A federal grand jury charged a 26-year-old Virginia taxi driver with helping provide support for terrorists after he transported one of his associates, a would-be member of the Islamic State, 90 minutes to the airport.
The cabbie, Mahmoud Amin Mohamed Elhassan, was also charged with making false statements to federal agents. He faces up to 48 years in prison under federal sentencing guidelines — more than twice the maximum of 20 years faced by the budding terrorist he transported.
The charges raise questions over the government’s use of informants, three of whom were involved in Elhassan’s case, at least one of them paid. They also underline questions over how involved Elhassan really was in a terrorism plot.
Federal prosecutors say that before driving aspiring ISIS member Joseph Hassan Farrokh to the airport, Elhassan introduced Farrokh to people Elhassan believed would assist Farrokh in traveling to join the Islamic State. Elhassan later lied to FBI agents about where Farrokh was going and how, the government claims.
Farrokh, 28, pleaded guilty to material support charges this March. Elhassan’s case, meanwhile, has been presented in the press as part of a straightforward prosecution of homegrown terrorism. But the terms of the criminal complaint against him cast doubts on the extent of his complicity.
According to the complaint, no one involved with the case was ever actually in touch with the Islamic State, only with the three informants who helped snare Farrokh and implicate Elhassan. While Farrokh seems to have desired to travel abroad and fight with ISIS, making several belligerent statements to that effect, that goal did not appear to have appealed to Elhassan, who told Farrokh that Farrokh was an “extremist.”
Farrokh was initially reached by a government informant through Elhassan. The informant, a former acquaintance of Elhassan’s, began contacting Elhassan to tell him that he had a “message” for Farrokh, suggesting that he would be able to help him link up with others to facilitate Farrokh’s travel abroad. This man was a paid government informant who had begun cooperating to receive favorable treatment on separate criminal charges.
After connecting with Farrokh, the informant introduced him to another man, also a government informant, who later introduced him to yet another man, who was also government informant, all of whom assured Farrokh (against his openly expressed doubts) that they could be trusted and would help get him to Syria.
Farrokh spent a lot of time with the informants over the next several months, planning his travel and saying he hoped to later bring his family to Syria. At the suggestion of the informants, Farrokh even pledged an oath of allegiance to the leader of ISIS, despite expressing that he “did not understand why he needed to give it here.”
At the close of one conversation with the informants, he told them that he had been asking God to help him get to Syria for over a year, and that they had “made him very happy.”
On January 1, the informant Elhassan had known previously contacted him. In a recorded conversation, Elhassan allegedly confessed that he knew that Farrokh was planning to leave the country to join ISIS and that Farrokh had lied to his family by telling them that he was going to Saudi Arabia to study. Elhassan also expressed his own anxieties about the situation, saying that “he didn’t want to see Farrokh go to prison” and adding that he had forwarded Farrokh an article about another government sting operation that had targeted a man in upstate New York.
Two weeks later, Farrokh packed his bags and prepared to depart the United States on a flight to Jordan. The car he took to reach the vicinity of Richmond International Airport was a taxi, driven by Elhassan. The two men spent roughly two hours together before Farrokh proceeded on his own to the airport terminal. It is not known what they discussed in this time.
After Farrokh checked in at the airport, cleared security, and proceeded to his departure gate, he was arrested by FBI agents.
That same afternoon, FBI agents contacted Elhassan, who consented to be interviewed. According to the complaint, Elhassan told them that he believed Farrokh had been traveling within the United States for family reasons. When asked which airport Farrokh used, the complaint states that Elhassan “hesitated,” and then told them Farrokh had flown from a different airport than he actually had.
Elhassan was then arrested.
Even accepting the government at its word, the alleged plot seems to have involved Elhassan in a very marginal capacity, if at all, while the number of informants in the case exceeded the number of supposed conspirators. Elhassan now faces the prospect of a lengthy prison sentence, based primarily on Farrokh’s conversations with several government informants and on Elhassan’s taxi drive with Farrokh to the vicinity of the airport.
In the days following Elhassan’s arrest, his lawyer at the time, Ashraf Nubani, said that the men had been the victims of public hysteria over ISIS, as well as the overzealous use of informants by the government. “I think it’s unfortunate that in the media and public discourse we allow these cases to be dictated by the position of the government,” he told WTVR. “They had three informants in this case that were looking for people to get in trouble.”
