Wednesday, December 31, 2014

the Lure of Isis

WASHINGTON -- Why would a woman leave her home and family to join the Islamic State? Among the thousands of Westerners headed to the Middle East to join the terror group, a shocking number of them are young women.
Shannon Conley was one of them. For months before Conley's arrest, FBI agents met with her repeatedly.
They warned the 19-year-old Muslim convert that her plan to travel to Syria and help ISIS was illegal.
Conley, however, had made up her mind. She wanted to leave her suburban Denver home to marry an ISIS fighter she had met online.
Agents stopped her at Denver's airport before she could carry out her plan. Yet there are many more like her.
Last month, three teenage girls, also from suburban Denver, were detained while trying to make their way to Syria. But hundreds of other young women from Western countries have made it to the Islamic State -- marrying ISIS fighters and even fighting alongside them.
"I have a huge concern regarding the women going back because that's again a part of building a new society; that's the marketing that's going on. A lot of women here are finding that an attractive option," former Ramsey County, Minnesota, sheriff Bob Fletcher told CBN News.
Ramsey County includes the city of St. Paul. At least four Somali women from St. Paul and neighboring Minneapolis have traveled to Syria in recent months to join ISIS.
"While they are recruiting men, they promise them wives when they get there," Fletcher explained. "They need women in their society to keep their fighters content. It's a scary thing, but the women are really being used in a variety of ways once they get there."
In some cases, these women act as much more than jihadi brides.
A group of British women reportedly led an all-female Sharia police unit inside the ISIS-controlled Syrian city of Raqqa. These British nationals enforce Islamic dress codes and even reportedly run a brothel where they provide sex slaves to ISIS fighters.
So far, most of them come from Europe. The numbers include at least 50 British women, 40 from Germany and some 60 French girls and young women, all leaving their homes to join the Islamic State.
The so-called "poster girls" for this movement are a pair of Austrian teenagers who are believed to be living in Syria and married to ISIS fighters. The girls are reportedly pregnant and want to come home.
"The women -- this is al Qaeda extremist, what you call ISIS, al-Shabaab -- one of their great powers is the element of surprise…I believe for the girls they are using the element of surprise," Abdirizak Bihi, a Somali community activist, told CBN News.
"There is a precedent for female terrorists: dozens of Muslim women from Chechnya and Dagestan have carried out suicide bombings against Russian targets in recent years," Bihi said.
But ISIS is taking things to another level by actively recruiting women online. ISIS promises them husbands and a wonderful new life in the Caliphate -- a place where, ironically enough, women have no rights or freedoms.

JIhadi Brides as an Attraction

LONDON -- "Yusra, we are missing you, if you are watching this please contact us. You are not in trouble and we are not angry with you," pleaded Safiya Hussien in a recent video. "We just want you back home with us."
"Home," for 15 year old Yusra Hussien, is a Somali community in western England, but as CBS News' Charlie D'Aagata reports, since she disappeared in September, there are fears she may have become one of a growing number of teenage girls making the journey to join ISIS fighters in Iraq and Syria.
Steven Pomerantz, former chief of counter-terrorism at the FBI, thinks some young Muslim girls are being lured toward jihad as a way of giving meaning to their lives.
"They're looking for excitement," Pomerantz told CBS News. "They are looking for adventure. They are looking for social acceptance."


The recruitment message from ISIS, also known as ISIL, is slick, well-produced and effective. It targets impressionable Muslim teenagers in the West who often feel they don't quite fit in with the society around them, and it calls on them to fight.
But for young women, it's not just the battle that beckons.
"Becoming wives of fighters seems to be a common thing; to take part in ISIL activities in that way, by marrying and producing children, jihadist children, or becoming part of the fight themselves," said Pomerantz.
Assia Saidi, a 15 year old girl, was caught by her parents trying to flee their home in France for Syria.
Two teenage girls from Austria managed to make the trip, and recent reports suggest one of them may already have died in Syria.
"They hear the message, they hear the appeal and they are susceptible to it," said Pomerantz. "It's a variety of magazines, there are online websites that they can go to, so there's no shortage of message."
It is a message the terrified family of Yusra Hussien can only hope their missing daughter never received.

