Deceit and TerrorHamid Hayat didn’t want to believe that his closest friend was a paid government agent. Then, awaiting trial, he learned Naseem Khan would be the star witness against him.

The prison warden’s letter arrived three days before Christmas.
Last fall, I wrote a letter to a medium-security prison in Arizona, requesting an interview with an inmate named Hamid Hayat. He was serving a 24-year sentence after being convicted of receiving terrorist training in Pakistan. Although Hayat’s case made international headlines when he was arrested as part of an alleged al Qaeda “sleeper cell” in Lodi, a rural California town, he had never talked with a reporter before.
Prison interviews aren’t uncommon. Typically, a reporter fills out the required forms and then works with the facility to set a date and time. Hayat’s lawyer and his family assured me that Hayat was a model prisoner, so I was optimistic. I filled out the proper forms in October. A month later, the federal prison asked me to provide a letter from The Intercept, which I did. In early December, a prison staffer assured me that he was working to “clear up one last issue.” But on December 22, the prison warden denied my interview request because of “safety, security, and orderly management considerations.” The warden declined to talk with me, and there was no appeals process.
Stymied by the prison, I gave Hayat’s lawyer a list of questions about the specifics of his case and his life now. I had seen Hayat only in videos of his FBI interrogation — a decade old and a lifetime ago. When I got his answers and saw recent photos of him in prison, I was surprised. Gone was the thin, timid young man with the hunched shoulders and wispy beard. In his place was a muscular man with a tight ponytail and sunglasses who stared coolly into the camera.Hayat didn’t say much about prison conditions, other than that he had little contact with the outside world — just one visit a year, from his family — and that his father hadn’t been granted permission to visit him in eight years. His phone time, too, was limited compared to other inmates.
Although the restrictions on phone calls and visits clearly irritated Hayat, he said the prison had, in an odd way, broadened his perspective by giving him his first exposure to people of diverse backgrounds and faiths. To an outsider, his childhood, split between California and Pakistan, sounds worldly. In reality, he grew up cloistered in a community of rural Pakistanis, who held tight to religious traditions and conservative culture regardless of whether they remained in an ancestral village or moved across the world to Lodi or London. “I was just in my community, so I really didn’t know much about what was going on around me,” he said. “I look back almost every day and think, ‘I wish I could have met more people out there.’”
His experience with other inmates had made him ashamed of some opinions he’d grown up with. As a teen, he’d celebrated the news that Pakistani terrorists had kidnapped and beheaded Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. In recorded conversations introduced by prosecutors at his trial, the jury listened as Hayat gleefully told an FBI informant, “They killed him. So I’m pleased about that. They cut him into pieces and sent him back. That was a good job they did. Now they can’t send one Jewish person to Pakistan.” In prison, he has remained a devout Muslim, he said, but now takes a more inclusive view of his faith and others and is friendly with Christian and Jewish inmates. “I was wrong, what I said,” Hayat said of Pearl. “I totally disagree with myself. I didn’t know much then. I was pretty much not open-minded then about a lot of stuff.”
A car drives by a park in a residential section of Lodi, California. Video: Ramin Talaie for The Intercept
At 19, Hayat had just returned to the United States after a decade of studying at a religious school in Pakistan. He had suffered a nearly fatal brain infection and needed a place to recover. He had only an elementary school education and hadn’t spoken English in years. He tried to enroll in high school, but he had aged out. He dabbled in community college, taking a single course in English grammar. He slept on a mattress in his parents’ garage. Most days, he hung out around the mosque. That’s where, in 2002, he first met an undercover FBI informant named Naseem Khan, the man who would befriend him and then betray his trust.
Hayat’s father was the first to catch on — something in one of Khan’s conversations struck him as odd. “He had a bad feeling about him,” Hayat recalled. But even after Hayat’s parents warned their son about his friend, Hayat kept talking with him. He didn’t want to believe that his closest friend was really a paid government agent. But he didn’t get proof of Khan’s involvement in the case until he was already in jail, waiting for his trial, and his lawyer told him that Khan would be the star witness against him. That’s when Hayat realized he’d never really known Khan, that his parents had been right all along.