Too bad he wasn’t a rapist, swimmer and Stanford student.
So, like, /are/ there any real terrorists? All I’m seeing are people who work for the FBI, here.
…..they are not “informants”; they are part time, independent contractors…..betcha they will again be employed by the FBI and other law enforcement agencies, or individuals without being directly identified……
Don’t disagree though at the same time they’ve gotten very good at that whole carrot on a stick bit. Too many stories about people in, eg, the Muslim community being hassled if they don’t agree to act as informants even though they’ve done nothing wrong (other than ‘traveling while being Muslim’ or whatever — disgraceful prejudice). At the same time, so many informants who’d say or do anything just to get out of (probably also trumped up) charges. I’d say we probably have a plague of several different types and calibres of informants rotting our communities’ trusts from the inside-out now. The type you mention definitely bothers me, at times, more than some of the other kinds. Don’t know if you saw the documentary (T)error but that one guy epitomized the particular type of informant you mentioned (people doing it for money, and calling it a ‘job’ either to themselves or other people). It’s ugly, ugly business, and we need more and better laws to make it illegal for such things to persist — and to come together as communities to protest it (hard when we’re in the middle of a COINTELPRO-like surge in anti-free-speech actions by law enforcement and private corps).
The F.B.I. has a devise called a stingray used illegally to trace phones .
It is not accepted by the courts because it violate the fourth amendment – search & seizure….all such evidence must be destroyed. The F.B.I. to counter it has entered into a conspiracy to deprive people of their rights – instructing the police how to cover the evidence obtained…using other various methods….
All police departments that use these devices have to sign a confidentiality agreement…..which they are not allowed to discuss
POLICE STATE
Got to keep those prisons full for CCCA and the GEO group don’t we. That’s all this is about. They are making everyone who has any kind of a political stand, or are different, like Muslims, for targeting because they are all a bunch of morons at the FBI!
Lucky he wasn’t the cabbie who was driving Mullah Mansoor. He got the death penalty without any form of trial. Death by immolation was the bonus penalty.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/may/29/family-of-driver-mohammad-azam-killed-in-us-strike-on-taliban-leader-mullah-mansoor-file-criminal-case
….at the very, very least Mr. Mansoor’s family should receive financial compensation along with and apology……
…..if the apology is too much to ask, compensation should speak to some form of moral right….
It would help if you would remember where you read that. On the NY Times?
…
https://ipsoscustodes.wordpress.com/2016/05/29/theintercept-virginia-cabbie-faces-48-years-in-prison-after-driving/
RCL
$ date
Sat May 28 13:47:09 EDT 2016
It would help if you would remember where you read that. On the NY Times?
Since Iran has never been an aging population and since you are talking about “male” population, that would approximate the snitching @ssh0l3s to general population ratio to 15%, which, quite honestly, I doubt. If everybody “shares responsibility” (the funny way in which gringos call -snitching-), then no one is “productively” snitching (as they themselves fear)
Again, from where did you get that data? In the case of East Germany it is easy to check:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stasi
Personnel and recruitment:
Between 1950 and 1989, the Stasi employed a total of 274,000 people in an effort to root out the class enemy.[12][13] In 1989, the Stasi employed 91,015 people full-time, including 2,000 fully employed unofficial collaborators, 13,073 soldiers and 2,232 officers of GDR army,[14] along with 173,081 unofficial informants inside GDR[15] and 1,553 informants in West Germany.[16]
~
Since there were 16 million East Germans in 1990, snitching @ssh0l3s to general population ratio would be:
(264096 = (91015 + 173081)) / 16000000 = 1.65%
I lived in East Germany and very well learned about the stasi. I was bothered by them (followed around on the streets), summoned for “clarifications” (for making fun of them, communism) and even offered a “job” by them and I can tell you that people didn’t mind the stasi as much as you would like to believe, even though they were doing their best to instill fear in the people. People were bothered way more by their perceived lesser quality of life (as compared to West Germans’), not being able to travel wherever they pleased, …
I (lbrtchx) did myself call Hubertus Knabe’ bluff:
https://www.ted.com/talks/hubertus_knabe_the_dark_secrets_of_a_surveillance_state?language=en
I would like for him to do some comparative anthropology on repression. At that 1.65% stasi rate given the current 324 million U.S. population, don’t you think the FBI, CIA, NSA, … employ more than 5,346,000 people including “unofficial informants”?