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Moslem Christmas?

Now write a list of things you want from Santa,” my 3rd-grade teacher casually instructed as she handed out a sheet of paper for us to write on.
I saw it coming – another filler assignment to occupy our attention for at least an hour or so in the last few days before the holiday break.
“I don’t celebrate Christmas, can I have something else to do?”
I spent the next 30-minutes doodling on the back of a reef coloring sheet. My classmates were in disbelief.
“Dag, you don’t get nothing on Christmas? That’s crazy! I couldn’t be no Muzlim.”
“That’s ’cause she don’t believe in Jesus, she believes in Ola.”
“No and Santa doesn’t even have anything to do with …”  They weren’t tryna hear any of it. All the comebacks I had stored up over the years from being in this same exact situation fell on deaf ears. At 8-years-old, all they could process was the shock of me waking up on December 25th without any gifts waiting for me while I was purposely avoiding red and green crayons – I was done with the holiday hoopla at this point.
This was as broad as religious discussions got in my public school elementary classrooms. Year after year, I sat through Christmas plays, visits from Santa, and tree decorating activities. There was an occasional presentation on Kwanzaa, which usually only lasted a day and included a lackluster call-and-response of a few of the principles. I also remember learning a tidbit about Jewish dreidels and Hanukkah. Exposure pretty much stopped there.

At the time, I didn’t think much of it. I was used to standing out either because of my name, not pledging to the flag in the morning or not having gifts to brag about after Xmas or Easter. I always saw my faith as outside of the norm, something I only learned about at home or schooled my peers on during recess.
As an adult who’s taken opportunities to learn about other cultures and belief systems, I see the problem in this limited and one-sided exposure in our school systems and when I continue to come across stories about parents being upset over their children learning about Islam in school, I find it so ironic. A teacher in Tennessee was reprimanded last week for including Islamic symbols in classroom decorations (which also included Xmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa decorations).  There was also the case of a mother in Michigan being “outraged” over her child’s assignment on the 5 major religions in the world because, Islam.
What is the harm in learning about another faith or its holiday traditions when so much of our school system curriculum shoves days like Christmas and Easter down students’ throats?
One of the main purposes of education should be to give students as much cultural insight as possible, not to program and indoctrinate one religion over the other. America is a mostly Christian country, so I get the imbalance to a degree, but the reaction of these parents and my experience in school says a lot about where we are as a society. Of course the media plays a role in this type of unnecessary paranoia with equating Islam with terrorism; but, an educational system too scared or unwilling to give children an accurate understanding of the diversity that makes up our world is a huge part of the reason so many of us grow up to be clueless, biased adults.

