Plenty of Somali drug lords here in Minneapolis.  They shot a kid in broad 
daylight a about four years ago.  Right in the head.  He was standing on the 
corner between his mom and his sister.  College kid.  Turned out to be a 
prominent member of Scholars for 911 Truth.  Just a coincidence I'm sure.  Do 
you think you could do a drive by like that and get away?  Not even a 
surveillence cam on the news?  Like I said, just a coincidence.
What's your take, Mary Hartmann?


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: muckblit 
  To: cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Saturday, August 07, 2010 1:13 AM
  Subject: [cia-drugs] Somalia al-CIA-duh Rochester MN Saudi




  
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/08/05/AR2010080504650_pf.html

  14 charged for supporting Somalia terrorist group

  By PETE YOST and AMY FORLITI
  The Associated Press
  Thursday, August 5, 2010; 8:13 PM 



  WASHINGTON -- The government announced Thursday that it has charged 14 people 
as participants in "a deadly pipeline" to Somalia that routed money and 
fighters from the United States to the terrorist group al-Shabab. 

  The indictments unsealed in Minneapolis, San Diego and Mobile, Ala., reflect 
"a disturbing trend" of recruitment efforts targeting U.S. residents to become 
terrorists, Attorney General Eric Holder told a news conference. In one case, 
two women pleaded for money "to support violent jihad in Somalia," according to 
an indictment. 

  The attorney general credited Muslim community leaders in the United States 
for regularly denouncing terrorists and for providing critical assistance to 
law enforcement to help disrupt terrorist plots and combat radicalization. "We 
must ... work to prevent this type of radicalization from ever taking hold," 
Holder said. 

  Of the 14 people charged at least half are U.S. citizens and 12 of them are 
out of the country, including 10 men from Minnesota who allegedly left to join 
al-Shabab. Seven of those 10 Minnesota men named in one of Thursday's 
indictments had been charged previously in the probe. 

  Al-Shabab is a Somali insurgent faction embracing a radical form of Islam 
similar to the harsh, conservative brand practiced by Afghanistan's former 
Taliban regime. Its fighters, numbering several thousand strong, are battling 
Somalia's weakened government and have been branded a terrorist group with ties 
to al-Qaida by the U.S. and other Western countries. 

  Terrorist organizations such as al-Shabab continue to radicalize and recruit 
U.S. citizens and others to train and fight with them, said Sean Joyce, the 
FBI's executive assistant director for the national security branch. 

  One of two indictments issued in Minnesota alleges that two Somali women who 
were among those charged, and others, went door to door in Minneapolis; 
Rochester, Minn., and elsewhere in the U.S. and Canada to raise funds for 
al-Shabab's operations in Somalia. The indictment says the women - the only two 
people indicted Thursday who remain in the United States - raised the money 
under false pretenses, claiming it would go to the poor and needy, and used 
phony names for recipients to conceal that the money was going to al-Shabab. 

  Omar Hammami, who is now known as Abu Mansour al-Amriki, or "the American," 
was charged in Mobile, Ala. He has become one of al-Shabab's most high-profile 
members. He appeared in a jihadist video in May 2009. 

  At the news conference, Holder said Hammami has appeared in several 
propaganda videos for al-Shabab and "has assumed an operational role in that 
organization." 

  Hammami grew up in the middle-class town of Daphne, Ala., and attended the 
University of South Alabama in Mobile, where he was president of the Muslim 
Student Association nine years ago. Hammami, 26, enrolled at the university in 
2001 but left in 2002; school officials said they have been unaware of his 
whereabouts since then. 

  Hammami's father, Shafik, is an engineer with the state highway department 
who also has served as president of the Islamic Society of Mobile. Shafik 
Hammami confirmed his relationship to Omar Hammami in e-mail exchanges with The 
Associated Press earlier this year but declined further comment. 

  In San Diego, prosecutors unsealed an indictment charging Jehad Serwan 
Mostafa, 28, with conspiring to provide material support to al-Shabab. Mostafa 
is believed to be in Somalia. 

  One of the Minnesota indictments alleges that the two women, Amina Farah Ali, 
33, and Hawo Mohamed Hassan, 63, raised money by making direct appeals to 
people in teleconferences "in which they and other speakers encouraged 
financial contributions to support violent jihad in Somalia." 

  During one teleconference, the indictment says, Ali told others "to forget 
about the other charities" and focus on "the jihad." 

  The indictment says Ali and others sent the funds to al-Shabab through 
various hawalas, money transfer businesses that are a common source of 
financial transactions in the Islamic world. Ali is accused of sending $8,608 
to al-Shabab on 12 occasions between Sept. 17, 2008, through July 5, 2009. 

