Everything about Iyman Faris totally explained
Iyman Faris aka
Mohammad Rauf (b. on 4 June, 1969 in
Kashmir) is a former
truck driver from
Columbus, Ohio who was convicted of providing material support to
Al Qaeda, for his role in a plot to destroy the
Brooklyn Bridge. His name has mistakenly been reported as Lyman Harris.
On
22 June,
2003, the
United States Department of Justice revealed to
Time that Faris had served as a double agent for the
FBI for months. Faris was detained two weeks after
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was arrested in Pakistan on
1 March. While installed as a double agent for the US Government, Faris sent messages to his terrorist commanders by mobile phone and email from an FBI safe house in
Virginia. A senior
Bush administration official told
Time, "He was sitting in the safe house making calls for us. It was a huge triumph."
Early history
Faris first entered the United States in 1994, and married Geneva Bowling the following year. In 1996 he was said to have received a speeding ticket, and
Newsweek reports that in 1997 he overturned his vehicle on a highway entrance ramp.
Faris became a U.S. citizen in 1999, and allegedly returned to
Pakistan the following year, and moved along to
Afghanistan,where he's accused of having met
Osama bin Laden.
While in the region, documents provided to the court show that Faris was asked to investigate the possibility of using an
ultralight aircraft as an "escape plane" for bin Laden. He used an
internet cafe in
Karachi, Pakistan to research ultralights and purchased 2000
sleeping bags.
His five-year marriage ended in 2000, and he lived with a friend for several weeks, while looking for a new place to live - NBC reported a
drunk driving conviction against him during this time.
Faris' ex-wife later said he'd suffered from hearing imaginary voices, and sudden bouts of believing that somebody was choking him.
Brooklyn Bridge plot
In late 2001, while in Pakistan, Faris went to a travel agency to have expired airline tickets to
Yemen re-issued for several unknown colleagues. Since he wasn't the original purchaser, he claimed to be a preacher from
Tablighi Jamaat
In early 2002, Faris was introduced to an operative identified only as "C-2", and learned of a plot allegedly involving the simultaneous destruction of the
Brooklyn Bridge by cutting through cables with
blowtorches, and a second group that would
derail a train in
Washington D.C..
Faris' investigations into obtaining the necessary tools for the dual-operation involved asking a friend where he might purchase welding equipment, and researching the structure of the bridge on the internet. He concluded that the operation was unlikely, and sent a message back to Pakistan calling off the plot, stating that "The weather is too hot".
Working for FBI
On March 19 2003, Faris was visited by two
FBI agents and an anti-terror officer, who confronted him with testimony from
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, and the results of an intercepted telephone call. Faris was reportedly friendly and accommodating, and agreed to let the agents search his apartment the following day.
He was then granted a deal to work as a double agent, reporting to the FBI. He was ordered to leave his home in Columbus, and stay at a
safe house in Virginia from which he'd appear to continue discussions with his contacts, reporting the information back to the authorities.
Criminal charges
Faris was represented at trial by attorney
Frederick Sinclair. On
May 1,
2003, Faris pled guilty to both charges, for both conspiracy, and providing material support to
Al Qaeda. The documents relating to the charges were not unsealed until
June 19. Shortly after this, it was revealed that Faris had in fact been a
double agent working under orders from the
FBI. Also in May, Faris had been stopped for speeding, a $200 fine, in
Delaware County.
His sentencing was due
August 1, but delayed. On
September 25 he sought to withdraw his
guilty plea claiming that while he admitted to meeting with Khalid, he'd merely been seeking information about Al-Qaeda for a book he wanted to write. He argued that Khalid was giving false information to authorities as revenge, for Faris refusing to be recruited into Al-Qaeda by the lieutenant. The appeal was disallowed. On
28 October he was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment by District Court Judge
Leonie Brinkema.
According to the
New York Times, the plot was uncovered with assistance from the
NSA eavesdropping program. This led to Faris' new lawyer David B. Smith announcing that they were looking into the potential for a direct
lawsuit against
George W. Bush who personally authorized the illegal wiretaps.
In 2004,
Nuradin Abdi, charged with plotting to detonate explosives in
shopping centres, said that Faris had picked him up from
Port Columbus International Airport.
Further Information
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