On the other side of Sanity

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Three teens threw uncooked pork ribs at the Eltingville home of a Muslim woman Saturday night, sparking a hate crime investigation by the NYPD, the Advance has learned.
The incident happened at about 11:35 p.m., Saturday, according to an NYPD spokesman. The victim, a practicing Muslim who lives on Mosley Avenue near the Eltingville train platform, got a knock on the door, and when she went outside to answer, she found raw pork on her doorstep, the spokesman said.
A law enforcement source provided additional details on the incident — three white teens, ages 16 through 19, threw uncooked pork ribs at the house, then fled in a four-door sedan.
The NYPD’s Hate Crimes Task Force is investigating the incident, the NYPD spokesman said.
No one answered the door at the woman’s house Tuesday afternoon.
Muslims are prohibited from eating pork products, and bigots often use pork as a means to taunt or offend, according to Islamic-American leaders.
In August 2012, someone scattered pieces of bacon over the New Dorp Beach field where the borough’s Muslim community celebrated the end of Ramadan, sparking a hate crime investigation.
“It’s a prevalent misunderstanding. It’s not poison. We just don’t consume it. But it’s intended as an insult,” said Hesham El-Meligy, the founder of the Islamic Civic Association-Staten Island.
The incident took place on the eve of Eid al-Adha, or the Feast of Sacrifice — which commemorates the willingness of the prophet Ibrahim, or Abraham, to sacrifice his son.
Even so, El-Meligy said, he doubts Saturday’s incident was sparked by the holiday. Rather, he suggested, the incident took place “on the heels” what he referred to as last week’s “tempest in the teapot” controversy surrounding the removal of a Hajj banner at the Muslim American Society of Staten Island in Dongan Hills.
“Definitely there is an impact of such ignorance, and not even an attempt to understand,” El-Meligy said.
The Dongan Hills mosque had put up a banner depicting an airliner, in celebration of Hajj, which is the annual Muslim pilgrimage now taking place to Mecca in Saudi Arabia.
Scott LoBaido, a local artist and community activist, visited the mosque after, he said, he learned about the banner on social media from community members worried that it was linked to the Sept. 11 attacks.
Last Tuesday, he posted the following message to his more than 4,600 friends on Facebook, several of whom work for a variety of news organizations: “I regards to the airplane on the front of the si mosque, everyone hold on for a bit. I am going there tonite to ask them about it and aske them to take it down. I will post outcome.”
That visit, and the request to remove the banner, sparked a media storm, with Muslim-American activists criticizing LoBaido for perpetuating anti-Islamic prejudice by pressuring the center into removing a harmless sign. LoBaido maintains that he visited the mosque to “try to defuse a possibly ugly event,” and said he didn’t contact the media.

Friday, December 12, 2014

Somali Muslim Teen KIlled in KC

Devastated family, friends and schoolmates of a 15-year-old boy killed in a horrific hit-and-run car crash that is being investigated as a hate crime gathered for his funeral on Saturday.
A large community of Somali Muslims in Kansas City, Missouri, is still in shock after the boy died on Thursday evening, when a man appeared to deliberately drive his vehicle into him as he was leaving a local mosque.
Abdisamad Sheikh-Hussein, 15, almost had his legs severed when a man whom locals said had been harassing the community with anti-Islamic taunts and violent threats apparently swerved his car and ploughed into the boy.
Ahmed Aden, 34, a local Somali of Christian faith, appeared in court the following day, charged with first-degree murder and other crimes.
Multi-faith messages of support were sent for Abdisamad’s family and the stunned community as the boy’s loved ones prepared to say their last goodbyes in a service on Saturday at the Islamic Society of Greater Kansas City.