Hayat remembered their conversations. At first, they talked about movies and cricket — cricket is one of Hayat’s favorite topics, but Khan always wanted to talk politics. They’d hang around their imam’s house or drive to a local park. Khan was frequently at Hayat’s house, even spending the night. When Hayat returned to Pakistan for a visit in the spring of 2003, Khan often called him. At first, Hayat was glad to hear from his friend, but he grew annoyed that Khan aggressively steered their conversations toward jihad.
“Every time he’d call, he always wanted to talk about politics,” Hayat said. “I was like, ‘Why does he always want to talk about this?’ … I started having a different view, thinking different about him.”
Eventually, Hayat got so frustrated by the conversations that he stopped answering Khan’s calls. It’s during this time period, roughly from October 2003 to November 2004, that the FBI claimed Hayat left his village to attend a terrorist training camp in Pakistan. Hayat said he’d mostly hung out around his small village, playing video games and taking care of his mother, who suffered from hepatitis. A couple of times a month, he’d venture to the nearest big city, Rawalpindi, for a weekend. Once, he went to a wedding in the southern part of the country, the opposite direction from the alleged camp. In the answers he provided to his lawyer, Hayat remained adamant that he never attended a jihadi camp or received any kind of terrorist training.
While Khan was pretending to be Hayat’s confidant in Lodi, he was living a dual life in a town 500 miles to the north in the foothills of the Cascades.Khan shared a home near Bend, Oregon, with his then-girlfriend, Josée Hennane, who was in the dark about much of what he was doing in Lodi. Hennane, a tall woman with a kind smile and a mane of curly dark hair, agreed to meet me in a coffee shop in early May. She remembered her time with Khan fondly and still struggled to understand its ending.
Hennane and Khan had met around 2000 through Match.com. Hennane fell for Khan immediately. He was good-looking and a great cook. They lived a quiet life. He worked as a clerk at the K Market convenience store. She worked in sales. She envisioned their time together stretching far into the future — kids, a house, an ordinary life. He seemed to be looking forward, too, she said, away from rocky relationships with his family and past heartache.
Then, the September 11 attacks happened. One of only a handful of Muslims in Bend, Khan kept a Quran in his apartment, but Hennane didn’t think of him as devout and certainly not radical. Somehow, Khan’s name and social security number came up during an FBI investigation into an Islamic charity accused of funding terrorist groups. FBI agents showed up in Bend to question him. During their conversation, the agents determined that Khan had nothing to do with the terrorist financing case, but he caught their attention with a fabricated story about seeing terrorist leaders at a mosque he used to attend in rural California.
Intrigued by his story, the agents hired him as an informant. He told Hennane he was going to California for a while to help out on a case. He also said that if he impressed the FBI, perhaps he could work as an agent or get a job with the CIA. Although he didn’t have an American high school degree, he spoke Urdu and Pashto and understood Pakistan’s culture and politics, important and rare skills in a post-9/11 world.
“I think he got drawn in,” Hennane told me. “It fed him, and it fed his ego. Helping out, making this place safer.”
Khan didn’t give her details about his work. He disappeared for long stretches of time and didn’t say much about where he’d been or what he was doing. He began carrying a locked briefcase. She assumed he kept his case paperwork inside. His work strained their relationship, so much so that he invited her to Portland to meet with FBI agents so he could prove he actually worked for the agency. Hennane said she remembered meeting the agents at a coffee shop.
Her boyfriend’s secretive behavior continued until the Lodi case became public in the summer of 2005. As Hayat’s trial neared, Khan told her that he feared for their safety. The FBI paid to install a security system on the couple’s house. Shortly before the trial, Hennane went out to her car in the morning and found a note. In it, Khan apologized and said that he needed to end their romance. Hennane was so devastated and confused that she drove to the Sacramento FBI office, where she begged the agents to tell her Khan’s whereabouts.
