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Learn mandarin - Informant plays key role in JFK plot

WORLD / America

Informant plays key role in JFK plot

(AP)
Updated: 2007-06-04 08:31

NEW YORK - A convicted drug dealer who agreed to pose as a wannabe
terrorist among a shadowy group now accused of plotting to blow up John
F. Kennedy International Airport secretly fed information to federal
investigators in exchange for a lighter sentence.

Passengers are seen at Terminal 4 in JFK International Airport in New
York Sunday, June 3, 2007. [AP]

His surveillance trips to the airport with the suspects, travels abroad
to meet with supporters and assurances he wanted to die as a martyr in an
attack on an underground jet fuel pipeline gave counterterrorism agents
insight and evidence that experts say was otherwise unattainable.

And his help once again demonstrated the growing importance of informants
in the war on terrorism, particularly as smaller radical groups become
more aggressive.

"In most cases, you can't get from A to B without an informant," said Tom
Corrigan, a former member of the FBI-NYPD Joint Terrorist Task Force.
"Most times when an informant tells you what is going on, speculation
becomes reality."

According to court papers and investigators, the informant began working
for the government in 2004, after his second drug-trafficking conviction
in New York, and he quickly proved to be a credible source.

He was sent to meet with the JFK plot's alleged mastermind Russell
Defreitas in 2006 and was introduced by an unidentified third party.
Defreitas quickly accepted the informant as legitimate, saying he was
sure they knew each other through a Brooklyn mosque.

The informant was convincing. Defreitas, according to a federal
complaint, believed the informant "had been sent by Allah to be the one"
to pull off the bombing.

Four Muslim men are accused of plotting to use explosives to destroy a
jet fuel pipeline that runs through populous residential neighborhoods to
the airport, which they allegedly believed would kill thousands of people
and trigger an economic catastrophe.

In an indictment, one of them is quoted as saying the bombing would
"cause greater destruction than in the Sept. 11 attacks."

Although the plotters put a great deal of time and travel into their
plan, they never managed to obtain any explosives before authorities
arrested Defreitas and foiled the JFK scheme. Experts said the plot could
have resulted in damage and fires, but nothing on the scale that the
defendants had envisioned.

The men accused in the JFK plot didn't turn to Middle Eastern extremists
for support to target the airport. Instead, investigators say the
informant and defendants Kareem Ibrahim and Defreitas visited a compound
belonging to the Jamaat al Muslimeen, a radical Muslim group based in
Trinidad off Venezuela's coast.

When Defreitas discussed his radical "brothers" with the informant, he
made it clear they were not Arabs, but from Trinidad and Guyana.

The complaint also made clear how deeply the informant had infiltrated
the small band of would-be terrorists. While Defreitas, a retired JFK
airport cargo worker, made four reconnaissance missions to the airport
with the informant, federal authorities recorded each one on audio and
video.

Defreitas, 63, who immigrated to the US more than 30 years ago from
Guyana, was in custody Sunday pending a bail hearing, was arrested two
days earlier in Brooklyn.

Ibrahim and another suspect, Abdul Kadir, were in custody in Trinidad
awaiting extradition hearings. Officials identified Kadir as a former
mayor of a Guyanese town and a member of the country's Parliament.

Authorities in Trinidad were still seeking a fourth suspect, Abdel Nur.

Authorities said the JFK case and last month's arrest of six men
suspected of plotting to attack soldiers at Fort Dix, N.J., illustrated
the need for inside information.

"These have been two significant cases back-to-back where informants were
used," Corrigan said. "These terrorists are in our own backyard. They may
have to reach out to people they don't necessarily trust, but they need -
for guns, explosives, whatever."

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said they were examples of terrorism
growing in the US

"It's a movement. It's a philosophy. And they're motivated by the same
hatred that motivates al-Qaida," Kelly said Sunday on CBS's "Face The
Nation."

Last year, informants played a major role in two other terror cases. In
June 2006, an informant posing as an al-Qaida operative helped bring down
a plot to blow up the Sears Tower. Five of the seven men arrested in that
alleged terrorist group were US citizens.

In May 2006, an NYPD informant's testimony led to the conviction of a man
plotting to blow up the busy Herald Square subway station in midtown
Manhattan.

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