Times Square Bomb: ARREST Made

TOM HAYS and LARRY NEUMEISTER   05/ 4/10 11:35 PM ET   AP

Times Square Bomb Arrest
An arrest has been made in the Times Square bomb attempt.

NEW YORK — Seized from a plane about to fly to the Middle East, a Pakistan-born man admitted training to make bombs at a terrorism camp in his native land before he rigged an SUV with a homemade device to explode in Times Square, authorities said Tuesday.

Faisal Shahzad, a naturalized U.S. citizen who recently spent five months in Pakistan, was arrested on terrorism and weapons of mass destruction charges for trying to blow up the crude gasoline-and-propane bomb amid tourists and theatergoers Saturday evening.

He was in custody after being hauled off a Dubai-bound plane at Kennedy Airport that he had been able to board Monday night despite being placed on the federal "no-fly" list. Authorities had planned to arrest Shahzad, who had been under constant watch from mid-afternoon, at his Connecticut home, but lost track of him, two people familiar with the probe told The Associated Press. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to talk publicly about the breach in surveillance.

Because Customs and Border Protection agents were on the lookout for Shahzad, they recognized his name on a passenger manifest and ordered the flight stopped so they could arrest him.

Authorities shed little light on what might have motivated Shahzad – who since moving from Pakistan to Connecticut had acquired a master's degree in business administration and a house in the suburbs that subsequently was lost to foreclosure. He reportedly came from a background of privilege and wealth – the son of a retired air vice marshal.

A real estate broker who worked with Shahzad in 2004 said the bombing suspect had expressed a dislike for former President George W. Bush and his policy in Iraq.

Attorney General Eric Holder said Shahzad has been providing valuable information to investigators as they sought to determine the scope of the plot. A court hearing for him was canceled Tuesday in part because of his continuing cooperation.

"Based on what we know so far, it is clear that this was a terrorist plot aimed at murdering Americans in one of the busiest places in our country," Holder said.

Holder and other U.S. officials did not elaborate on whether they believed any international terrorist group was involved, or whether Shahzad, after his training, was acting on his own.

The FBI read Shahzad his constitutional rights after he provided information, and he continued to cooperate, FBI Deputy Director John Pistole said.

Shahzad, 30, had been identified as the man who recently purchased the SUV in cash and was added to the no-fly list early Monday afternoon as a result of breaking developments in the investigation, according to a law enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation.

Counterterrorism officials send electronic notifications to airlines when watch lists are updated, but it is up to the airlines to check the web forum where the notifications are sent. If Emirates airlines had done this, the airline would have been able to flag Shahzad when he purchased his ticket that night. Because they didn't, law enforcement officials were not aware of his travel plans until they received the flight manifest 30 minutes before takeoff, the official said.

Customs and Border Protection officials, who were on the lookout for Shahzad since the early afternoon, recognized his name on the manifest and ordered the flight stopped so they could arrest him. The flight had not left the gate at that point, the official said.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano credited Customs officials with recognizing Shahzad's name on the manifest and stopping the flight. But she had little explanation for how he was able to board the plane with a last-minute ticket.

Passengers on the flight, which arrived in Dubai about seven hours late on Wednesday, said there was no panic, and the arrest was done quietly and calmly.

Robert Woodward, 41, of Boulder, Colo., was traveling to Dubai on business and gave high marks to security and the flight crew.

"They were very efficient. There was no commotion, no general alarm or concern," said Woodward, who didn't understand the incident was linked to the Times Square bombing attempt until he was told by an airport security guard.

First-class passenger Samir al-Ammari, a Saudi who was in the U.S. on a business trip, said he was concerned. "Honestly, I was worried," he said. "I was planning to cancel the flight and get another one."

According to the criminal complaint filed in federal court in Manhattan, Shahzad confessed to buying the SUV, rigging it with a homemade bomb and driving it into Times Square. The complaint says he admitted to receiving bomb-making training in Waziristan, Pakistan, a region where the Pakistani Taliban operates with near-impunity.

The Pakistani Taliban has claimed responsibility for the bomb plot, but U.S. officials say there's no evidence to back that up.

The complaint charged Shahzad with trying to detonate a weapon of mass destruction, attempted car bombing and obstructing interstate and foreign commerce by trying to kill and maim U.S. citizens.

The report of Shahzad's training raises the possibility the attack was a coordinated international effort, but authorities have not said whether they believe that to be the case.

In Pakistan, authorities said they had detained several people in connection with the bombing attempt, although the FBI said it had no confirmation that these arrests were relevant to the case. Reports also surfaced in Pakistan that Shahzad came from a wealthy family and was the son of a former high-ranking air force officer.