“I went to their office, and they said, ‘Let it go, it’s over,’” Hennane said.
Khan vanished from her life. Years later, she said, she received a ticket for a toll violation on the East Coast and assumed that Khan still listed their old address in Oregon. She thought perhaps he’d moved to the East Coast and started over. She never heard from him again.
“Looking back, I think he thought of it as his family, his law enforcement family,” Hennane said. “From the sound of it, I think he wasn’t going to look back.”
A man walks past the window of Rice and Spice, a Pakistani restaurant in Lodi, California. Video: Ramin Talaie for The Intercept
In many ways, Khan fits the profile of the type of dubious informant the FBI has used in the aftermath of 9/11. He had a troubled past and a rocky relationship with family — he told his ex-girlfriend that relatives had abused him by dropping him down a well in Pakistan when he was a child. He had falsely accused his mother of abuse when he was a teen, and he had been convicted of burglary in Yuba City, California. But as a Pakistani immigrant, he could slip easily into Lodi’s Muslim community — and this was crucial for the FBI.
“After 9/11, the FBI realized it hadn’t been paying enough attention to terrorism,” said Michael German, a former FBI agent who spent 16 years with the agency on undercover operations and domestic terrorism and is now a fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice. “The demand to identify people who could provide information was enormous, and unfortunately, there wasn’t a lot of solid information by which the informants could be vetted.”
The FBI did vet Khan, checking his immigration, criminal, and employment records, but it didn’t check with the one person who likely had stronger feelings about his truthfulness than anyone else — his mother.
Khan’s mother, Nazhat Shaheen, didn’t learn about her son’s role in the Hayat case until the trial was underway. A relative showed her a news story about the star witness in the trial, a Pakistani immigrant named Naseem Khan. At this, Shaheen began to worry.
It had been years since she had spoken with her firstborn son, but based on her previous experiences with him, she worried that he wasn’t telling the truth about Hayat attending a training camp. Shaheen wrote a letter to Hayat’s lawyer. “While neighbors in Lodi might be surprised by his unconscionable scheming for self-gain, I find his behavior in keeping with his dishonest past,” she wrote. “He is a bagful of lies, deceit, and air. He will betray and deceive any and all parties for his own gain. … He can even take the FBI for a ride without their knowing it.”
A letter from Naseem Khan’s mother to Hamid Hayat’s trial lawyer. Review the whole document here.
It was not easy to find Shaheen. I wanted to find Khan’s family because I thought they might be able to tell me about Khan’s side of this story, but every address and number proved a dead end. When I mentioned to one of Hayat’s lawyers that I wanted to understand more about Khan, the lawyer said that years before, someone on the legal team had gotten a phone call from a man who claimed he was related to Khan. That man turned out to be Khan’s half-brother, who told me the person I really needed to talk to was Khan’s mother.
Shaheen, 67, lives in a quiet suburb in Ohio. I agreed to use her maiden name and not mention the town where she lives because community members don’t know that her son worked as an FBI informant, and she is ashamed of his role. We sat at her dining room table and, over several hours, she told me her story.
Shaheen grew up in a conservative family in Pakistan. Her family supported her ambition for education, and she received a master’s degree before her parents decided it was time to find a match for their daughter. She had a disastrous marriage to a Pakistani military officer that lasted only three months before the couple divorced. By then, though, she was pregnant.
Her parents decided that Shaheen would give her child, Naseem, to be raised by her ex-husband’s parents. Shaheen, meanwhile, moved to the United States, where she settled in the Midwest. Eventually, she married a doctor, had two sons, and became an English teacher. She was living a comfortable, upper-middle-class life when, in 1988, she heard from relatives in Pakistan that Naseem, then 16, wanted to join her.