They themselves list some 100,000 as “employees”: FBI: 35,104; CIA: 21,575; NSA: 35,000; USAID: 3,797. But that figure is deceiving. Informing prior to Iran’s mullahs’ revolution or during stasi time didn’t mean the same. Nowadays were all carry two-way tele prompters, recording absolutely all we do, that were considered utter dystopia during those times.
I live here in NYC which is a snitching cesspool. In addition to those “fusion centers” they have employers, business affiliated “programs” such as “nexus” with mandatory snitching cells. Imagine, even the FBI has had public bickerings with the NYPD (which has its own “‘Intelligence’ Division & Counterterrorism Bureau”) about what they have been doing even outside of their jurisdiction.
I am curious about the snitching @ssh0l3s to general population ratio in the U.S. including “unofficial informants”. Of course, when that “happens” in “‘the’ land of ‘the’ ‘free’ …” it is different, since they do it “freedom-lovingly”
truth and peace and love,
RCL
$ date
Sat May 28 13:47:09 EDT 2016
My question is why Obama havent went prison. That guy going prison for driving Isis and so on and Obama have been funding Isis so which one is worst? Obama is one should go prison not just this guy. Check out the leak from Scott Bennett which have proven Isis being funding by Obama.
My question is he went to prison for joining or helping they why Obama not going prison for funding Isis which have Scort Bennett work at same place Edward Snoden work at and Scott leak some documents about Obama been funding Isis is that double standards?
How many young American Zionists leave for Israel at the age of 18 to join the IDF? They engage in an illegal campaign of occupation and terrorism against an oppressed civilian population half of which are kids under the age of 17. Then they come back to America and subvert our national interests and policies by serving Israel before America. A new law should be passed so that any person who leaves America to fight for another group or forgein military should have their citizenship revoked, as they are traitors against the USA and not to be trusted.
Had Farrokh been planning to go shoot up a kindergarten, and Elhasan brought him and his guns to the gate, we wouldn’t really be having this conversation. The problem here isn’t really that the cabbie is charged for contributing to a crime, but that the Islamist is charged with attempting to emigrate in the first place. That is flat out Soviet Russia! If he wants to go fight for the Pedobear Poobah of the Prophet, fine, let him go, let him join up!
Once he fights for an enemy army we can revoke his citizenship proper. Then he won’t be our problem any more, except through the gunsights of a drone. Even if we manage to do him no harm, what of it? Syria can only support so many Koran-thumping parasites; either he will die or some other ISIS member will, without us having to lift a finger.
Yeah, yeah, I know, the crowned heads of the world, the wise lights of the UN, say it’s our duty to stop our citizens from emigrating. Well, Americans have a finger set aside for responding to UN orders. They’ll just have to suck it up, go away, go back to their great humanitarian project in South Sudan or something. We have no business spending taxpayer money to lock up people for trying to get Islamic fanatics out of our country.
Unbelievable!
Here we see the law only being applied to the “little people”.
We have a former Secretary of State who by the IG Report flaunted rules and regulations regarding internet security that may have led to a security breech of sources and methods yet who is running for president!
And a cabbie who unknowingly drove a possible terrorist to an airport.
Equal justice for all?
Give me a break.
Utter nonsense. Are you actually claiming that emailgate is for real? LOL
Do you have a similar attitude toward Americans who abandon the US to fight for the Jewish State in the Levant? Sauce for the goose, is all.
As I have written before, the organization most responsible for terrorist plots on American soil is the FBI.
Every time I read pieces about gun problems, police abuses, and so on and so forth, I feel happy for not being born in the US. I have corruption here and many other problems like in other developed countries. But knowing the system won’t abuse you or throw you in jail because you’re of the wrong color is priceless. I also feel safer knowing the granny next door isn’t carrying a weapon in her purse. Most gun problems in my country is with people committing suicide.