President Barack Obama said "hundreds of lives" may have been saved Saturday night by the quick action of ordinary citizens and law enforcement authorities who saw the smoking SUV – a 1993 Nissan Pathfinder – parked in Times Square.

"As Americans and as a nation, we will not be terrorized. We will not cower in fear. We will not be intimidated," Obama said.

Married with two children, Shahzad had obtained U.S. citizenship after emigrating from Pakistan.

In Bridgeport, Conn., authorities removed filled plastic bags and a bomb squad came and went from a house in a working-class neighborhood of multifamily homes. FBI agents found a box of consumer-grade firecrackers and other fireworks in the driveway that they were marking off as evidence.

Shahzad graduated from the University of Bridgeport with a bachelor's degree in computer applications and information systems in 2001 and later returned to earn a master's in business administration in 2005, the school said.

He had returned Feb. 3 from a five-month trip to Pakistan, claiming he was visiting his parents, the complaint said.

Real estate broker Igor Djuric, who represented Shahzad when he was buying a home in Shelton, Conn., in 2004, said Shahzad made clear he didn't like President George W. Bush or his policy in Iraq. Djuric said the comments were not hateful but he was surprised to hear them because they hardly knew each other.

Shahzad bought the two-story grayish-brown colonial in a working-class neighborhood for $273,000 and lost it to foreclosure last year. Frank DelVecchio, a broker trying to sell it for Shahzad, said Shahzad told him to let the bank take the house because he owed too much on it and he planned to return to Pakistan.

He worked from mid-2006 to May 2009 as a junior financial analyst for the Affinion Group, a marketing firm in Norwalk, Conn. Company spokesman Michael Bush said Shahzad held a lower-level position dealing with the company's budget and projected income, and left on good terms.

"It was a voluntary decision. ... There was not firing or anything like that," Bush said.

Law enforcement officials say Shahzad answered an Internet ad for the Pathfinder, and gave a cell phone number to the registered owner. They later used the cell phone number to track him and learn his name.

Shahzad paid $1,300 cash three weeks ago for the SUV, going first for a test-drive in a supermarket parking lot and offering less than the $1,800 advertised price. Peggy Colas, 19, of Bridgeport, sold the car to Shahzad, law enforcement officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the case.

She and another person involved in the transaction, possibly her father, gave authorities a description of the suspect and were later shown a sketch. Keys found in the SUV's ignition fit the car Shahzad left at the airport and a home in Connecticut.

The vehicle identification number had been removed from the Pathfinder's dashboard, but it was stamped on the engine, and investigators used it to track the owner of record.

The complaint said Shahzad apparently tinted the SUV's windows after buying it. The bomb inside had cheap-looking alarm clocks connected to a 16-ounce can filled with fireworks, which were apparently intended to detonate gas cans and propane tanks.

A metal rifle cabinet in the SUV's cargo area was packed with fertilizer, but NYPD bomb experts believe it was not a type volatile enough to explode like the ammonium nitrate grade fertilizer used in previous terrorist bombings.

Police said the SUV bomb could have produced "a significant fireball" and sprayed shrapnel with enough force to kill pedestrians and knock out windows.

Several of Shahzad's current and former neighbors say he kept largely to himself, rarely socializing or even stopping to chat.

"He usually walks around alone, looking lonely and kind of depressed usually," said Nejilia Gayden, 18, of Bridgeport. "Sometimes he'll mumble to himself."

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the arrest should not be as used as an excuse for anti-Muslim actions. "We will not tolerate any bias or backlash against Pakistani or Muslim New Yorkers," he said.

More than a dozen people with U.S. citizenship or residency, like Shahzad, have been accused in the past two years of supporting, attempting or carrying out attacks on U.S. soil, illustrating the threat of violent extremism from within the U.S.

Among them are Army Maj. Nidal Hasan, a U.S.-born Army psychiatrist of Palestinian descent, charged with fatally shooting 13 people last year at Fort Hood, Texas, and Najibullah Zazi, a Denver-area airport shuttle driver who pleaded guilty in February in a plot to bomb New York subways.

The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the Times Square incident in a one-minute video posted on websites Sunday. The video was narrated by Qari Hussain Mehsud, the group's chief bomb maker who is also in charge of recruiting suicide attackers. Two further videos were released Monday, one of which featured Hakimullah Mehsud, the leader of the Pakistan Taliban, threatening more attacks against the United States and its NATO allies.

U.S. officials initially questioned the claim, saying the Pakistani Taliban lack the international reach and have made outlandish, false statements in the past.

However, the Taliban have links to extremist groups, including al-Qaida, that have pulled off attacks outside Pakistan. Some U.S. and Pakistani intelligence officials believe militant groups work together in complex attacks, such as the Dec. 30 suicide bombing at a CIA base in Afghanistan that killed seven CIA employees, allowing one organization to claim full responsibility to build morale in its ranks and gain prestige among extremist-minded Muslims.