Shaheen went to Pakistan, sponsored his green card, and brought him to America. The problems began immediately. Khan complained that he didn’t fit into their family. At first, Shaheen pitied her son because he’d told her wild stories that his family in Pakistan abused him, shocking him with electricity, beating him with sticks, locking him in a bathroom, and hanging him upside down in a well.
Then, she said, the lies began. He lied to her about trivial things, like pretending to rake leaves but really just filling garbage bags with air. She thought it was typical teenager stuff. Things turned serious about two months into his stay, when social services knocked on Shaheen’s door. Khan had made a claim of abuse against his mother, telling his high school that he wasn’t getting enough to eat and was being kept in poor conditions. Shaheen said she took the workers through her four-bedroom home and showed them the well-stocked refrigerator and a freezer full of halal meat. No charges were filed, and the social workers determined that “the youth is neither a neglected nor abused child,” and his mother was taking “proper and responsible measures” to care for him, according to a letter from the local social services agency.
The relationship between Shaheen and her son never recovered.
“It was all about tricks,” Shaheen said. “It was all about lying and deceit. I could see that I could not trust him.”
She made arrangements for her son to return to Pakistan. She took Khan’s green card and mailed it to immigration officials with a letter explaining that she would no longer sponsor him. Then, she took him to New York and watched him get onto a plane. “I was devastated,” Shaheen told me. “I went through so much to get him.”
Two or three months later, she heard from her son. He’d somehow managed to get a ticket back to the United States and to convince immigration authorities to let him re-enter. He sent her a cassette tape on which he apologized for his behavior, she said. He tried calling. He told his mother that he had no desire to live with her, but he did want money, a monthly allowance. She refused. He wrote her letters, apologizing for his behavior. None of his efforts swayed her.
She said she believes that once, while she was back in Pakistan for her mother’s funeral, Khan tried to get inside her house, and that he might have been looking for his green card, which she’d already turned over to authorities. When she returned from Pakistan, she noticed that someone had broken in and searched through paperwork. She filed a report with the police, but nothing came of it. The last time she heard from Khan was around 1992 or 1993, when he told her he was living in Texas, she said, and again tried to apologize. She didn’t believe the apologies he offered were sincere. “I was done with him, I really was,” she said.
At the end of our interview, Shaheen said that she wanted to know the truth from her son. She wanted him to promise on the Quran that he believed Hayat really had attended a terrorist training camp. But when we talked again a few months later, she’d changed her mind. She said she didn’t think that promising on the Quran would ensure her son’s honesty.
A car drives through an intersection in Lodi, California. Video: Ramin Talaie for The Intercept
Like Khan’s mother, I wanted to hear the truth, whatever it was. Did Khan really believe his claims about Hayat? What prompted Khan to tell the FBI that he’d seen al Qaeda leaders in Lodi, something the government later determined was false? Did he continue to work in the intelligence world after Hayat’s trial?
I first reached out to Khan just after New Year’s 2015. Although the Hayat family told me they’d heard rumors that Khan had remained in the Lodi area, working in insurance, public records showed that he first moved to the East Coast, near Washington, D.C., around the time of Hayat’s trial, and had since returned to Oregon. His address at the time was in Salem, the state’s capital.
I pulled off a busy four-lane road of fast-food restaurants and chain stores, down a side street and into an apartment complex of bland, two-story gray condominiums. I walked up the short sidewalk to his door and rang the bell. A few seconds later, the door opened slightly and a thin man in his late 30s or early 40s wearing a white T-shirt answered.
“Hi, I’m looking for Naseem Khan,” I said.He nodded slightly.
I quickly said that I was a reporter, and as soon as I mentioned Hayat, he began to close the door.
“Can you tell me if you’re still involved with the FBI?” I asked.
“No, I’m not,” he said. He took my business card before closing the door.
I followed up by sending a letter explaining that I hoped to sit down and talk with him, that I wanted his perspective. I heard nothing.
In March 2015, I tried again. This time, as I stood at his door and rang the bell, I noticed a small security camera in the window. No one answered. I wrote a note, once again saying that I was writing a story and hoped to hear his perspective. I left it on his door, and I again heard nothing.