  The fundraising operation in Minnesota reached into Ohio, where a Columbus 
resident helped collect donations for al-Shabab, according to one of the 
indictments unsealed in Minneapolis. 

  During appearances by Ali and Hassan before a federal judge Thursday in St. 
Paul, Minn., prosecutors didn't seek detention for either woman. A judge set 
several conditions for their release, including barring travel outside 
Minnesota without permission. 

  Ali's attorney said she denied the allegations. Asked whether she understood 
why she was in court, Ali said: "I do not know - however, I think maybe because 
of my faith." 

  At one point, speaking through a translator, Ali said: "Allah is my 
attorney." 

  She said she worked in home health care and had lived in Rochester for 11 
years. Hassan said she was self-employed, running a day care. 

  After the FBI searched Ali's home in 2009, she allegedly contacted an 
al-Shabab leader in southern Somalia and said: "I was questioned by the enemy 
here. ... They took all my stuff and are investigating it ... Do not accept 
calls from anyone." 

  After being released, Ali and Hassan both said they are innocent. "We are not 
terrorists," Ali said. 

  Abdifatah Abdinur, a Somali community leader in Rochester, Minn., said Ali 
was known in the community as the go-to person if local Somalis had clothes or 
other goods to donate. 

  "If you have clothes, you give them to her," said Abdinur. "If you have 
shoes, give them to her." Abdinur said Ali was also a religious speaker who 
preached to women in the area. "I was surprised, as almost everybody was (to 
learn) that she was sending clothes to al-Shabab," Abdinur said. 

  Roughly 20 men from the U.S. - all but one of Somali descent - left Minnesota 
from December 2007 through October 2009 to join al-Shabab, officials have said. 

  On Thursday, a newly released State Department annual report on worldwide 
terrorism noted with concern that al-Qaida, particularly in Pakistan, Yemen and 
Somalia, appeared to be attracting growing numbers of radicalized Americans to 
its cause. 

  --- 

  Forliti reported from Minneapolis and St. Paul. Contributing to this report 
were Associated Press writers Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Ala.; Jason Straziuso 
in Nairobi, Kenya; Lolita C. Baldor in Washington; and Andrew Welsh-Huggins in 
Columbus, Ohio. 


  
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/08/06/AR2010080600490_pf.html

  2 Minn. women among 14 charged in terror probe


  By AMY FORLITI and PETE YOST
  The Associated Press
  Friday, August 6, 2010; 9:08 AM 



  ST. PAUL, Minn. -- Amina Farah Ali had become the go-to person for Somalis in 
the southern Minnesota city of Rochester wanting to donate items to refugees 
displaced by violence in their homeland. 

  But she and another woman, Hawo Mohamed Hassan, were actually using the 
pretense of charity to send money to a violent terrorist group in the African 
country, prosecutors allege. They also claim the women made direct pleas in 
teleconference calls for others "to support violent jihad in Somalia." 

  The two women, both U.S. citizens living in Rochester, are among 14 people 
named in indictments unsealed Thursday in Minneapolis, San Diego, and Mobile, 
Ala. - accused of being part of what the government called "a deadly pipeline" 
that routed money and fighters from the U.S. to al-Shabab. The Somali insurgent 
faction embraces a radical form of Islam similar to the harsh, conservative 
brand practiced by Afghanistan's former Taliban regime. 

  Both women said they are innocent. "We are not terrorists," Ali said after 
she and Hassan made their first appearances Thursday in U.S. District Court in 
St. Paul. 

  The indicted also include Omar Hammami, an Alabama man now known as Abu 
Mansour al-Amriki, or "the American" - who has become one of al-Shabab's most 
high-profile members and appeared in a jihadist video in May 2009. The group's 
fighters, numbering several thousand strong, are battling Somalia's weakened 
government and have been branded a terrorist group with ties to al-Qaida by the 
U.S. and other Western countries. 

  Attorney General Eric Holder said the indictments reflect a disturbing trend 
of recruitment efforts targeting U.S. residents to become terrorists. He 
credited Muslim community leaders in the United States for helping combat 
radicalization. 

  Of the 14 people named in indictments Thursday, at least half are U.S. 
citizens and 12 of them are out of the country, including 10 men from Minnesota 
who allegedly left to join al-Shabab. Seven of those 10 Minnesota men named had 
been charged in earlier indictments or criminal complaints. 