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Eileen Sullivan, Pete Yost, Matt Apuzzo and Julie Pace in Washington; David Crary, Colleen Long, David B. Caruso and Sara Kugler in New York, Chris Brummitt in Islamabad, Adam Schreck in Dubai; John Christoffersen in Bridgeport and Shelton, Conn.; Dave Collins, Stephen Singer, Pat Eaton-Robb and Stephanie Reitz in Hartford, Conn.; and the AP News Research Center in New York.

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NEW YORK — Seized from a plane about to fly to the Middle East, a Pakistan-born man admitted training to make bombs at a terrorism camp in his native land before he rigged an SUV with a homemade...
NEW YORK — Seized from a plane about to fly to the Middle East, a Pakistan-born man admitted training to make bombs at a terrorism camp in his native land before he rigged an SUV with a homemade...
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07:04 PM on 05/04/2010
He was caught by tracking all his phone calls made with the disposable phone he bought. I bet the Patriotic Act played a big role in catching him.
07:03 PM on 05/04/2010
Are these incidents still being called "man made disasters"? Seems like terr0rism to me
01:50 PM on 05/04/2010
the sad story is that during the press conference being done at 1:30 pm today, it is clear that even though this fellow was identified and being followed to JFK, the agents almost lost him because he made it to the plane. So, a question asked to those authorities as to how close they were to lose him was not answered. If he was identified and being followed, how come did he make it to the plane which was being pulled out of the gate? It looks like it was just serendipity that he was caught, although they probably could have himk stopped in Dubai.
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JaxReader
Charity is no substitute for justice withheld.
01:31 PM on 05/04/2010
Neocons and 'Baggers: Don't be so quick to throw away our constitution and rights as Americans, given to us by our founding fathers. You are getting dangerously close to being un-American and setting up a totalitarian regime.
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01:05 PM on 05/04/2010
Thank goodness they got him before he could get away. Now the 40 yr. old white man who changed his jacket can go home and have a cold long glass of ice tea, since he's no longer a person of interest.

Now it's time for the real guy to start singing. Let the opera begin! Some people really take advantage of American citizenship while others (Haitians) died to achieve it. Sad. But glad the bad guy got caught this time.
12:59 PM on 05/04/2010
Whats up with Pakistan, Looks like they have a Jihad factory there.
01:02 PM on 05/04/2010
they do, and the scary thing is pakistan does have nuclear weapons.
07:05 PM on 05/04/2010
As will Iran shortly since the US is governed by wimps now.
12:49 PM on 05/04/2010
We won't know for awhile yet if this suspect did this on the basis of radical islamic ideology, but one thing is for certain, even if his motives were based on this islamic ideology, our government will never admit it. I don't understand why our leaders cannot come to grips with the radical islamist ideology that drives these people. It does not matter if you or I believe that Islam is peace, or that we don't think the qoran ok's these kinds of acts, the radical Islamists believe it, and are willing to kill and be killed for it. How can we begin to reverse this trend of radical islam if we won't even admit that it's here ?
07:06 PM on 05/04/2010
Liberal political correctness will get us all killed.
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07:34 PM on 05/04/2010
in other words american values and it's constitution will get us all killed is what you seem to be saying....
hmmm
12:46 PM on 05/04/2010
What is the Obama admin. NOT doing? Ft. Hood, Recruitment masacre, Crotch bomber, now Times Square. ALL on Obama's watch in 15 months. But we want to mirandize and try them in the US. There is something wrong with this picture.
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Chudye
01:01 PM on 05/04/2010
Your argument is pathetic. We have tried over 40 terrorists in US courts and they are all in prisons in the US! Only 3-4 have been tried in military courts so far and two have been released to their home country. Don't you follow the news? Or do you only listen to FAUX?
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Ipanemagirl
progressive
01:08 PM on 05/04/2010
oh pleeease! Bush had 9/11 on his watch, what do you want to compare this with???...these people are out there and its impossible to keep track of everybody unless you dont allow any muslims in the country or become a police state!
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William Hegemann
Retired Vet
12:42 PM on 05/04/2010
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/04/AR2010050400192.html
In Pakistan, an intelligence official said authorities arrested at least two people in the southern port city of Karachi in connection with the Times Square bombing attempt. The official, who is not authorized to speak on the record, identified one of those arrested as Tausif Ahmed, who was picked up in a busy commercial neighborhood called Gulshan-e-Iqbal. He said Ahmed reportedly traveled two months ago to the United States to meet with Shahzad. The official did not have the other suspect's name.
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William Hegemann
Retired Vet
12:38 PM on 05/04/2010
NEWS FLACH: Pakistani authorities have arrested two people in connection with the failed bombing in Times Square, according to an intelligence official who was not authorized to speak for the record. One of the suspects, Tausif Ahmed, allegedly traveled two months ago to the United States to meet with Faisal Shahzad, the American citizen who has been arrested by U.S. law enforcement. http://www.washingtonpost.com/r/F490YD/RJHQ6/GKPZMY/2XX5PB/JPGF2/ID/t
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winwithoutrwar
12:36 PM on 05/04/2010
There are two kinds of immigrants, one group, the majority immigrants, come in to the land of opportuinity for better life, they are law-abiding, hard working and join the mainstream, enjoying the liberty and freedom, loving the sports of football, baseball and basketball. The second group come mostly from middle east and pakistan, no racial profile but proven-facts, come here to expoloit and impose their thinkings and belief. lamenting about being discrimiated and try to disrupt our American way of life established 300 years ago by the American pioneers. They hated baseball, football....

