about 12:30 p.m. yesterday to be met by the FBI.

"It was a day of irony for me, because I was called out of a meeting about how to cope with a terrorist attack," he said.


TOPICS: Breaking News; News/Current Events; US: District of Columbia; US: Maryland; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: alfuqra; alqaeda; blackmuslims; blackpanthers; jamaatalfuqra; newblackpanthers
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To: js1138
The Christians that persecuted the druids were not radicals. We kept some customs, but their culture did not last very long after the Christians moved in. As you must know by reading the threads, I was not discussing American culture. Please lecture someone else.
261 posted on 10/24/2002 1:28:08 PM PDT by stuartcr
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To: Semaphore Heathcliffe
Jerry Falwell was the first to say "Muhammad was a terrorist". I call him the first Jihadist.
262 posted on 10/24/2002 1:30:11 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: Crowcreek
"Nope -- totally objective comment. You're the bigot."

You're incorrect. Your comment is NOT objective at all.

Any extreme in any race, religion, etc. is bigotted. Their belief is that anything that doesn't agree with their way is wrong. That's bigotted. You're just ticked off because you're one of those.
263 posted on 10/24/2002 1:37:25 PM PDT by hawkeyeBetsy
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To: Kevin Curry
Good catch.
264 posted on 10/24/2002 1:44:33 PM PDT by Roscoe
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To: stuartcr
Sorry, I disagree. I believe that the Koran is open to interpretation

Some parts may be, but not Jihad. It is too fundamental of a concept. Have you read the entire Quran? In context, there really isn't any legitimate way to "reinterpret" the Jihad concept the way many on fringes of Islam have tried.

There are at least 6 different Islamic sects that I can think of. All religion is interpretive, just by definition.

Islam is more than just a religion. It is also a meta-government which ultimately requires control of the mechanisms of state, in the same way that leninist communism does. Of course, there are variations of Islam, and not all muslims agree upon every single theological point. However, there are certain fundamental beliefs that are at the core of Islam, and one of them is Jihad and the strive for a world under the domination of Islamic law. If you don't believe in this, then you're not really a Muslim.
265 posted on 10/24/2002 2:36:20 PM PDT by Technogeeb
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To: Triple
How did you miss that part? - it was the only other line in my post.

I didn't miss it,I ignored it because it is incidental. John Wayne Gacey was Catholic,does this mean the IRA was responsible for his crimes?

Again, these tangos have all the ingredients for terrorist - even under your restricted definition.

What is a "tango"? I'm so unhip I thought it was a dance.

266 posted on 10/24/2002 2:46:16 PM PDT by sneakypete
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To: FreeReign
How can you dismiss the possibility that the motives were both greed and terror?

I can't because I don't know. Neither do you,yet.

267 posted on 10/24/2002 2:49:48 PM PDT by sneakypete
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To: Dave S
So are you saying that all the law enforcement officers that train there and use the range or all the good ole white boys with their AR-15's and 50 calibers are Al Qaeda members also because they paid their dollars and fired a few rounds or took a day course there?

No I'm not saying that. I don't even see why you drew that conclusion.

Evidently the Marion camp has been used by Al Qaeda in the past according to Scotland Yard. If this is true, these guys need to be investigated and laws past that will not allow private companies to train foreign nationals, like the AlQaeda.

Someone who sympathizes with AlQueda wouldn't have any trouble meeting other Al Queda group members. That's all I was saying.

As far as I'm concerned an Al Qaeda wannabe is the same as an AlQaeda member. They both want the same thing, a Jihad in America.

268 posted on 10/24/2002 2:53:42 PM PDT by FR_addict
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To: VRWC_minion
Well, you need to know that he was actually in the Home Depot at the time, so he's not an inconvenient witness who is being hushed up, if that's what you're wondering.
269 posted on 10/24/2002 2:58:05 PM PDT by jiggyboy
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To: moron
I'll give it a go: Joshua 10 19 And stay ye not, but pursue after your enemies, and smite the hindmost of them; suffer them not to enter into their cities: for the LORD your God hath delivered them into your hand.

An honest quote would include Joshua 10 verses 1-9, which reveals that these enemies had attacked the city of Gibeon and failed. Why did they attack Gibeon?:

4 Come up unto me, and help me, that we may smite Gibeon: for it hath made peace with Joshua and with the children of Israel.

Peace!? Unthinkable! We all know which religion practices that philisophy.

If this is your best shot, I'd say that that proves the rule -- Christianity is not about striking first, or striking the weak, or the innocent.

270 posted on 10/24/2002 3:22:07 PM PDT by jiggyboy
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To: EggsAckley
By the way, can you translate this----> (IIRC!) I keep seeing it but haven't a clue what it says. Thanks.

"IIRC"="If I remember correctly".

271 posted on 10/24/2002 4:03:30 PM PDT by sneakypete
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To: sneakypete
Thank you. It's so obvious, I can't believe I didn't think of it. Have to use it now and then, IIRC.
:o)
272 posted on 10/24/2002 4:06:33 PM PDT by EggsAckley
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To: hawkeyeBetsy
' You're just ticked off because you're one of those.'

And you're spewing sewage because you haven't the brains of an ant.

