Two charged in unrelated terror bomb plots
FBI says they were caught in sting operations unrelated to Zazi case
![]() | Michael C. Finton, left, and Hosam Maher Husein Smadi were charged after an FBI sting operation. |
Illinois Department of Corrections and Dallas County Sheriff via AP |
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CHICAGO - A Jordanian man living outside Dallas and an ex-convict who wrote letters to John Walker Lindh were in custody on Friday after each tried to blow up what they thought were vehicles packed with explosives outside a Texas skyscraper and an Illinois courthouse, authorities said.
The two cases are unconnected to each other and to the investigation that set off the most intense flurry of national terrorism warnings since the aftermath of Sept. 11, authorities said.
Hosam Maher Husein Smadi, 19, who is a Jordanian national, appeared in court Friday in Dallas after federal officials said he parked what he thought was an explosive-laden truck in a parking garage beneath the 60-story Fountain Place office tower. Smadi mostly looked down as he was led into the courtroom in handcuffs, and when asked whether he understood his rights, he softly answered, "Yes."
Michael C. Finton, 29, who also went by the name Talib Islam and idolized Lindh — the American-born Taliban fighter — was arrested Wednesday in Springfield, Ill., after federal officials said he attempted to detonate what he believed to be explosives in a van outside a federal courthouse in the Illinois capital.
In both cases, decoy devices were provided to the men by FBI agents posing as al-Qaida operatives. Both are charged with trying to detonate a weapon of mass destruction and face up to life in prison if convicted. Finton also is charged with attempting to murder federal officers or employees.
Jordanian's brother reportedly arrested
Smadi, who federal prosecutors said lived and worked in the north central Texas town of Italy, came to the United States in 2007 with his brother, Hussein, on student visas, their father Maher Hussein Smadi told The Associated Press in Jordan. The father said Hussein Smadi, 18, was arrested in California, but would not elaborate. That arrest could not immediately be confirmed by officials in the U.S.
"The issue is completely fabricated and in our family we never condoned terrorism," the father said.
Richard Anderson, the public defender appointed to Smadi in Dallas, said after Friday's hearing that he had "little to say" until he figures out more about the case. He said his client is scared and has no family nearby.
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Smadi on Thursday parked a vehicle containing the device in a garage beneath the Dallas office tower and set the device's timer, the affidavit said. Smadi then met with an agent, who drove several blocks away and Smadi dialed a cell phone in an attempt to detonate the bomb, according to the affidavit, which said he picked the Fountain Place because it housed banks.
A similar scenario played out the day before in Illinois. Finton also had been closely monitored by federal agents including in the months leading up to his arrest, according to an affidavit in that case. It said an FBI agent who posed as an al-Qaida operative presented Finton on Wednesday with a van containing materials he described as explosive but which actually were harmless.
The two men parked the van at the courthouse and close to the office of U.S. Rep. Aaron Schock, R-Ill., which Finton allegedly hoped also would be damaged. They then drove a short distance to where Finton twice used a cell phone to try to detonate the explosives, the affidavit said. He was arrested immediately.
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