WORLD TRADE CENTER BOMBING SUSPECTS (NEWS ARTICLE, WASHINGTON POST)

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP96-00789R003900260005-7
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 2, 2002
Sequence Number: 
5
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 5, 1993
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP96-00789R003900260005-7.pdf203.03 KB
Body: 
'trade (enter Bo eek `clarity of Motive' to Ryder employees, had arrived ick up the van in a red GM sedan accompanied by a companion. ler officials said that roughly two rs after the explosion, Salameh eared at the office and claimed van had been stolen the night )re. He asked for his $400 dam- deposit, but was told he must t file a police report. ;alameh's name was already in the s files. In 1990 he had demon- ited publicly on behalf of El-Say- Nosair, an Islamic firebrand who been charged with, and acquitted the 1991 slaying of Jewish De- Se League founder Meir Kahane. ameh had visited Nosair at the ce prison in Attica, N.Y., where he serving a sentence on lesser .rges. ialameh gave investigators a par- ilar suspect to consider, and, as )ortant, drew their attention to a up of activists who orbited ough the larger Islamic commu- r in New York and New Jersey I attended the Abu Bakr mosque Brooklyn and the Al-Salam sque in Jersey City. Rahman had ached at both mosques. 1'he FBI had not previously con- ered these activists to be terror- merely passionate militants. Yet FBI had access to intelligence )rmation about them gathered as' result of at least three occur- .ces: the prosecution of Nosair; emergence of Rahman as a pres- ;e in the New Jersey-New York imic community; and the 1991 .rder of Mustafa Shalabi. The Nosair trial was a watershed ant among Middle Eastern mili- ts in New York. Kahane, a hero to ray Jewish radicals, was viewed as ymbol of Zionist oppression to Is- lic radicals. During the trial, the al groups staged demonstrations, nn nnnnite sies of the cort- ment blames the Islamic Group for a series of bombings and murders, most especially the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981. Egyptian security forces are en- gaged in a massive, nationwide crackdown aimed at fundamentalist militants, including members of the Islamic Group. The government has jailed 700 suspected extremists in response to a wave of violence that has left nearly 150 people dead, at the hands of either police or extrem- ists. Before he emigrated to the United States, Rahman was acquitted of in- volvement in Sadat's death, but an FBI intelligence briefing during the Persian Gulf War persuaded at least one senior official to believe that he posed a potentially serious threat from his new base in New Jersey. lease 2003/01/17 RMI DID NTERE2(kMBINGi SUSPECTS__ Six suspects have been charged in connection with the World Trade Center bombing. Four were jointly indicted in the bombing and remain in custody. One is being held on obstruction charges and the sixth reportedly has fled the country. MOHAMMAD SALAMEH, 25 Jordanian. Jersey City, N.J., handyman arrested March 4. Indicted in the bombing. BILAL ALKAISI, 26 Jordanian. New York area resident arrested March 25. Charged with aiding and abetting the bombing. NIDAL AYYAD, 25 Kuwaiti. Maplewood, N.J., chemical engineer arrested March 10. Indicted in the bombing. IBRAHIM ELGABROWNY, 42 Held Iraqi pass- port. Brooklyn contractor ar- rested March 4. Charged with obstruction and possessing fraud- ulent passports. MAHMUD ABOUHALIMA, 33 Egyptian. Wood- bridge, N.J., cab driver arrested in Egypt and brought to the U.S. March 24. Indicted in the bombing. RAMZI AHMED YOUSEF, 25 Jersey City, N.J., resident who reportedly fled the country. Indicted in the bombing. When Rahman arrived in the Unit- office, agents arrested him. In his Ayyad's office phone. Agents learned ed States, Shalabi found him a res- pockets, they found the business card that Salameh and Ayyad had a joint idence. Thereafter, they raised funds of Nidal Ayyad, 25, a chemical engi- account at a local bank. They discov- for the Afghan resistance, but ulti- neer. ered that on Feb. 15 Ayyad had mately had a falling out, according to Eventually, the FBI executed at rented from National Car Rental the published statements by several as- sociates. In March 1991, Shalabi was least 10 search warrants in New Jer- same type of car that Salameh ar- Sey. rived in at the Ryder van rental of- found dead in his Brooklyn home, Agents found evidence connecting fice. Moreover, "Salameh" was listed arrests. knifed. There have been no Salameh to a rental unit at the Space as an additional driver on the rental . Station Storage facility in Jersey car. A witness from the Ryder office In addition, rater bombing, months before th20 e City. Employees identified Salameh identified Ayyad as the same man members eo of f center the two mosques m about out out who o as the man who rented a shed in No- who accompanied Salameh when he attended Nosair's trial or visited him vember under the name "Kamal Ibra- rented the van. at Attica were subpoenaed by a fed- ham." On March 10 agents descended on eral grand jury, according to the Upon searching this unit March 5, Ayyad's first-floor apartment at 60 New York Times. Ahmed A. Satta, a agents discovered several hundred Boyden Ave., Maplewood, N.J. In- postal worker, told the Times that pounds of chemicals that, if properly side, they found what a prosecutor FBI agents grilled him about Nosair, combined and triggered with a small later described as a modified timing Shalabi and Rahman. explosive, could produce a powerful mechanism that an explosives expert To officials, then, the circumstan- blast. They also discovered that the described as a time delay firing sys- tial clues being gathered by agents in chemicals-hundreds of pounds of tem. Ayyad was carrying an Amer- New Tersev seemed to fit into a larv- urea and nitric acid-were purchased ican Express card in the name of Bilal er context. For 3p veH2~ 1` el Wra X- PRe?-0 J` "a ffl ~AKma iLaccom- New York state driver's license hste g his residence as 57 Prospect Park, FBI that the day before the bombing panied Salameh to the storage shed Rrooklvn-the home of Ibrahim they saw a man they believe was "on several occasions." purported involvement with the Af- ghan resistance. Associates said Abouhalima traveled to Pakistan for military training and that he was a follower of Rahman and sometimes served as his driver. Rahman has dis- puted this claim and publicly de- nounced the bombing.) Aside from these characterizations of Abouhalima-which will likely be contested in court-there has been no public disclosure of what direct evidence, if any, connects him to the bombing. He was eventually returned to New York. U.S. officials have re- fused to discuss their knowledge of the arrest or treatment of Abou- halima. For weeks, the trade center bomb, ing was an incomplete act of terrors ism because it lacked a political meet sage. But on March 28 the New Yore Times published a letter it received four days after the bombing. Th4 Times quoted a law enforcement 1403,r(? tvhn said there wa. "incontrn-