  Ali, 33, and Hassan, 63, are the only two people indicted Thursday who remain 
in the U.S. They are both charged with conspiracy to provide material support 
to a foreign terrorist organization. Ali faces multiple counts of providing 
material support to a foreign terrorist organization, and Hassan faces three 
counts of lying to the FBI. 

  Abdifatah Abdinur, a Somali community leader in Rochester, said many knew Ali 
as a religious speaker who preached to women, and as a person who would collect 
clothes for refugees, telling many people to drop off donations at her garage. 

  "I know a lot of people might send money or goods, without knowing the 
consequences of what they were doing," Abdinur said. 

  "If you have clothes, you give them to her. If you have shoes, give them to 
her," Abdinur said. "I was surprised, as almost everybody was (to learn) that 
she was sending clothes to al-Shabab." 

  The women and others allegedly went door to door in Minneapolis; Rochester 
and elsewhere in the U.S. and Canada to raise funds for al-Shabab's operations 
in Somalia. The indictment says they claimed the money would go to the poor and 
needy and used phony names for recipients to conceal that it was going to 
al-Shabab. 

  They also allegedly made direct appeals to people in teleconferences. During 
one teleconference, the indictment says, Ali told others "to forget about the 
other charities" and focus on "the jihad." 

  The indictment says Ali and others sent the funds through various hawalas, 
money transfer businesses that are a common source of financial transactions in 
the Islamic world. Ali is accused of sending $8,608 to al-Shabab on 12 
occasions from September 2008 through July 2009. 

  The fundraising operation in Minnesota reached into Ohio, where a Columbus 
resident helped collect donations for al-Shabab, according to the indictment. 
The document also says that after the FBI searched Ali's home in 2009, she 
contacted an al-Shabab leader in southern Somalia and said: "I was questioned 
by the enemy here. ... They took all my stuff and are investigating it ... Do 
not accept calls from anyone." 

  Prosecutors didn't seek detention for Ali or Hassan, but a federal magistrate 
set several conditions for their release, including barring travel outside 
Minnesota without permission. 

  When asked whether she understood why she was in court, Ali said through an 
interpreter: "I do not know - however, I think maybe because of my faith." 

  Ali, who works in home health care and has lived in Rochester for 11 years, 
also said: "Allah is my attorney." 

  Hassan said she was self-employed, running a day care. 

  Minneapolis has been the hub of the federal investigation into al-Shabab 
recruitment over the last two years. The investigation began about the time a 
U.S. citizen from Minneapolis carried out a suicide bombing in Somalia in 
October 2008. Roughly 20 young men - all but one of Somali descent - have left 
Minnesota for that country since late 2007. 

  In Mobile, Ala., on Thursday prosecutors unsealed a September 2009 indictment 
against Hammami. Holder said Hammami has appeared in several propaganda videos 
for al-Shabab and "has assumed an operational role in that organization." 

  Hammami, 26, grew up in the middle-class town of Daphne, Ala., and attended 
the University of South Alabama in Mobile, where he was president of the Muslim 
Student Association nine years ago. School officials said they have been 
unaware of his whereabouts since he left the university in 2002. 

  Hammami's father, Shafik, is an engineer with the state highway department 
who also has served as president of the Islamic Society of Mobile. Shafik 
Hammami confirmed his relationship to Omar Hammami in e-mail exchanges with The 
Associated Press earlier this year but declined further comment. 

  In San Diego, prosecutors unsealed an indictment charging Jehad Serwan 
Mostafa, 28, with conspiring to provide material support to al-Shabab. Mostafa 
is believed to be in Somalia. 

  --- 

  Yost reported from Washington. Contributing to this report were Associated 
Press writers Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Ala.; Jason Straziuso in Nairobi, 
Kenya; Lolita C. Baldor in Washington; and Andrew Welsh-Huggins in Columbus, 
Ohio. 

  (This version corrects that Rochester is in Minnesota.) 


  
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/08/05/AR2010080503683_pf.html

  U.S. charges 14 with giving support to Somali insurgent group


  By Greg Miller
  Washington Post Staff Writer
  Friday, August 6, 2010; A05 



  Federal authorities unsealed terrorism-related charges Thursday against 14 
people accused of providing funding and recruits to a militant group in Somalia 
with ties to al-Qaeda, part of an expanding U.S. effort to disrupt what 
Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. called a "deadly pipeline" of money and 
fighters to al-Shabab. 

  It is the first time that the Justice Department has publicly revealed 
criminal charges against two U.S. citizens, Omar Hammami and Jehad Mostafa, who 
have risen through al-Shabab's ranks to become important field commanders for 
the organization. 

