August
30, 2002, New York Times
Informer
Is Cited as the Key to Unlocking a Terrorist Cell
By
DANNY HAKIM
DETROIT, Aug. 29 — For nearly a year, the
three foreigners picked up at an apartment here a week after the Sept. 11
attacks seemed like just another group of
Arab men caught up in the government dragnet. They languished in prison
while
facing charges that seemed minor; federal agents had actually been looking for
the previous occupant when they raided
the
apartment.
But
at least one thing appears to have separated the Detroit trio from hundreds of
other Arabs swept up by the government in
the
last year: a cooperative witness. A fourth Arab man who once lived with the men
and who had been charged in the case
appears
to have become a witness against the other three and is playing a critical role
in the government's case.
The
picture painted by the indictment issued on Wednesday by a federal grand jury
is of a busy terrorist cell working hard to
avert
suspicion. The men used fake names to open post office boxes and had phony
visas so authentic-looking that one veteran
investigator
of visa frauds said he could not tell the visas were bogus, and they even
enlisted a "mentally unstable man" to
disguise
their notes, federal court filings show.
Much
of this evidence comes from an apartment on Norman Street in Detroit which was
once the residence of Nabil
al-Marabh,
who the government believed had ties to Al Qaeda. It was Mr. al-Marabh, 35,
that federal agents were looking for
when
they raided the apartment on Sept. 17. His name was still on the mailbox.
Instead,
they found the three men who were indicted on Wednesday as being part of a
terrorist conspiracy: Karim Koubriti,
24,
and Ahmed Hannan, 34, both Moroccans, and Farouk Ali-Haimoud, 22, an Algerian.
A fourth man from Chicago and
known
as Abdella was also indicted. He is still at large.
The
Detroit case has been aggressively investigated by federal authorities since
last September when the men were first
arrested.
The case has stirred debate within the government, government officials said.
Some officials have hinted that they
suspected
the men had ties to Al Qaeda, but others have said that no evidence has emerged
to show any definitive connection.
The
indictment paints the men as operating a terrorist cell, though no definitive
connections to Al Qaeda are revealed. None of
the
men are now suspected of knowing in advance of the Sept. 11 attacks, government
officials said.
While
the men are regarded by counterterrorism officials as low-level operatives, the
charges against them are serious,
particularly
an accusation that they conspired to provide material support for terrorism
against the United States.
Some
officials said today that the case was important but not a breakthrough in
understanding terror operations in the United
States.
The indictment provides little information about the nature of the terror
operation that the men are accused of
supporting,
nor does it indicate how far plans for an attack had progressed.
Investigators
did find in the Norman Street apartment a cache of material they considered
suspicious, including audiotapes that
preached
jihad, notes suggesting a plot against William S. Cohen, the former secretary
of defense, and a cache of phony ID
documents.
The indictment said investigators also found a videotape that had surveillance
footage of the MGM Grand Hotel
and
Casino in Las Vegas and Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif.
It
remains unclear whether the material belonged to the three men or to Mr.
al-Marabh.
Mr.
Koubriti, one of the three men, implicated a fifth man, Youssef Hmimssa, whose
picture was found among forged identity
documents.
Mr. Koubriti said that a day planner that contained notation in Arabic
referring to an American airbase in Turkey,
the
American foreign minister and an airport in Jordan, belonged to Mr. Hmimssa.
Mr.
Koubriti and Mr. Hmimssa had lived together in Dearborn. Mr. Hmimssa was
arrested shortly after the first raid, on Sept.
28,
in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Kevin
Ernst, a lawyer for Mr. Ali-Haimoud, said in an interview on Wednesday that Mr.
Hmimssa was cooperating with the
government.
"The
only difference between October of last year, when the government dismissed the
charges against my client because there
was
no evidence, and today, when they issued the superseding indictments, is one
snitch," Mr. Ernst said referring to Mr.
Hmimssa.
Mr.
Hmimssa's lawyer, Stephen Rabaut, did not return calls. Government officials
would not say whether he was an informer.
Jim
Thomas, a lawyer for Mr. Hannan, said his client had been held since Sept. 17
without a bond. "He is still, in the face of
these
very serious charges, presumed to be innocent," Mr Thomas said. "The
trial will be scheduled hopefully for some time in
January
and at that time we expect to have a full and fair hearing in front of
impartial jury."
While
the case against the three men in Detroit has grown more serious, the case
against Mr. al-Marabh, the initial target,
appears
to be winding down. Mr. al-Marabh, who is being held at a prison in Batavia,
N.Y., is likely to be deported to Algeria
after
pleading guilty to illegally entering the country.
"We
brought an immigration violation charge against him; that charge does not
contain any evidence linking him terrorism,"
Bryan
Sierra, a spokesman for the Justice Department, said.
In
the indictment against the other men, the government says they were part of a
terrorist cell that provided support to other
operatives,
recruited members, collected intelligence on potential targets and cased the
Detroit Metropolitan Airport while all
three
worked there.
Part
of the men's intent was to "cause economic harm to U.S. businesses,"
the indictment said, and previous documents said
they
planned an "economic jihad."
The
men went to some length to conceal their plan, it said. They used a
"mentally unstable man" to try to disguise their writings
in
a notebook. They used the man, who is not identified in the indictment, to
write his name and personal information on some
of
the notebook pages found in the apartment, which contained plans and sketches
of an American airbase in Turkey and a
Jordanian
hospital. They also had the man temporarily hold on to the notebooks.
It
appears that they also had high-quality false ID documents.
Edward
Seitz, a special agent for the State Department who has investigated visa fraud
for 14 years, testified at an April
hearing
that one of the visas was so authentic looking that he had to check the
agency's database to find out if it was fraudulent.
"It
was of such a quality that to the naked eye it would have probably
passed," Mr. Seitz said. "It would have passed me."