All of that happened before I talked with Khan’s mother and his ex-girlfriend, before I’d heard Hayat’s version of events. I felt it was important to try to reach Khan one more time, to give him another chance to respond. Before heading to Oregon, I checked public records and found that he had registered a new company, a tourist shop selling Pakistani fabrics, sunglasses, and earrings in a small beachside town in the state.
In late June, I arrived at his shop. I got there before it opened and waited on a bench outside. Just before 10 a.m., Khan walked past me, clean-cut and athletic-looking in a red T-shirt and dark pants. He unlocked the door to his small shop, which had a sweeping view of the ocean. After he went inside, I knocked on the glass door. When he came to the door, I explained, yet again, that I was a reporter working on a story about the Hayat case.
He shook his head no.
I told him that I’d talked with his mother, who said she didn’t think he’d told the truth about Hayat attending a terrorist camp. He looked directly at me and shrugged his shoulders.
“I’m not interested,” he said.
He tried to close the door, but my boot was blocking the doorway. He tried again, and I moved out of the way. He closed the door and turned the lock.
A freight train passes through the town of Lodi, California. Video: Ramin Talaie for The Intercept
The life that Hayat lost when he went to prison no longer exists.
His parents sold their house in Lodi to pay their legal bills. They moved about 20 minutes away to a neighborhood in disrepair. When I visited them one morning, the neighbor across the street was sitting on a car hood, drinking a can of beer and staring with a vacant look. Trash blew across the pavement.
Hayat is no longer a newlywed — far from it. Tired of waiting for him, his wife divorced him in 2012. His mother told him about the divorce during a prison visit. His life is on hold until his scheduled release in 2026.
Hayat says that he won’t agree to a plea deal that might cut his sentence if he drops his appeal and admits guilt.
“I’m not gonna plead guilty to something I didn’t do,” Hayat told his lawyer in response to the questions I submitted.
Hayat continues to fight. In 2014, he asked a federal judge to overturn his conviction, accusing his trial lawyer of ineffective assistance of counsel and claiming that the government failed to disclose evidence that would have helped his case. In August, his case was assigned to a new federal judge, Deborah Barnes, for further proceedings, which are ongoing.
Even if wins his appeal, prosecutors could decide to try the case again. Hayat is ready for that.
“I’ve been through it once, and I’ll do it again,” he said.
Documents published with this story:
Abbie VanSickle is a reporter for the Investigative Reporting Program at University of California, Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism. She also trained as a lawyer and practiced in Washington state.
Top video: Men stand across the street from the Lodi Muslim Mosque in Lodi, California, on Nov. 4, 2016.

Deceit and TerrorHamid Hayat didn’t want to believe that his closest friend was a paid government agent. Then, awaiting trial, he learned Naseem Khan would be the star witness against him.
“Terrorism” cases like this are created to justify mass spying, militarization of the police, bigger repression against society, shortly said: implementation of totalitarian system. Khan made all lies (to his mother) for a simple thing: to get a life in the US, and all lies for the bill of FBI, to get money from them and make his own company. Now he got a good life with destroying the life of other person. Such people is what American billionaires and politicians need to implement totalitarian system.
The Intercept could benefit from noticing phrases like this :
“His parents sold their house in Lodi to pay their legal bills. They moved about 20 minutes away to a neighborhood in disrepair”
-as they appear in the various “targeted individual” blogs that pop up and disappear, as the FBI/DHS use unconscionable tactics to put the squeeze on individuals that they want to use as informants.
The phrases “we will make you homeless,” and “they can take your house away” and “these are campaigns of total destruction waged on people” and more, appear with great frequency in these blogs, as the agencies use such to taunt and destroy the persons they are seeking to corrupt.
A good line of questioning for any of these informants that you can access is “were you contacted online by strange people who pointed you to the dialectic of “organized gang stalking?”