I just hope the government laws-and-order take this into account and work out a plan to prevent this from happening.
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Katzencats
Just because you can, doesn't mean you should.
01:47 PM on 05/04/2010
Don't know any Pakistanis, do you? I know plenty here in Houston, & they are all law abiding people who came here to have better lives for themselves & their children. A lot of them are even Christians (from birth).

How about other Middle Easterners? When I lived in Tampa 30 years ago, there was a huge Lebanese population, all of whom were hard working, here for their attempt at the "American Dream". When the American Embassy in Tehran was taken over, the Lebanese-Americans had to start watching their backs & explain they were from Lebanon, not Iran.

But, they're all the same, aren't they?
02:13 PM on 05/04/2010
Obviously winwithoutrwar is making a joke. No serious person, even a right-winger, would say that liking baseball and football are standards for deciding whether someone is a good person.

By the way, the United Kingdom ("Great Britain"), you know, what most people in the USA call "England"......well most of those folks don't like American baseball or football either. Must be that they too should stay the hell away from your USA. (hey, I made a rhyme)
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Katzencats
Just because you can, doesn't mean you should.
04:09 PM on 05/04/2010
It wasn't obvious to me, but if it was said with sarcasm, I apologize for jumping to conclusions.

Between "my" Governor claiming the BP explosion to be an act of Gawd, the oil disaster itself, Times Square bomb attempt, McC saying this naturalized American is not entitled to a Miranda warning or any Constitutional rights, Arizona wanting to stop &/or arrest half of their population, & Heckuvajob Brownie whining about the Pres. not responding quickly enough... I have a banging headache.
12:32 PM on 05/04/2010
Rush is going nuts over this, I'm not sure how he is managing to criticize Pres Obama for commending the vendor and the police but he's doing it. Amazing, and people object when I call it "hate-radio."
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weebils
I like jalapenos and hot sauce
12:35 PM on 05/04/2010
I never objected. Don't put me in that category. I remember when he first became popular I thought it was some type of parody. His voice was over the top and so were his words. I could not and still cannot understand how people believe what he says.
12:45 PM on 05/04/2010
Whoa, I wasn't replying to anyone or putting anyONE in that catagory!

I listen, I guess, because I think someone should - it never ceases to amaze me that he lies and lies and lies and people believe him! He did used to be a little more careful, more implication than flat out lie but now it's just amazing, and people do believe him, I don't understand it.
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Ipanemagirl
progressive
01:12 PM on 05/04/2010
and he even said environmentalists did the oil spill on purpose....How absurd. Nature lovers would rather die than cause this much environmental damage and suffering to wildlife...this is a huge crime that was comitted against nature! Limbo always has his mouth in the toilet.
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Seymoreclearly
Get your info from more than one source!
01:38 PM on 05/04/2010
Hush Limbaugh.
12:28 PM on 05/04/2010
So this 30-yr-old Pakistani is the same 40-yr-old balding white guy they caught on camera nearby, taking off his sweatshirt ?!?!
mbrownNY
Sometimes left, sometimes right, always independen
12:45 PM on 05/04/2010
No. The media ran with the bald white-guy thing, but the police only said he was a person of interest - probably thrown out there as a ruse to stall the bomber from leaving.
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weebils
I like jalapenos and hot sauce
12:22 PM on 05/04/2010
""He was a little bit strange," she said. "He didn't like to come out during the day."

A vampire?
12:31 PM on 05/04/2010
lol
xsm941f
by any means necessary
12:14 PM on 05/04/2010
He failed and got caught. I would think EVERYONE would be happy and thankful but no, some just can't help but show how completely clueless they are of what makes America great. Giving into fear (and sometimes racism) would be the greatest victory to give to a terrorist. Compromising our rights is NEVER the answer.
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JaxReader
Charity is no substitute for justice withheld.
01:29 PM on 05/04/2010
Absolutely!