iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Faisal Shahzad Cooperation 'Ongoing': Holder

PETE YOST and KIMBERLY DOZIER   05/ 6/10 06:56 PM ET   AP

Faisal Shahzad Cooperating

WASHINGTON — Attorney General Eric Holder on Thursday rejected the notion that reading Times Square bomb suspect Faisal Shahzad his Miranda rights hindered investigators, telling Congress that Shahzad's cooperation is ongoing and that he has provided useful information.

Holder's testimony before a Senate appropriations subcommittee marked a sharp change in tone from the attorney general's recent appearances on Capitol Hill, where he has faced tough questions about his performance.

With what appears to be a success in the Shahzad case, Holder said that "we will continue to pursue a number of leads as we gather intelligence relating to this attempted attack."

"Mr. Shahzad is in fact continuing to cooperate with us," has provided useful information and if convicted, faces a potential life sentence in prison, Holder said.

"There is simply no higher priority than disrupting potential attacks and bringing those who plot them to justice," the attorney general said.

After the arrest of a man suspected of attempting to bomb an airplane on Christmas Day, Republicans attacked the administration for jumping too quickly to inform the suspect of his right to remain silent, saying that had shut off potential valuable intelligence. Holder's robust defense on Thursday – and a relative absence of second-guessing from his congressional inquisitors – demonstrated how the atmosphere has changed in light of this week's law-enforcement coup.

Holder told Congress that investigators got "a very substantial amount of information" from Shahzad before the decision was made to give him his Miranda warnings.

Separately, a senior U.S. intelligence official said that before investigators read Shahzad his rights, "they got what they needed."

Chief among their check list of questions: finding out whether other imminent attacks were planned, or other operatives assisted Shahzad. After several hours of questioning, investigators read Shahzad his Miranda rights, so whatever resulted from the subsequent questioning could be used in a future court case.

Speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation is continuing, the intelligence official said lessons were learned from the handling of Christmas Day bombing suspect Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, with a team being brought in immediately to handle the questioning of Shahzad and decide whether and when to read him his rights.

At the Senate hearing, Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski, D-Md., raised an issue that has come up in the Shahzad case – the fact that the suspect was able to get aboard an airliner before being arrested, even though investigators had already placed him on a no-fly list.

The issue "to me is like chalk on a blackboard," said Mikulski.

Emirates airline apparently didn't notice the notification from the Transportation Security Administration that Shahzad's name had been added to the list, and Shahzad boarded the Mideast-bound jetliner before federal authorities pulled him off and arrested him.

On Wednesday, the government issued a new requirement for airlines to check the no-fly list more often, a move aimed at closing that security gap in future cases of terror suspects.

"I suspect we would have detected him earlier" had the change already been in effect, Holder said, marking the one aspect of the Shahzad case on which the attorney general conceded a shortcoming.

Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska focused on the no-fly list problem in the apprehension of Shahzad, prompting Holder to declare that "I am never satisfied, even in an operation like this one" that was successful.

The arrest of Shahzad has provided an opportunity for the attorney general and the Obama administration to display a success in the fight against terrorism following Holder's ill-fated decision last year to put reputed Sept. 11 attack mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (HAH'-leed shayk moh-HAH'-med) and four accused co-conspirators on trial in New York. The White House stopped that effort.

Democrats at the hearing praised Holder for law enforcement's performance on the Shahzad case.

"It was pretty remarkable to see all the pieces come together," said Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.

Mikulski called it "amazing" that Shahzad had been taken into custody Monday night in such a short time after the Saturday evening bombing attempt.

Holder cited an earlier thwarted plot to bomb New York City's subway system, in which a key participant, Najibullah Zazi (nah-jee-BOO'-lah ZAH'-zee), pleaded guilty to terrorism violations.