“Did your crucial emails disappear at ‘coincidental’ times- such as trying to contact your lawyer?”
“Did you experience unusual or even perverse and scary re-directions of your internet browser?”
“Did you try to open emails, and then, your browser froze, the email disappeared, and then, tabs opened in your browser that- somehow- knew where all of your online writing is locted?”
Abbie- It seems like you’ve spent a very long time writing and researching this article. Thank you. It was wonderful- easy to follow and an important reality for everyone in the United States to try and understand. Again, thank you!
According to this article, Mr. Khan was paid $230,000.00 over three years. Another article in The Intercept stated the FBI has about 15,000 such paid informants. That would amount to more than $3 billion over 3 years or roughly $1B per year. With that type of money on offer, it is no wonder that immigrants from Pakistan are seeking to enter the USA. You don’t need to build a wall, just cut off the cash flow. But then the FBI would need to find something else to do, and I suppose it is better for the Pakistanis to be informing on each other, rather than getting into trouble. A large part of the East German economy was based on paid informants, although I don’t know if it was an economic model that others should strive to emulate. However, if you’ve outsourced all your manufacturing, I suppose that people have to do something with their time. Somehow I’d imagined the information economy would be a little different than it has turned out.
I disagree a little bit with you. The Paki people are not bad people. You can say they are both greedy and clever, so they don’t let a good opportunity to earn a quick buck go begging. But that is also the trait that any decent person, like Hillary Clinton for example, displays.
Ethics is what the nasty Brits walked off with when they finally gave freedom to all Pakis. So we can’t always blame them for not having any ethics.
Good piece. Reading it I kept thinking of San Bernardino, of Farook and Malik, the alleged shooters, who will never get their day in court. And I think of Pierre Omidyar and of Snowden’s sacrifice without which your article might not have found its venue. In the recent PEN prize interview Snowden intimates (very quietly) that our endless War on Terror is legit. Right about so much else, he is wrong on that. It is not legit.
M. Ewing (AE911 Truth, Supporting Member)
None of this stuff is legitimate. Zero. These assholes get so-called informants to talk people into committing crimes, then bust those people for the crimes that the informants basically created. What utter bullshit. And what a disgusting police state.
Most of the prisoners in Guantanamo were innocent folks caught by Paki bounty hunters. This Hyatt fellow is quite lucky that way.
Those clever folks from Pakistan are worse than Chinese and Nigerians in scamming unsuspecting folks like us. We need that wall more desperately than ever.
Somewhere in this article the alleged terrorist actually did admit to rooting for (at the time) the sort of people who killed Daniel Pearl, so it’s not like we want him. But from a more Trumpy sort of perspective, you could look at this and say that there’s one Pakistani who made a success story in Oregon and another who is sitting in a jail for a very long time instead of being thrown back to the place where everyone cheers on the sort of people who killed Daniel Pearl, and what that adds up to is Immigrants 2, Americans 0. However you look at it, this business of throwing people in jail for going to a training camp or talking about an attack is a sickness, one that leaves us less secure than a quick deportation.
These sorts of things surely undermine confidence in the integrity of our law system’s fairness. Particularly, employing people of poor character to agitate against naive and mentally challenged vulnerable individuals is a recipe for trouble. In the end, these practices detract from finding genuine threats and may undermine confidence in future prosecutions when the public learns of these abuses from media investigations.
This is Journalism at its finest. Absolutely great. Thanks for your dedication.
Perhaps, just perhaps, your contribution to dragging the truth out of the layers and layers of lies and obfuscation, will ultimately help put this case to rest, one way or the other. The final truth is out there, just waiting to be discovered. I only hope it’s the one that satisfies real justice.
Brilliant piece of investigative journalism, Abbie.
This is simply another example of how the boogeyman of “War On Terror” is designed as a national security scare. Such boogeymen are used to justify anything and everything. And, sadly, this election has proven that people will surrender their rights to gain a little security. I doubt the vehicle used to achieve their objectives, Naseem Khan in this case, are of any consequence to those in power. They are a means to an end. The end here is to continue doing whatever they want without the pesky people asking question. This is what intercept is doing. Asking questions to those in power.
