AUTHOR: Paola Messana/AFP
PHOTO: javno165


DOMESTIC TERROR CASE

MARCH 19 2010 14:41h

'Jihad Jane' pleads not guilty

Text

Pennsylvania resident Colleen LaRose, 46, smiled and appeared relaxed as she was arraigned on charges of conspiracy to support terrorists.

PHILADELPHIA, March 19, 2010 (AFP) - A blonde American who dubbed herself "JihadJane" pleaded not guilty Thursday to recruiting Islamist militants in the latest home-grown terrorism case.

Pennsylvania resident Colleen LaRose, 46, smiled and appeared relaxed as she was arraigned on charges of conspiracy to support terrorists, recruiting militants, and plotting to murder a Swedish cartoonist who had offended some Muslims.

The federal court judge in Philadelphia ordered Rose, whose blonde hair was done up in dreadlocks and a pony tail, to be held without bail until her trial starts May 3. If found guilty she faces up to life in prison.

The rash of cases of so-called home-grown terrorists is a relatively new phenomenon in the United States.

LaRose's case is seen as indicating an alarming new development in which militants are drawn not from Muslim immigrant communities but from Americans born and raised in the United States.

In Chicago, another US citizen, David Coleman Headley, pleaded guilty Thursday to scoping out targets in India for the deadly 2008 Mumbai attacks and plotting to attack a Danish newspaper.

Headley was born Daood Gilani to a Pakistani father and American mother, but later changed to his mother's maiden name and adopted a Western first name, allowing himself to blend in more easily.

LaRose allegedly boasted in Internet traffic, where she went by the monikers "Fatima LaRose" and "JihadJane," that her looks also allowed her to go anywhere undetected.

She allegedly bragged in one email that she could go anywhere undetected, writing that it was "an honour & great pleasure to die or kill for" jihad.

Born in 1963, LaRose she lived in Texas before moving to a community outside the northeast US city of Philadelphia.

Her alleged recruitment drive targeted women with the kind of mobility to escape initial suspicion. They were to possess "passports and the ability to travel to and around Europe in support of violent jihad," the indictment says.

Divorced, LaRose had no known occupation, authorities said.

She is accused of trying to transfer a stolen US passport "to facilitate an act of international terrorism."

In Sweden, the artist widely believed to have been at the center of LaRose's alleged murder plot said he no longer feared her because she would now be under surveillance or behind bars.

"If she was freed, I don't think she would be dangerous anymore," Lars Vilks, 63, told AFP.

Security experts though are increasingly worried by a battle in which militants can be expected to hold US citizenship and all-American backgrounds.

LaRose's transformation into an alleged Islamist plotter is "one of our worst nightmares playing out," said Jerrold Post, author of "The Mind of the Terrorist" and director of the political psychology program at George Washington University.

US counterterrorism agencies are "concerned" about the influence of inspirational figures who reach out online to radicalize new adherents, said National Intelligence Director Dennis Blair.

One such figure is Anwar al-Awlaqi, a radical imam who was born in New Mexico and is believed to be hiding in Yemen, Blair told a congressional hearing last month in his annual threat assessment last month.

Al-Awlaqi has been cited as an influence on three of the hijackers in the September 11, 2001 attacks and was in e-mail contact with Major Nadal Hassan, the US army psychiatrist accused of opening fire at the Fort Hood army base and killing 13 people in November.

The imam has also been linked to a Nigerian student accused of trying to blow up a Detroit-bound flight with explosives in his underwear on Christmas Eve and Sharif Mobley, a New Jersey-born man arrested in Yemen this month on terror charges.

"Thus far, radicalization of groups and individuals in the United States has done more to spread jihadist ideology and generate support for violent causes overseas than it has produced terrorists targeting the homeland," Blair said.

The number of extremist groups and armed militias which advocate radical anti-government doctrines and conspiracy theories nearly tripled last year to 512 from 149 in 2008, according a recent report by to the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks the activities of hate groups.

Comment

bottom
There are no comments at the moment.




Only Club members can comment articles.

Log in or sign in into club. Registration is free.

  Login
  Password