Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Pak-origin man arrested in Times Square bomb plot: Reports

A U.S. national of Pakistani-origin has been arrested in connection with a failed terror plot to explode a car bomb in the heart of New York’s busy Times Square, media reports said on Tuesday.

The 30-year-old man identified as Pakistani-American Shahzad Faisal, who is a naturalised U.S. citizen and a resident of Connecticut, was arrested on Monday night, reports said.

MSNBC reported that the suspect Faisal was arrested on Monday night on Long Island while CNN said the man was nabbed while trying to board a plane for an unknown location at John F. Kennedy International Airport.

MSNBC said the man had been linked to explosives-laden Nissan Pathfinder seized late on Saturday at the busy Times Square. The suspect bought the Nissan Pathfinder in recent weeks with cash from its last owner in Connecticut.

The investigators tracked down the registered owner by the vehicle identification number.

It is still not clear whether the man was acting individually or is part of a terrorist outfit and reports suggest that man had travelled to Pakistan recently.

The former owner identified the buyer was of Middle Eastern or Hispanic descent, but could not recall his name, the New York Times said.

Authorities had launched a massive manhunt with the FBI’s anti-terror unit and New York police to try to catch the would-be bomber.

Meanwhile, the police and FBI in the New York are examining surveillance tapes from the surrounding buildings.

“Investigators and agents also were scouring international phone records showing calls between some of the people who might be associated with this and folks overseas,” an official who has discussed the case with intelligence officers was quoted as saying by The Washington Post.

CNN also said that investigators are examining phone records of businesses that sell some of the bomb’s components and chasing leads in “several locations” on the East Coast and beyond.

A federal law enforcement official, to whom CNN spoke, would not say whether any of the leads were in other countries, and cautioned that the investigation could take “a few more days or weeks.”

ABC News reported that there is growing evidence the bomber did not act alone and had ties to radical elements overseas.

Earlier, one senior official told the news channel that there are several individuals believed to be connected with the bombing and that at least one of them is a Pakistani-American.

The license plate on the car was apparently stolen from an auto repair shop outside Bridgeport, Connecticut, according to law enforcement officials, ABC News said.

Referring to the interviews with authorities in the administration, the CBS News said the buyer of the SUV is a man of Pakistani descent who recently travelled to Pakistan.

“Pending investigation. We are continuing to pursue leads in an effort to identify the individual or individuals who left the vehicle in Times Square,” FBI spokesman Paul Bersson earlier told PTI.

The fresh terror plot by Pakistani-American came into light months after arrest of another Pakistani-origin American David Coleman Headley, who has been charged with plotting terrorists attacks in India and Denmark.

In March, U.S.-based think-tank the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in a report said that the United States needs to refocus its efforts on extremists born and raised in American communities following a spurt in cases of arrest of “home grown terrorists“.

The report A Growing Terrorist Threat? Assessing Homegrown Extremism in the United States noted that facing comparatively few restrictions, U.S. residents and citizens can travel abroad, connect with terrorist groups to gain explosives or weapons training, and return here to plan and execute attacks.

Referring to some of the high-profile arrests in 2009 including that of Najibullah Zazi, Headley and Nidal Malik Hasan, the report had said, this rash of arrests has important implications for policymakers and officials in charge of counter-terrorism and homeland security because U.S. legal residents and citizens are lucrative assets for global terror groups.

“Particularly troubling are homegrown extremists who possess facility with both American and foreign cultures, including language skills. Such multicultural familiarity could allow them to operate freely both at home and overseas and to elude far more easily than foreign nationals,” it added.

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