A 21-year-old Bangladeshi man, who the FBI said came to the United
States on a student visa this year to conduct a terrorist attack, was arrested
Wednesday after he allegedly attempted to detonate what he believed was a
1,000-pound car bomb outside the New York Federal Reserve Bank.
Quazi
Mohammad Reswanul Ahsan Nafis, of Queens, was arrested by members of the FBI’s
Joint Terrorism Task Force after he assembled what he thought was the bomb
inside a van in a New York City warehouse, parked it next to the Federal
Reserve and tried to detonate it with a cellphone from a nearby hotel,
authorities said.
Online
response to the town hall has been uncharacteristically muted.
In a written
statement that federal officials say was intended to assert responsibility for the
bombing on behalf of al-Qaeda, Nafis quoted “our beloved Sheikh Osama bin
Laden” and wrote that he wanted to “destroy America" and that he thought
the best way to accomplish his goal was to target the country’s economy,
federal officials said.
“Attempting to
destroy a landmark building and kill or maim untold numbers of innocent
bystanders is about as serious as the imagination can conjure,” said acting
assistant FBI director Mary Galligan. “It is important to emphasize that the
public was never at risk . . . because two of the defendant’s ‘accomplices’
were actually an FBI source and an FBI undercover agent.”
The sting
tactic used to arrest Nafis, in which suspects are monitored almost from the
inception of plots and provided with the means to carry them out, has
increasingly been used by the FBI since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. Targets in
such stings have included Washington’s Metro subway system, the Pentagon and,
last year, the U.S. Capitol.
In this
case, authorities said Nafis entered the country in January on a student visa
under the guise that he was going to school in Missouri. He tried to recruit
people to form a terrorist cell, saying he had overseas connections to
al-Qaeda. He allegedly sought contacts of the terrorist network in the United States
to assist him in an attack, according to the federal complaint filed in U.S.
District Court in New York.
Nafis
proposed several targets, including a high-ranking U.S. official and the New
York Stock Exchange before settling on the Federal Reserve, authorities said.
“I don’t want
something that’s like, small,” Nafis told an FBI undercover agent, who was
posing as an al-Qaeda member and wearing a recording device. “I just want
something big. Something very big. Very, very, very, very big, that will shake
the whole country.”
Nafis also
told the agent that he hoped his attack would disrupt the presidential
election.
“You know what, this
election might even stop,” Nafis allegedly said in a recorded conversation.
The FBI
agent, whom Nafis first came in contact with in July, supplied him with 20
50-pound bags of purported explosives. Nafis then allegedly bought components
for the bomb’s detonator and conducted surveillance in New York’s financial
district on multiple occasions, according to the complaint.
During the
investigation, Nafis allegedly told the undercover FBI agent that he had come
to wage “jihad.” Nafis contacted a man in the United States, identified in the
complaint as “Yaqueen,” who has been arrested by federal authorities on
non-terrorism charges, the FBI said.
Nafis
communicated with Yaqueen and the undercover agent on Facebook, officials said.
Nafis discussed with them whether it was legal under certain Islamic rulings to
wage jihad while on a student visa. Although Nafis said he had overseas
connections to al-Qaeda, which could help with the planning and execution of an
attack, law enforcement sources said they found no evidence of such
connections.
On Sept. 23,
Nafis urged the agent — who he thought was an al-Qaeda operative — to remind
the group’s leadership that he had come to the country specifically to conduct
the attack and that he had devised the plan himself, according to the
complaint.
“Al-Qaeda operatives
and those they have inspired have tried time and again to make New York City their
killing field,” said New York City Police Department Commissioner Raymond W.
Kelly, whose department was involved in the investigation.
Nafis, who
faces charges of attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and attempting
to provide material support to al-Qaeda, appeared in federal court in Brooklyn
and was ordered held without bail.
Civil rights
activists have criticized similar stings, saying that since the Sept. 11
attacks, the FBI has identified individuals with radical views to build
criminal cases when the suspects might have limited ability to carry out the
attacks.
But law
enforcement officials say that the stings are a critical tactic to head off
terrorist attacks.
“We have an
obligation to take action to protect the public when an individual expresses a
desire to commit violence and recruits others for an attack,” said Justice
Department spokesman Dean Boyd. “Allowing such individuals to proceed without a
government response is not an option, given that they may take action on their
own or find others willing to assist them.”
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