The Shahzad and Zazi cases reflect "exemplary investigative efforts" by federal agents, law enforcement officers and Justice Department prosecutors, the attorney general said in his prepared remarks.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Hill newsletter!
WASHINGTON — Attorney General Eric Holder on Thursday rejected the notion that reading Times Square bomb suspect Faisal Shahzad his Miranda rights hindered investigators, telling Congress that S...
WASHINGTON — Attorney General Eric Holder on Thursday rejected the notion that reading Times Square bomb suspect Faisal Shahzad his Miranda rights hindered investigators, telling Congress that S...
Filed by Jeff Muskus  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 17
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
05:45 AM on 05/21/2010
yes A letter, dated May 12, sent by American attorney office written by Chief Judge Loretta A. Preska, has revealed that Shahzad is cooperating with the authorities reported by A Pakistan News via http://www.apakistannews.com/faisal-shahzad-cooperating-with-authorities-184626

but still no big news from US
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThinkingPatriot
Free your mind...and your ass will follow...
08:43 PM on 05/09/2010
Shouldn't DHS/TSA be responsible for checking against the list? So they let him check in (using his real name) but then he has to show ID to TSA, right? Plus, you'd think his picture is on the 10 Most Wanted etc. I'm not really impressed with DHS
anfractuous
Like you care.
09:31 AM on 05/07/2010
Feds to Shahzad: "Shut up already!"
06:25 AM on 05/07/2010
The Uni-Brow Bomber is singing like a canary...
01:49 AM on 05/07/2010
Anyone feel safe with Eric Holder at the Justice Department?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Derek Spisak
05:31 PM on 05/06/2010
Cooperating? He sounds closer to a nut job seeking attention than anything.
04:53 PM on 05/06/2010
All this information forthcoming from the suspect without torture, how about that!
photo
harveyr2
Be skeptical of politicians or be their pawn
04:21 PM on 05/06/2010
And we're supposed to believe Mr. Holder? I'm skeptical, Shahzad was trained to do what he did. No reason to believe his intelligence isn't intended to create a wild goose hunt.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
studio8h
02:48 PM on 05/06/2010
Is it possible that Emirates Airline didn't WANT to stop Shahzad and thus "overlooked" the addition of his name? The same kind of thing that whisked the binLaden family out of the country within 16 hours of 9/11. It would make sense to me to watch Emirates; to alert when a passenger phones in a reservation within hours of such a long flight, and pays cash; and to do a double/triple check of any passenger who falls within that criteria, including questioning. The airlines are lazy. To use them as a main line of defense risks disaster. And any mid-east airline should be subject to much greater scrutiny. Sorry guys, you did it to yourselves.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Derek Spisak
05:32 PM on 05/06/2010
I would think all of those are huge red flags that would cause increased scrutiny thru the screening process. I know that when I buy one ways same day, I have "s" all across my boarding pass, which means I get extra screening.
pharmmajor
proud Libertarian.
07:13 PM on 05/06/2010
The bin Ladens were NOT flown out of the country after the 9/11 attacks. That has been disproven.

http://snopes.com/rumors/flights.asp
01:48 AM on 05/07/2010
Doesn't matter. It is a good liberal story and they are sticking to it.
11:59 AM on 05/06/2010
Poor idiots. Not only the poor idiot boy, but the poor idiots trying to make him look like Osama ben Hasbeen. Every time we see an arrest, it turns out the person was an idiot, a wannabe, a psycho, or an murkan home grown twit.
I would like to suggest a simple solution. If you don't want people in the countries that prefer to worship Mo angry with you, stay away from them. A less simple solution. If you want them to stop treating you badly, stop treating them badly. Do something for them instead of 100 years of doing nothing but attacking them, invading them, stealing their resources, propping up puppet governments to get their oil, giving israel a free pass and blaming their neighbors for everything. Lies and BS wear thin after 100 years.
01:06 PM on 05/06/2010
Ah, you are very wise indeed, grasshopper. You have the perfect answer to an age old problem. The only problem - I don't understand what the f&ck you're trying to say. "Stop treating them badly..." "Lies and BS wear thin after 100 years." Please go into detail because you make little sense. Thank you, Old(wise)tree
03:11 PM on 05/06/2010
Does it not seem suspect to anyone that this trained terrorist botched his car bomb and has rolled over spilling every last detail of his connections to Pakistani terror camps within a few days? Just makes me wonder what agenda is being best served by this big news we accept without question like the well trained society we are.
photo
harveyr2
Be skeptical of politicians or be their pawn
04:24 PM on 05/06/2010
Yes, the failure of the third world nations is all because of nasty America. It has nothing to do with the government/political structure of those countries who are generally totalitarian regimes. Totalitarian regimes do not have their citizen's best interest in mind and they fill their minds with hate. Far easier to maintain a regime when you can aim your citizens' anger at the "West" instead of at their own government.