273 posted on 10/24/2002 8:52:10 PM PDT by Crowcreek
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To: Technogeeb
Well, I'm not a Muslim, but I still believe that a person can be a Muslim and not believe all that is written. I'm not a Christian, but I still believe that a person can be a Christian, and not believe all that is written, or probably a Jewish person, or a Hindu, etc. It's all interpretation.
274 posted on 10/25/2002 6:24:33 AM PDT by stuartcr
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To: sneakypete
Based on your posts to military/special forces threads, I thought you would know: tango=target/bad guy

My bad.

BTW - Why the reluctance to call the guy who terrorized 2-3 million people a terrorist? (even if he was acting alone based on both greed and his sympathy for islamic jihadists)

Later Babe,

275 posted on 10/25/2002 6:43:54 AM PDT by Triple
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To: Triple
BTW - Why the reluctance to call the guy who terrorized 2-3 million people a terrorist? (even if he was acting alone based on both greed and his sympathy for islamic jihadists)

Because it's giving them more credit than they deserve. Terrorists always have some political goal that they value more than their own lives. You and I may or may not agree with their goals,but none the less they believe in something beyone their own selfish needs and greed. These two are simply cowardly murderers whose only real apparant belief seemed to be to shoot unsuspecting innocent people from hiding for profit and "kicks". They are nothing more than common murdering criminal scum.

276 posted on 10/25/2002 8:37:17 AM PDT by sneakypete
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To: stuartcr
Well, I'm not a Muslim, but I still believe that a person can be a Muslim and not believe all that is written

Muslims don't, and that is what is relevant. If you were a muslim and made that statement, you would be subject to a death sentence. Denying any part of the Quran ("all that is written") is heresy.

I'm not a Christian, but I still believe that a person can be a Christian, and not believe all that is written,

Believing "all that is written" is not a requirement of all sects of Christianity. It is for Islam. Nevertheless, if he doesn't believe in the fundamental dogma of Christianity, a person isn't really a Christian regardless of what he calls himself. "Christian" (or "muslim") is more than just an arbitrary label.

or probably a Jewish person, or a Hindu, etc. It's all interpretation.

If you were to say the words above ("It's all interpretation") in the context of a mutable Quran, in a Muslim country under Sharia law, the punishment would be your death. One of the biggest advantages Islam has is that of people like you, who (quite reasonably) assume Islam is just another belief system. But it isn't.

And, as you say, if you are not a Muslim and are not a Christian, then death awaits you if the Muslims ever take over. Christians are given the opportunity to pay an oppressive tax (Jiziya) and survive as long as they follow certain rules (like don't build churches or mention their religion, act subservient to any nearby Muslim, etc). You, on the other hand, would be a "kafir", and subject to immediate execution unless you convert to Islam. And under Islam, the only part of this that is "subject to interpretation" is the amount of the tax you'll pay if you are Christian, or the method of death if you are a kafir.
277 posted on 10/25/2002 8:57:36 AM PDT by Technogeeb
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To: Technogeeb
I'm sorry, but there are any number of internet sites, and books that say differently. I don't think you're completely accurate in what you are saying about the Islamic religion. Once again, I emphasize the fact that different religions, and the understanding of different religions, is based on interpretation. Your interpretation of the Islamic religion, is not the same as many others.
278 posted on 10/25/2002 9:33:18 AM PDT by stuartcr
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To: stuartcr
I'm sorry, but there are any number of internet sites, and books that say differently

Yes there are. They are all wrong. Some are written by western apologists with no real understanding of Islam, such as yourself. Others are examples of Al-Taqiyah written by Muslims themselves. I am confident that you have never read the Quran, since it is clear that you have no understanding of Islam. As an example, the statements that you have made to "defend" Islam (i.e., that the Quran is open to interpretation and the words don't really mean what they say) would get you killed in any area of the globe under Sharia law.

I don't think you're completely accurate in what you are saying about the Islamic religion

I know (that you don't think this). And that is the problem. Westerners believe that Islam is just another religion, a facade that Islamists support until their numbers in an area are strong enough to change the local political system. Even when a movement like Islam insists that their intent is to destroy you and when they make clear statements to that effect, you still won't believe them, and think that some "compromise" can be reached that will allow both sides to live in peace. History is full of the graves of people who thought the same way.

Once again, I emphasize the fact that different religions, and the understanding of different religions, is based on interpretation

And once again, I emphasize that Islam doesn't worth that way. Islam is more than just a "different religion", it is also a political movement, and one that demands that it be the sole political (Sharia law) authority as well as the sole religious authority. You might as well try to categorize Ebola or Smallpox as a religion; doing so will make you no more immune to their ultimate effects.

Your interpretation of the Islamic religion, is not the same as many others

Mine isn't an "interpretation", it is merely statement of theological dogma common to all forms of Islam. And it IS THE SAME as that of the Muslims themselves. There is no way to "reinterpret" the relevant statements as metaphor in the context in which they are written. Trying to "interpret" such statements as "slay the idolaters wherever you find them" in a peaceful context is about as useful as trying to reinterpret the Nazi party's antisemitism as being a statement about immigration policy.
279 posted on 10/25/2002 1:23:09 PM PDT by Technogeeb
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To: Technogeeb
It's refreshing to find someone with such confidence. I thank you for reminding me of one of the reasons I enjoy freerepublic so much. I'm going to spend the weekend forgetting everything I've ever read or learned about Islam. I may even denounce my Muslim friends just for being wrong.
280 posted on 10/25/2002 2:49:50 PM PDT by stuartcr
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