NYC terrorism suspect awaits arraignment
An Afghan immigrant accused of plotting to turn common chemicals into explosives that could have targeted New York City was due in federal court yesterday, a day after authorities confirmed that they know the identities of three believed to have been in on the scheme.
Najibullah Zazi is to be arraigned in a Brooklyn courtroom on charges he conspired to use weapons of mass destruction. The 24-year-old airport van driver and former coffee cart vendor has denied wrongdoing.
A letter filed by Brooklyn prosecutors last week argued that Zazi should be jailed indefinitely because, as an Afghan immigrant with ties to Pakistan, he could flee, and because he "poses a significant danger" to the community.
Evidence gathered--including bomb-making instructions found on his laptop computer--shows "Zazi remained committed to detonating an explosive device" until he was arrested, the letter said.
The law enforcement official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation continues, confirmed the bombing plot might have targeted mass transit in the New York area.
Authorities released a flurry of terrorism warnings for sports complexes, hotels and transit systems even while saying the plot was disrupted before it become an immediate threat.
The official who spoke to The Associated Press declined to comment further about the co-conspirators, and there have been no reports that the bomb-making materials have been recovered.
The accomplices are suspected of travelling from New York City to suburban Denver this summer and using stolen credit cards to help Zazi stockpile beauty products containing hydrogen peroxide and acetone, which can be key ingredients for homemade bombs, authorities have said.
Before the raids, police detectives showed a source--a Queens imam at a mosque where Zazi had once worshipped--photographs of him and three people considered possible suspects, court papers say. It was unclear whether those three were the same ones suspected of travelling to Denver.
Spokesmen James Margolin for the FBI, Edward Mullen for the New York Police Department and Robert Nardoza for the U.S. attorney's office in Brooklyn declined to discuss the case.
Prosecutors allege that Zazi has admitted that while living in Queens, he travelled last year to Pakistan and received explosives training from al-Qaeda. Security videos and store receipts show that when he returned and moved to Aurora, Colorado, he and three others bought several bottles of beauty products over the course of several weeks, court papers said.
On September 6, Zazi took some of his products into a Colorado hotel room outfitted with a stove on which he later left acetone residue, authorities said. He repeatedly sought another person's help cooking up the bomb, "each communication more urgent in tone than the last," the papers said.
The FBI was listening to Zazi and becoming increasingly concerned as the anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks and a New York visit by President Barack Obama approached, officials said. They decided to track him on September 9 when he rented a car and drove to New York.
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