  The indictments were unsealed in Alabama, California and Minnesota, the 
latter being home to the largest Somali population in the United States. 

  In Minnesota, officials said, FBI agents arrested two women on Thursday on 
charges that included soliciting donations door-to-door for al-Shabab, which 
the United States designated a terrorist organization in 2008. The other 12 
suspects were in Somalia or were otherwise at large. 

  The indictments "shed further light on a deadly pipeline that has routed 
funding and fighters to al-Shabab from cities across the United States," Holder 
said. "We are seeing an increasing number of individuals -- including U.S. 
citizens -- who have become captivated by extremist ideology and have taken 
steps to carry out terrorist objectives, either at home or abroad." 

  For years, al-Shabab was seen primarily as an insurgent group struggling to 
topple Somalia's weak government and to impose strict Islamic law. But the 
group's focus "has morphed over time," a senior FBI official said. Al-Shabab 
has attracted a growing number of foreign fighters to its camps and has 
demonstrated a new ability to export violence, and it has been praised by Osama 
bin Laden. 

  Last month, the group claimed responsibility for bombings in Uganda that 
killed at least 76 people. A State Department terrorism report released 
Thursday said al-Shabab and al-Qaeda "present a serious terrorist threat to 
American and allied interests throughout the Horn of Africa." 

  Holder said none of those charged is accused of plotting attacks against U.S. 
targets. Most are accused of sending money or signing up for a war aimed at 
ousting the U.S.-backed government in Mogadishu. Even so, al-Shabab's ties to 
al-Qaeda and its ability to tap support inside the United States have caused 
concern that the group could be used to carry out a domestic attack. 

  "What it reaffirms is that we do have a problem with domestic 
radicalization," said Frank J. Cilluffo, an official in the George W. Bush 
administration who heads the Homeland Security Policy Institute at George 
Washington University. 

  The indictments follow the arrest last month of Zachary Adam Chesser, 20, of 
Fairfax County, who was detained in New York while attempting to depart for 
Africa. Authorities said he planned to join al-Shabab. 

  As part of a multiyear FBI investigation, 19 people have been charged in 
Minnesota with supporting al-Shabab. Nine have been arrested, including five 
who have pleaded guilty; the others are not in custody. 

  But the most significant figures indicted are the two Americans who have 
emerged as battle-tested leaders of al-Shabab. 

  Hammami, 26, is a native of Alabama and a key player in al-Shabab's efforts 
to recruit supporters in the United States and other Western nations, officials 
said. Hammami, who goes by Abu Mansoor al-Amriki, or "the American," appeared 
in a rap-themed video this spring that attracted widespread attention online. 

  "He has assumed an operational role in that organization," Holder said. 

  Like Anwar al-Aulaqi, the Muslim cleric in Yemen tied to recent terrorist 
plots, Hammami is seen as a "bridge figure" who uses his familiarity with U.S. 
culture to appeal to Western audiences. But Aulaqi is known primarily for his 
radical online sermons, whereas Hammami has earned credibility as a fighter in 
Somalia's civil war, counterterrorism experts said. 

  "This guy actually has operational experience," Cilluffo said. "He is one of 
the top jihadi pop stars." 

  Mostafa, 28, is also an increasingly important figure, officials said. A U.S. 
citizen and former resident of San Diego, Mostafa served as a top lieutenant to 
Saleh Nabhan, a senior al-Qaeda and al-Shabab operative killed in a U.S. 
military strike last year. Since then, Mostafa "is believed to have ascended to 
the inner circle of al-Shabab leadership," a U.S. counterterrorism official 
said. 

  Mostafa is believed to have met Aulaqi about a decade ago in San Diego, the 
official said, although it is unclear whether they have remained in contact. 

  The only suspects taken into custody were Amina Farah Ali, 33, and Hawo 
Mohamed Hassan, 63, both naturalized U.S. citizens from Somalia who resided in 
Rochester, Minn. The two women are accused of working with counterparts in 
Somalia to hold conference calls with Somali natives in Minnesota, urging them 
to "forget about" other charities and focus on "the Jihad," according to 
charges filed in U.S. District Court in Minnesota. 

  The records indicate that the women collected more than $8,000 in donations 
since 2008. They routed the money to al-Shabab recipients in Somalia through 
"hawala" transfers widely used in Third World countries to move money and 
bypass traditional banks. Hassan is also accused of making false statements to 
the FBI; she had denied that she was involved in raising funds for al-Shabab. 

  Staff writer Spencer S. Hsu contributed to this report. 





  

Reply via email to