A friend who was with Abdisamad was also hurt in the collision.
“It became pretty clear that this was not an accidental crash, there is a considerable amount of evidence that leads us to believe it was intentional,” said Sergeant Bill Mahoney of the Kansas City Police Department.
The boy’s father, Adullahi Mohamud, was an assistant to the imam and a teacher and the mosque. News reports said he and his wife Hawa have three other children. Mohamud was enveloped in tearful embraces at the mosque in a sombre prayer services on Friday.
His son had just led prayers early on Thursday evening and was about to get into a Toyota car parked outside to leave and go to the gym when a black SUV hurtled into him. Witnesses said it knocked him into the air before he landed and was run over by the vehicle.
Abdisamad Sheikh-Hussein.
This undated Department of Motor Vehicles photo courtesy the family shows Abdisamad Sheikh-Hussein. Photograph: AP
The driver tried to flee in the vehicle but it was damaged so he ran away and was captured by police officers, according to local news reports.
The boy’s family and other people involved with the Somali Centre told local TV station WADF the suspect had been threatening them for months, even waving a gun at some attendees and telling them he was going to kill them for being Muslim.
Abdisamad was known as Adam to many of his schoolmates at Staley High School in the North Kansas City school district, where he had a reputation as a highly intelligent, studious and friendly pupil.
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Aden was charged in Jackson County court on Friday with first-degree murder, armed criminal action, leaving the scene of an accident and unlawful use of a weapon. He was not granted bail.
After charges were announced, Jackson County prosecutor Jean Peters Bakers spoke of Abdisamad as a “completely innocent young man that had much to offer all of us and as of today he is no longer with us”.
She said she would seek “very firmly” to hold the individual who killed the boy responsible for his actions and had brought the highest possible charge against the defendant after a crime that was “horrific, awful” and affected the whole city.
Reverend Welton Gaddy, the president of the national Interfaith Alliance, sent a letter to the Islamic Society in Kansas City expressing his concern about the killing.
“I write to you today to promise that no matter how pronounced the voices and actions of those who seek to isolate and denigrate American Muslims, the interfaith community will stand stronger in defence of religious freedom and equal rights,” his letter stated.
He spoke of “the purveyors of hate” who sought to “terrorise minority communities in America” with vitriol.
Rabbi Arthur Nemitoff offered sympathy from his synagogue on the outskirts of Kansas City and said he was grateful the FBI were investigating the killing as a hate crime. “An attack on one religious community is an attack on all of us,” he said.
Abdisamad Sheikh-Hussein regularly led evening prayers, fellow community members told the Kansas City Star. In his service on Thursday he called for peace.
“He asked for mercy for humankind and asked for humans to follow the righteous path,” said Ali Abdi, the assistant director of the centre.
Aden, a Kansas City truck driver, told police after his arrest he had been searching for men who had threatened him nine days earlier. He said he planned to kill those men if he found them, according to court records.
Aden told police he intentionally struck Abdisamad, but he had mistaken the teen for one of the men who had threatened him.
Abdisamad’s uncle, Abdinajib Dirir, told the Kansas City Star the family, who had emigrated from war-torn Somalia, was devastated.
“There are no words to describe,” he said. “This is a community that fled a violent situation. Now we’re facing violence in the United States … We are American like everyone else. And this is a tragedy for us.”