Give Dick Wolfe a bit of time, and he’ll whitewash Naseem Khan on one of his formulaic “Criminal Minds” episodes, which dozy Westerners will consume like pablum.
Thank you for this report. As disgusting as it is, journalism must uncover what needs to be in the open.
As I have said before, and will probably say again, the organization most responsible for terrorist plots on American soil is the FBI.
this whole thing smells rotten. I suspect the truth is still not out. Part of the 9/11 cover-up?
We will soon get rid of these nuisance Packies.
Says a scumbag racist Trump surrogate while torturing his cat.
Fact
….apparently I spoke too soon; defense attorney Wazhma Mojaddidi was hired by Lodi community members…..
…..I am wondering if she returned the retainer to those trusting people. Ms. Mojddidi now practices in Sacramento in Immigration and Family Law, after graduating from one of the local law schools, McGeorge School of Law. As the trial court judge commented, one wonders why she took the case with no, absolutely, no experience in criminal law.
Amazing……
……thank you Abbie for a very nice piece of investigative reporting….
…..the court appointed defense attorney should be taken to task, should never appear in trial court….
Most of the Paki people are like that, so I’m not surprised. Hillary Clinton was surrounded by too many clever Packies like Huma Abedin, Khizer Khan, Neera Tanden, Desai, etc., which was one of the main reasons she lost. Now the good thing about “extreme vetting” is that it’s better than the wall to keep all these people out, so we can expect some peace here.
Today I caught my Paki neighbor cheating on his wife. Actually, it was my Labrador that alerted me. He is quite friendly with the burkha wearing real wife, but today he growled at this female, apparently because he smelt mischief.
The lesson here is that if you have such malacious neighbors then better keep good attack canines for protection.
I always know when you’ve posted. I can smell your racist stench even over the interweb.
Probably you should reduce your drinking and falling every evening into the gutter from where you collect your stench.
kys,
peace!
Naseem is a quintessential American success story, a shining example of the sort of patriotism and business acumen against which we all need to measure ourselves if we wish to survive in a Trump economy. And reporters are like spies; their job is to tell the reader what they need him to know, while keeping the other things from us. So readers should be like spies, trying to ferret out what the reporter didn’t tell to learn the secrets of success. So far, a Google search for Naseem in Salem leads to a Lookupbear entry for the registration of Khoobsurat, which leads via Google to a store website with the same image shown on the door above: https://squareup.com/store/khoobsuratgiftshop/ But that site seems jammed up (god knows what kind of script is running on it), and I am still not finding the shop shown in the article on Google Maps in the gorgeous seaside location that its Craigslist posting links to. Can anyone get further?
This Khobsurat is a lovely little packy store where you can shop online for anti-terror stuffs and gifts. Why are you posting such links?
52 North Highway 101
Depoe Bay, OR 97341
Contact – 1 (541) 765-2925 ; khoobsuratgiftshop@gmail.com
Yeah, but nosing around the Google Street View, the store at that location didn’t seem to match the photo in the Intercept; hence my dissatisfaction. There’s a galleria visible in the back from the other road but I’m not convinced that’s the same either, and they have a different name on their map. With this kind of topic you want to see the level of fine detail that convinces you it’s not all some crazy story.
Good job Abbie, in this climate of Jornos poting nonsense-here comes someone who reaffairms my faith in that profession
Nice piece Abbie. Proper Intercept reporting.
Thanks for the great work.
When reporters actually realize that the goal of 9/11 was to mine copper out of Afghanistan, you’ll realize you are chasing boogie man patsy stories.
America invaded Afghan for the exact same reason that Russia invaded Afghan in 1979.
Copper.
You can confirm my synopsis by looking to the Declassified Kissinger State Department Cables — published on Wikileaks.