Our biggest problem about guns is these people can not shoot straight – always hitting innocent bystanders. The second biggest problem about guns – MENTAL ILLNESS
…..Lump….liked your insightful comment…
…..I live in an urban, growing California city….I love where I live….but, I now harbor the mentality that I will be shot at some period of time, for no rational reason, during some time in my life….
….I walk throughout the city with some hesitation….should I sit outside when drinking my coffee?….should I stand behind something while wait public transportation?….when I take a bus or light rail,should I be sitting closer to the door so I can exit when some one enters a little too fast, looking a little too agitated?……
….and for those who think I am a neurotic,paranoid person, I say my background has been working with both the mentally ill and with accused criminals…..and, I am old enough to remember when only hunters and criminals had guns….not everyone, it seems in the US thinks they need a gun….
Grew up in Urban Texas area, Lots of guns around here. Never worried for my life.
I actually have a firearm but only for home defense and protecting my family because, let’s face it, if someone breaks into your house with a gun it’s better to have one yourself than to put yourself at their mercy. I also believe that responsible gun owners are a psychological barrier for burglars.
While the main issue in this article isn’t guns, the core issue is the same.
FEAR
They are sentencing a man who had a marginal part to play in aiding someone in leaving the country who “might” have had plans to join a group that admittedly has an atrocious Human Rights Record, to 40 years in prison.
This is pretty clear to me that this is a value sorting incident as a response to fear.
“We” have decided that “Security” is a higher value than “Freedom”
I once read that before the mullahs’ revolution, up to 50% or Iran’s male population were informers. Not voluntary ones, mind you—just people who didn’t want to be tortured to death for a minor political infraction, so they cooperated. East Germany had similar proportions.
It would help if you would remember where you read that. On the NY Times?
Since Iran has never been an aging population and since you are talking about “male” population, that would approximate the snitching @ssh0l3s to general population ratio to 15%, which, quite honestly, I doubt. If everybody “shares responsibility” (the funny way in which gringos call -snitching-), then no one is “productively” snitching (as they themselves fear)
Again, from where did you get that data? In the case of East Germany it is easy to check:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stasi
Personnel and recruitment:
Between 1950 and 1989, the Stasi employed a total of 274,000 people in an effort to root out the class enemy.[12][13] In 1989, the Stasi employed 91,015 people full-time, including 2,000 fully employed unofficial collaborators, 13,073 soldiers and 2,232 officers of GDR army,[14] along with 173,081 unofficial informants inside GDR[15] and 1,553 informants in West Germany.[16]
~
Since there were 16 million East Germans in 1990, snitching @ssh0l3s to general population ratio would be:
(264096 = (91015 + 173081)) / 16000000 = 1.65%
I lived in East Germany and very well learned about the stasi. I was bothered by them (followed around on the streets), summoned for “clarifications” (for making fun of them, communism) and even offered a “job” by them and I can tell you that people didn’t mind the stasi as much as you would like to believe, even though they were doing their best to instill fear in the people. People were bothered way more by their perceived lesser quality of life (as compared to West Germans’), not being able to travel wherever they pleased, …
I (lbrtchx) did myself call Hubertus Knabe’ bluff:
https://www.ted.com/talks/hubertus_knabe_the_dark_secrets_of_a_surveillance_state?language=en
I would like for him to do some comparative anthropology on repression. At that 1.65% stasi rate given the current 324 million U.S. population, don’t you think the FBI, CIA, NSA, … employ more than 5,346,000 people including “unofficial informants”?
They themselves list some 100,000 as “employees”: FBI: 35,104; CIA: 21,575; NSA: 35,000; USAID: 3,797. But that figure is deceiving. Informing prior to Iran’s mullahs’ revolution or during stasi time didn’t mean the same. Nowadays were all carry two-way tele prompters, recording absolutely all we do, that were considered utter dystopia during those times.
I live here in NYC which is a snitching cesspool. In addition to those “fusion centers” they have employers, business affiliated “programs” such as “nexus” with mandatory snitching cells. Imagine, even the FBI has had public bickerings with the NYPD (which has its own “‘Intelligence’ Division & Counterterrorism Bureau”) about what they have been doing even outside of their jurisdiction.