Is Chicago an ISL Hotbed?

Undercover FBI agents arrested an 18-year-old American man who tried to detonate what he believed was a car bomb outside a downtown Chicago bar, federal prosecutors said Saturday.

Adel Daoud, a U.S. citizen from the Chicago suburb of Hillside, was arrested Friday night in an undercover operation in which agents pretending to be extremists provided him with a phony car bomb.

The U.S. Attorney's Office in Chicago announced the arrest Saturday and said the device was inert and that the public was never at risk.

Daoud is charged with attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and attempting to damage and destroy a building with an explosive.

The FBI began monitoring him after he allegedly posted material online about violent jihad and the killing of Americans, federal prosecutors said.

In May, two undercover FBI employees contacted Daoud in response to the material and exchanged several electronic messages with him in which he expressed an interest in engaging in violent jihad in the United States or abroad, according to an affidavit.

Prosecutors say that after being introduced to an undercover FBI agent who claimed to be a terrorist living in New York, Daoud set about identifying 29 potential targets, including military recruiting centers, bars, malls and tourist attractions in Chicago.

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

3 Chicago Teens

 Mohammed Hamzah Khan, 19, rose before dawn on Oct. 4 to pray with his father and 16-year-old brother at their neighborhood mosque in a Chicago suburb.
When they returned home just before 6 a.m., the father went back to bed and the Khan teens secretly launched a plan they had been hatching for months: to abandon their family and country and travel to Syria to join the Islamic State.
While his parents slept, Khan gathered three newly issued U.S. passports and $2,600 worth of airline tickets to Turkey that he had gotten for himself, his brother and their 17-year-old sister. The three teens slipped out of the house, called a taxi and rode to O’Hare International Airport.
Khan was due at work at 6:30 a.m. at a local home-supply store, so he knew his parents wouldn’t miss him when they woke up. The two younger siblings bunched up comforters under their sheets to make it look like they were asleep in their beds.
Their plan was to fly to Istanbul, then drive into Syria to live in the Islamic homeland, or caliphate, established by the Islamic State, the militant group that has massacred civilians in Iraq and Syria and beheaded Western journalists and aid workers.
The Khan teens, U.S.-born children of Indian immigrants, each left letters for their parents explaining their motives.
“An Islamic State has been established and it is thus obligatory upon every able-bodied male and female to migrate there,” Khan wrote. “Muslims have been crushed under foot for too long. . . .This nation is openly against Islam and Muslims. . . . I do not want my progeny to be raised in a filthy environment like this.”
His sister wrote: “Death is inevitable, and all of the times we enjoyed will not matter as we lay on our death beds. Death is an appointment, and we cannot delay or postpone, and what we did to prepare for our death is what will matter.”
In their letters, all three teens, who had grown up playing basketball and watching “Dragon Tales” and “Batman,” told their parents how much they loved them and asked them to join them in Syria, but made it clear they would probably never see them again, except in the afterlife. They begged them not to call the police.
In the afternoon, FBI agents knocked on the Khans’ front door, armed with a search warrant.
“For what?” asked the teens’ shocked father, Shafi Khan.
“Your kids have been detained at the airport, trying to go to Turkey,” an agent said.
“We were stunned,” said Zarine Khan, their mother. “More like frozen. We were just frozen.”
Slick propaganda
The Khan teens are part of a growing number of young Americans who are joining or attempting to travel to Syria or Iraq to join the Islamic State.
This year alone, officials have detained at least 15 U.S. citizens — nine of them female — who were trying to travel to Syria to join the militants. Almost all of them were Muslims in their teens or early 20s, and almost all were arrested at airports waiting to board flights.
A senior U.S. official said the government anticipates more arrests. Authorities are closely monitoring Twitter, Facebook and other social media networks, where recruiters from the Islamic State aggressively target youths as young as 14.
“Their propaganda is unusually slick. They are broadcasting their poison in something like 23 languages,” FBI Director James B. Comey said in arecent speech, adding that the terrorist group is trying to attract “both fighters and people who would be the spouses . . . to their warped world.”
When the Khan teens reached the airport, FBI officials were waiting for them.
A U.S. law enforcement official said authorities had been monitoring the communications of at least one of the teens, although the FBI has not disclosed how they initially became aware of them.
Hamzah Khan has been charged with providing material support to a designated terrorist organization and faces up to 15 years in prison. At a federal court hearing last month, a judge ordered him held without bail, calling him a flight risk and a danger to the community.
His two siblings, minors whose names have not been made public, were released to their parents but are under investigation and could face charges.