Bottom line, the stage was set by 1973. Both wars were the result of a business deal gone bad and everything since amounts to nothing more than patsy stories and disinformation to cover up the fact that psychopaths are in charge.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, the ‘war on terror’ is really a “war for the for the diminishing oil and precious metals here on Mother Earth. Unfortunately, they are all where people of color live.
Watch the move Christopher Walken move “Dogs of War” on Youtube or Netflix.
That’s what happened in Afghan, The Congo, Eritrea, Iraq, Afghan, Libya, Chile, Argentina, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Japan, Cuba, etc.
That’s why we’ve got mercs everywhere, today.
Afghanistan wasn’t just about copper, it was even more about a pipeline they wanted to build.
That damn pipeline led to the first legal dispute with high level corrupting of the Indian judiciary. I refer to the Enron Dabhol Power plant corruption case in India, which was sold on the dream of gas as fuel from the CIA pipeline.
WRONG.
Go read CFR.org.
Pipeline has nothing to do with it. NO OIL. That whole story was invented.
It is truly disconcerting how easily our checks and balances fail, and how utterly worthless our constitutional rights are in the face of today’s criminal justice system. Preemptive arrest should be a very limited tool in law enforcement, used sparingly and only under the most necessary of circumstances. Sending out informants into neighborhoods and communities to root out people with unamerican sentiments’ sounds like something from the Hoover or McCarthy days, or something you might expect in Soviet Russia.
That said, I’m wondering how much of an impact it would have on the case if Khan was discredited as a witness. As I read these two articles, it wasn’t so much Khan’s testimony as the recordings he enabled and provided that landed Hayat in prison. You don’t have to be an honest man to wear a wire and record someone incriminating themselves, and despite explanations that he was trying to impress Khan, the things Hayat said on tape could certainly not have helped him during his trial.
I hope he gets a new trial and I hope this time everything is submitted into evidence. Similarly, I hope that whomever is picked for jury duty this time around, wont allow themselves to be bullied into a guilty verdict. That should NEVER happen, and let’s face it with the comments made by the jury foreman Hayat wasn’t exactly judged by his peers.
WTF? You pasted exactly what DB wrote below. Yet said nothing on your own. What is the point, other than nothing.
Great reporting, Abbie!
It is truly disconcerting how easily our checks and balances fail, and how utterly worthless our constitutional rights are in the face of today’s criminal justice system. Preemptive arrest should be a very limited tool in law enforcement, used sparingly and only under the most necessary of circumstances. Sending out informants into neighborhoods and communities to root out people with unamerican sentiments’ sounds like something from the Hoover or McCarthy days, or something you might expect in Soviet Russia.
That said, I’m wondering how much of an impact it would have on the case if Khan was discredited as a witness. As I read these two articles, it wasn’t so much Khan’s testimony as the recordings he enabled and provided that landed Hayat in prison. You don’t have to be an honest man to wear a wire and record someone incriminating themselves, and despite explanations that he was trying to impress Khan, the things Hayat said on tape could certainly not have helped him during his trial.
I hope he gets a new trial and I hope this time everything is submitted into evidence. Similarly, I hope that whomever is picked for jury duty this time around, wont allow themselves to be bullied into a guilty verdict. That should NEVER happen, and let’s face it with the comments made by the jury foreman Hayat wasn’t exactly judged by his peers.
Give this man a prize.
This seems to be a good story but the gratuitous videos slow my computer so much that I had to give up trying to read it.
Please repost without the gratuitous videos.
Yes the video of a freight train passing through the town of Lodi, California does nothing for the story.
Sped here to leave a similar comment. I didn’t even try to read it once I saw the many embedded movies. I have an old computer and I have to type this quickly and then close this page or my fan’s gonna blow up.
Yes, please repost without that shit.
then may i suggest you join the 21st century and arm yourselves with a computer of sufficient power to navigate today’s internet?
I am horrified that any person in the US finds this “preemptive crime fighting” anything but a travesty.