I am curious about the snitching @ssh0l3s to general population ratio in the U.S. including “unofficial informants”. Of course, when that “happens” in “‘the’ land of ‘the’ ‘free’ …” it is different, since they do it “freedom-lovingly”
truth and peace and love,
RCL
$ date
Sat May 28 13:47:09 EDT 2016
Barabbas, agreed!
I write this in sadness not sarcasm, When deplorable right wing talk radio hosts read this article they would probably be trying to figure out how to express that this Muslim is lucky to be in prison for 48 years, because otherwise he may be one of the 25% of the world Muslim population we are doing our very best to ensure are blown up.
The Federal Bureau of Entrapment launches more “terror” plots on American soil every year than al Qaeda has in a decade-and-a-half. And they’re proud of it.
Right, the FBI gets people off the street who sooner or later would join up with actual terrorists. You understand how this works, right?
Yeah, we know how this works. And so would you if you bothered to inform yourself.
;^)
Ah, so, one of our resident authoritarians, Rodger Lodger, endorses the dystopian Minority Report style of law enforcement.
you approve of entrapment?? Bush Administration Convicted of War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity….Do you also approve of TORTURE?? Wars based on lies?? GO back 14 years….WHAT TERRORISTS?? WHAT Isis??
F…B…E…
J E Hoover betrayed the U.S.A.
J E Hoover ran a secret police operation
J E Hoover ran a death squad (fred hampton etal)
J E Hoover was a racist and a sociopath
I feel like the historical trick of changing the names of evils with every new generation in order to trick the new generation should’ve gone the way of the dodo what with our ever-accumulating Internet archive
Can we say the new war against drugs anyone?
Why don’t we keep the hounds from bothering anyone who hasn’t actually harmed anyone else :b
They’re looking to make crypto the next big prohibition, it seems.
Y’know, who am I to argue against possibilities when only 16 years after the freedom-loving 90’s ppl line up en masse to have their underwear checked…but I don’t see it :b
Made the mistake of driving while appearing arabic, perhaps? WTF?!?! Yep, a nation run by a criminal class. Thank goodness(?) Native Americans never prosecuted the “terrorists” that invaded them. Apparently modern law enforcement don’t have near enough to do here in Der HomeLand so they have to replicate BrownShirt Nazism. Here we are in the New World Order, the New Secular Order like it says on (not) your dollar bill (but the Fed’s that you get to play with and rent, eternally at egregious rates of usury and debt-slave-ness) where war is peace, apples are oranges and criminals are the, ahem, justice system.
one guy sending a wouldbe ISIS out of the country gets 48+ years in prison while WALLSTREET ROBS THE COUNTRY, ROBS INVESTORS, ROBS AMERICAN HOMES, FALSIFIES THOUSANDS OF DOCUMENTS AND LIES TO EVERYONE, while BUSH FALSIFIES WMD, INVADES A SOVEREIGN COUNTRY, GET THOUSANDS KILLED…..
but forgetting the organized crime that is wallstreet and the people in govt, the cabbie did america a favor – hello. Imagine if all the wannabe ISIS or wannabe terrorists wanted to leave the country – you wouldnt by them a ticket out?
GIVE ME A FUCKING BREAK!
“GET TOUSANDS KILLED” actually some studies show over a million killed and even before we invaded our sanctions were responsible for the deaths of 500,000 children.
As we were bringing freedom, democracy and American Values to Iraq BBC News reported April 17, 2009, “According to several studies of the US military…30% of military women are raped while serving (14% of them gang raped), 71% are sexually assaulted, and 90% are sexually harassed.”
According to data reported by BPW/USA … military women were 15 times more likely to be raped by their fellows than die in the war.
ty for that amplification
You are welcome and you would do the same for me.
we were bringing them freedom?? democracy(NO)? American Values??? GREED – CORRUPTION?? IRAN was a secular democracy – WE installed the SHAH – (pick a title…..Monarch…..Dictator…..Despot…..Tyrant….PUPPET??)
Go to Egypt – Mubarak military dictator…. Afghanistan – Bin Laden we supplied him with all the weapons he could ever use…..
I’ve listed three people – our government used them AND then discarded them….all three are dead – dead men tell no TRUTH about dirty deals…
the poison gas used by Saddam?? supplied by the good old U.S.A…..
Yes and I do not think you gained you fact based info from right wing talk radio or Fox non-News.