The Justice Department is not eager to prosecute juveniles, but it will do so when they are so radicalized that they pose a potential threat, a senior U.S. official said.
“There are not a lot of good options,” the official said. “You will see more young and juvenile cases in the future.”
In court last month, Assistant U.S. Attorney R. Matthew Hiller said Khan and his two siblings “believe they are religiously obliged to support violent jihad.”
“This was not a spur-of-the-
moment trip but rather a carefully calculated plan to abandon their family, to abandon their community, and abandon their country and join a foreign terrorist organization,” Hiller told the judge.
He said Hamzah Khan was “attempting to join an organization that has called for attacks against the United States and has already killed U.S. citizens and is dedicated to genocide.”
But Khan’s lawyer, Thomas Anthony Durkin, told the judge that the government was prosecuting Khan for what amounted to the “thought crime” of rejecting America and supporting the establishment of an Islamic homeland. He said the Khan teens wanted to go live in that homeland but not become fighters, a desire that he said was naive and misguided but not criminal.
Durkin cited a speech President Obama gave in September at the United Nations, where he said the Islamic State’s “propaganda has coerced young people to travel abroad to fight their wars and turned . . . young people full of potential into suicide bombers. We must offer an alternative vision.”
“This is the alternative vision we’re getting today: jail,” Durkin told the judge. “If we want to solve this problem, we are not going to solve it by threatening to lock people up forever. . . . We have to find a solution, because these are American children. . . . They are not barbarians. They are our children.”
‘Those are not our teachings’
Khan’s parents, in an interview at Durkin’s Chicago law office one recent evening, said they were bewildered by what their children tried to do.
“What they wrote in those letters is not from us,” Zarine Khan said, her voice rising behind a colorful veil that covered her face, except for her eyes. “Those are not our teachings. That’s not what we believe in. This didn’t even come from our family, friends, neighbors — nobody.”
“We tried to be the best parents we could,” she said. “That’s all I can say — we tried our best. And they are good kids. This thing came out of the blue. We are still trying to figure it out.”
Hamzah Khan grew up in a suburban American home with pretty shrubs out front and a basketball hoop in the back yard. He earned a Presidential Physical Fitness Award in the eighth grade and loved Naruto, the Japanese manga. He volunteered at his local mosque and represented Argentina in the National Model United Nations.
He graduated from a local Islamic high school in 2013 and enrolled last year at Benedictine University, a Roman Catholic school about 10 miles from his home, where he studied engineering and computer science.
Shafi Khan, who came to Chicago from India almost 30 years ago, and Zarine Khan, who followed her husband 20 years ago, said they consider themselves “average” Muslims, no more or less religious than any of their friends and neighbors in Bolingbrook, Ill., a suburb of about 73,000 people southwest of Chicago.
They try to pray five times a day but said they often don’t. Shafi Khan wears a bushy beard and a white knit skullcap, which he said is an attempt to follow the example of the prophet Muhammad. Zarine Khan covers her head and most of her face, which she considers a sign of modesty, not extreme piety.
Like millions of American Muslims, the Khans, who are both U.S. citizens, said they have raised their children to love their country and their religion. Asked if he felt more Muslim or American, Shafi Khan said, “Both.”
Shafi Khan, 48, earned a degree in environmental science from Northeastern Illinois University and has worked for many years as an event planner for a humanitarian aid organization. Zarine Khan, 41, studied genetics and microbiology at an Indian university but gave it up to move to Chicago with her new husband.
They have four children — the three who were arrested, plus a 3-year-old girl — and Zarine Khan has worked for many years as a teacher at a local Islamic school.
The Khans tried to shield their children from unwanted influences. They had a TV when the children were younger, but they had no cable service. The TV was used solely for showing DVDs — mainly cartoons and educational JumpStart programs from the public library.
When Hamzah Khan was about 8 years old, the family got rid of the TV, because by then they had a computer with Internet access, which the parents carefully monitored. The children were allowed to watch cartoons and read news online, but they were not allowed to browse the Internet by themselves. “We didn’t want to expose them to adult stuff,” Zarine Khan said. “We wanted to preserve their innocence. We wanted to channel their intelligence into their studies and to becoming good human beings.”
The children studied at a local Islamic school, which offered a standard U.S. curriculum of English, math and science — but also classes on Islam. The Khans’ daughter, who turned 18 shortly after her arrest, was being home-schooled by her mother so she could graduate early from high school and begin studies to become a physician.
All three Khan children also became Hafiz, which means they completely memorized the Koran in Arabic. Each went to Islamic school through the fourth grade, then spent the next 2 1/years immersed in all-day memorization classes, augmented by evening programs to keep up with basics such as English and math.
The memorization process is common among Muslims and is not considered a sign of religious extremism, said Habeeb Quadri, who is principal of the Islamic school Hamzah Khan attended until the fourth grade and who frequently writes and lectures on Muslim youth.
Zarine Khan said the family took many vacations together, driving to Niagara Falls and Connecticut. She said they shopped at Wal-Mart and acted “like any other normal American family.”
“We tried to have them grounded and exposed to everything,” Zarine Khan said. “We tried to give them good morals. But it was not just Islam, Islam, Islam. We tried to expose them to different ideas as well.”
Omer Mozaffar, a Muslim community leader who teaches theology at Loyola University Chicago and the University of Chicago, said many Muslim families appear to have sheltered their children from the culture around them.
He said that since the 1991 Persian Gulf War and especially since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, some Muslims have felt “under siege” in the U.S. communities where they live. “There’s a defensiveness that compels parents to pull their kids out of everything,” Mozaffar said. “A lot of parents feel overwhelmed and don’t know what to do, so they try to isolate their children.”
The process is often called “cocooning” — shielding children from as much American culture as possible by banning TV, the Internet and newspapers and sending them to Islamic schools.
“Parents send them less for the Islamic tutelage and more for the sense of protecting them,” Mozaffar said. “They think ‘American’ equals ‘immoral,’ and there’s a common belief that if it’s more strict, it’s more pious. This is something I have to preach against all the time.”
The result is often that American Muslim children find themselves caught between two worlds. They are American, but they feel their parents and their religious leaders trying to steer them away from American culture.
That can leave them vulnerable to those who promise something better, a place where they are celebrated for their religion. And, recently, that message has often come in the form of the network of anonymous, persuasive recruiters on social media who lure youth to join the Islamic State. Quadri calls them “Sheik Google.”
Letters full of rhetoric
According to Shafi and Zarine Khan and court documents, the Khan children’s “Sheik Google” appears to have been a man with the nom du guerre Abu Qa’qa, whom they met on Twitter.
Hamzah Khan and his sister both had Twitter accounts, which they accessed on their cellphones because their parents closely controlled their Internet use on their home computer.
In court, Hiller, the prosecutor, said the Khan teens intended to meet with Abu Qa’qa when they arrived in Turkey and then travel with him to Syria. Notes found by FBI agents searching the Khan house suggested the teens were ultimately headed for Raqqah, an Islamic State stronghold in Syria.
Khan’s sister went by the Twitter name “Umm Bara” and signed her tweets with @deathisvnear. Prosecutors said that in May, she tweeted about watching an hour-long Islamic State propaganda video called “Saleel Sawarim,” which features photos and videos of beheadings and other gruesome violence.
Hiller told the judge that on May 28, apparently after watching the video, she tweeted that she had reached “The end of Saleel Sawarim,” followed by emoticons of a heart and a smiley face. Hiller described her reaction to the video as “twisted delight,” which he presented as evidence that the Khan teens supported the Islamic State’s violence and intended to participate in it.
Durkin said it was “inflammatory nonsense to say somehow, because somebody downloaded that video, that somehow they’re dangerous to the community.” He said the young woman wrote that her role in the caliphate would probably be to marry a fighter, not become one herself.
The letters the three teens left behind were filled with rhetoric their parents said was so out of character it could only have come from Islamic State recruiters.
“I am . . . obliged to pay taxes to the [U.S.] government,” Hamzah Khan wrote. “This in turn will be used automatically to kill my Muslim brothers and sisters. . . . I simply cannot sit here and let my brothers and sisters get killed, with my own hard-earned money. . . . I cannot live under a law in which I’m afraid to speak my beliefs. I want to be ruled by the Sharia [Islamic law]. . . . Me living in comfort with my family while my other family are getting killed is plain selfish.”
He continued: “We are all witness that the western societies are getting more immoral day by day. I extend an invitation to my family to join me in the Islamic States. True, it is getting bombed, but let us not forget that we didn’t come to this world for comfort.”
Sitting in Durkin’s office while their two younger teens worked on homework in the other room, Shafi and Zarine Khan said they are struggling to understand how their children could write such things. Durkin would not permit interviews with the younger siblings.
The Khans knew that their kids were on Twitter and Kik, a messaging service, but they said they didn’t know they were communicating with strangers overseas.
The evening before the teens tried to fly away forever, Zarine Khan said, she and her daughter sat together putting henna dye on each other in celebration of the upcoming Eid al-Adha holiday.
“I think they were completely brainwashed by whatever online things they were reading,” she said. “I wouldn’t want any parent to go through what we are going through; it’s a nightmare. We just thank God that our kids are with us here, and not over there.”

Friday, December 5, 2014

Muslim Teen Run Over

A Kansas City Muslim group and a Kansas group with ties to a national organization called Friday for a federal investigation following the death of a 15-year-old boy after, police said, he was deliberately struck by the driver of an SUV outside a mosque in midtown Kansas City.
The victim’s legs were nearly severed in the incident Thursday and he was taken to Children’s Mercy Hospital where he died, a dispatcher confirmed.
The incident happened about 5:30 p.m. at Admiral Boulevard and Lydia Avenue.
The Kansas City Muslim Community is “deeply shocked” at the hit-and-run outside the Somali Center of Kansas City, according to a press release from Zulfiqar Malik, a board member with the Heartland Muslim Council.
“We ask federal law enforcement to investigate this attack as a possible hate crime,” Malik said in the release.
In another release, the Kansas Chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations cited Somali Center officials as saying a man had been threatening Muslims in Kansas City for months. It also said the vehicle involved in the boy’s death was seen months before bearing anti-Islamic message written on a rear window.
“We urge federal authorities to get involved in this case in order to send the message that our nation’s leaders will not allow American Muslims to be targeted because of their faith,” CAIR-Kansas Chairman Moussa Elbayoumy said in a news release on Friday.
The victim and another person were getting into a parked car when the driver of a Chevrolet SUV, eastbound on Admiral, sideswiped them. Witnesses said the vehicle crossed the center line and appeared to target the pedestrians on the north side of the street.
“This was intentional,” said police Sgt. Bill Mahoney.
The victim was thrown by the impact.
The SUV was disabled by the crash. The driver, described as in his mid-30s, was alone in the vehicle. He fled on foot but was quickly arrested. Police said he had a machete and other weapons.
The Heartland Muslim Council commended police for arresting the suspect so quickly.
“We hope the suspect will be charged and brought to full justice,” the press release said.
Police on Thursday declined to speculate on a motive and were interviewing witnesses. The incident is being investigated by the assault squad, Mahoney said.




Read more here: http://www.kansas.com/news/state/article4292915.html#storylink=cpy

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Henrico's Version of Dumb and Dumber

RICHMOND, Va.  - Heather Elizabeth Coffman, a Virginia woman suspected of supporting the Islamic terror group ISIS, has waived her right to a detention hearing and preliminary trial.
     Coffman is accused of making materially false statements involving acts of terrorism, as well as promoting international and domestic terrorism.
     In a federal affidavit filed of Richmond, FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force Agent Odette Tavares detailed the charges against Coffman, including recurring engagements with an undercover FBI agent beginning July 2014.
     "Through these meetings Coffman indicated that she h ad legitimate ISIS facilitator contacts, capable of arranging for training and entry into Syria to join the ISIS cause," Tavares wrote.
     During a face to face meeting in a private hotel room on November 5, Coffman offered to share her contacts with the undercover agent, and to screen another party to establish his authenticity.
     "Coffman described part of the vetting process as using a computer search of images sent to her by the facilitator to determine if the pictures are authentic originals, as opposed to photos that an imposter copied from internet open sources in an effort to appear legitimate," Tavares wrote.
     Coffman also alluded to her husband, from whom she has since separated, and to having made financial arrangements for him to receive ISIS training in Syria, as well as her desire to be married to a "shaheed" or martyr, the government says.
     The report also contains information about Coffman's questioning by two FBI special agents at her place of employment on Nov. 13-less than 24 hours before the complaint was filed.
     "Coffman was asked whether [FBI undercover agent] supported ISIS or Al-Qaeda," said Special Agent Tavares in her report. "Coffman told the FBI special agents, 'We don't talk about things like that.'"
     Coffman is charged with providing materially false information to the agents at the time of her interview.
     The report also documents suspicious activity, including explicit images and excerpts from several Facebook accounts attributed to Coffman, whose internet activity has been under surveillance by the FBI since August of this year.
     A Facebook screen shot of a cover page and photos for one of Coffman's accounts, under the moniker Heather Obeida-La'Ahad, shows photos of ISIS flags, and masked men holding assault rifles.
     "I love ISIS!" She is quoted as posting in the report. "They keep deleting my accounts because of it."
     Coffman's trial date has not been set. She remains in custody of the state.