Madinat al-Muslimeen Islamic Message Board

A R C H I V E S

Told you so! Agents within

Madina Archives


Madinat al-Muslimeen Islamic Message Board

Told you so! Agents within
Kashif
06/13/02 at 08:55:34
Canadian Jew posed as Islamic convert to snare terror suspects

By Tanya Weinberg and Jeff Shields
Sun-Sentinel

June 11, 2002

An FBI informant acting as an eager convert to Islam spent months in a Pembroke Pines mosque looking for Muslim extremists, leading the government to a young Pakistani radical before being dumped by the FBI.

Howard Gilbert, a Canadian Jew who dreamed of becoming a CIA agent, said he infiltrated the Darul Uloom Institute for more than a year as part of an FBI-sanctioned effort to expose Islamic militants. It was Gilbert who alerted the FBI to the extremist leanings of Pakistani immigrant Imran Mandhai, federal authorities say. Gilbert later was taken off the case.

Gilbert’s work led indirectly to the indictment of Mandhai, 19, and Shueyb Mossa Jokhan, 24, who are accused of planning to blow up power stations, a National Guard armory and Jewish businesses as part of an Islamic jihad, or holy war, in South Florida.

The roles of Gilbert and a second informant have become a central issue in the sting operation that resulted in the arrest of Mandhai and Jokhan, the most significant terrorism-related prosecution in Florida since Sept. 11. There is no evidence that Mandhai and Jokhan had ties to the Sept. 11 plotters.

The potential for entrapment claims by the defendants tripped up the case for months as government lawyers debated whether to prosecute them, and how. Defense lawyers already have attacked Gilbert’s actions, and the trial promises to question how far the government should sensibly go in luring would-be terrorists.

Gilbert said he took Mandhai to shooting ranges to practice with a pistol and rifle, that he taught him to swim after Mandhai expressed interest in “military scuba,” and that he coached him in hand-to-hand combat in a Hollywood park. The Broward Community College student was excited to train “in the back yard of the Jews he wanted to kill,” Gilbert said.

Father: Son was set up

Mandhai’s father, Muhammad Farooq Mandhai, said Gilbert and a second FBI informant set up his son. Defense attorneys say they want to talk to Gilbert, and their defense will hang on their ability to convince a jury that any conspiracy was one generated largely by Gilbert and his replacement, an Arab known to Mandhai only as “Mohammad.”

“What people in this community have to realize is how dangerous a government informant can be, and how manipulative,” said federal public defender Robert Berube. He represented Mandhai until a conflict of interest forced him off the case last week.

Berube has suggested Gilbert concocted key evidence, including two documents listing the requirements for jihad that were presented at Mandhai’s detention hearing in May.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office and the FBI have distanced themselves from Gilbert — he is not alluded to in the indictment, and they have not contacted him about testifying.

The FBI ordered him to cease all involvement two months before it opened a criminal investigation against Mandhai in March 2001. Gilbert said he received up to $6,000 for his work between 2000 and 2001. He was outraged to learn that FBI Special Agent Paul Carpinteri testified at Mandhai’s detention hearing that the FBI did not pay Gilbert for work on the case.

Gilbert’s work as an operative remains classified, but federal law enforcement sources now concede he probably was paid as he built his association with Mandhai. When Carpinteri testified, he was unaware of Gilbert’s classified intelligence mission, according to two federal law enforcement sources.

In a series of interviews with the Sun-Sentinel, Gilbert retraced his role in the investigation, which started as an intelligence-gathering operation in 1999, Gilbert said. Federal law enforcement sources familiar with the case corroborated much of his story.

According to both sides, the relationship began to deteriorate around January 2001. Gilbert wanted to be paid $3,000 a month. The FBI refused. The FBI asked him to wear a recording device and testify as part of a criminal case. Gilbert, who said testifying would jeopardize his work as an intelligence operative, balked.

“If I had testified, how could I go on to work for the CIA?” said Gilbert, who saw his work for the FBI as a “resume builder” for eventual employment with the CIA.

Gilbert, a 33-year-old bodyguard and Hollywood Hills High School graduate, revealed himself reluctantly to the Sun-Sentinel only after he had been dismissed by the FBI and identified in open court. He describes himself as a patriot bent on fighting terrorism.

>From the time he was a small boy, Gilbert — now grown into a 340-pound man with a fondness for firearms and strippers — preferred Soldier of Fortune magazine to Sports Illustrated. He says he parlayed FBI informant work on the cargo theft task force into counter-terrorism with a plan to gather names for a terrorist watch list.

Gilbert says he met with Special Agent Keith Winter who liked his plan to attend mosques projecting an image that would appeal to extremists who could then be identified, and that Winter authorized him to go forward. Winter would not comment.

Building an identity

Boastful about a mythical background as a U.S. Marine, Gilbert became known around Darul Uloom as a gun-toting security expert with his own company, Risk Management International. The institute’s principal and religious leader, Maulana Shafayat Mohamed, said he even asked Gilbert for a price quote on providing security at the Pines Boulevard mosque and school.

The two men say they met at an Army officer’s Islamic wedding, performed by Shafayat Mohamed several years ago. Gilbert followed up after a year, telling Mohamed he had decided to convert to Islam from Christianity. He took the Islamic name Sayif Ullah, which translates as “Sword of Allah,” and became a mosque regular.

In late 2000, Gilbert gave an impassioned speech there about the Palestinian struggle. He said Mandhai soon approached him asking for weapons and tactical training.

“That was truly the night that launched me into the terrorist umbrella of South Florida,” Gilbert said.

While Gilbert single-mindedly pursued Mandhai as his ticket to infiltrating a terrorist cell, the FBI apparently was less convinced. A federal source familiar with the case said Gilbert was let go in January 2001 because he revealed his identity as a government operative to non-FBI sources.

Gilbert said he was fired after he complained to Department of Defense officials about FBI supervisors. He said they declined his request for back-up on a trip to Melbourne, where he said Mandhai had invited him to meet with “brothers from all over Florida.”

Gilbert said he was alarmed because Mandhai asked him to bring his weapons and military equipment to Melbourne, within an hour of Cape Canaveral.

A federal law enforcement source confirmed that Gilbert told of this scheduled meeting, but said no one verified whether the meeting took place or what it meant.

Gilbert supplied a name of a former professor at the American Military University, where he took online classes a decade after dropping out of the University of Miami as a reference who could confirm his concerns.

The professor, a Department of Defense employee who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Gilbert was an unpredictable character who in their frequent phone conversations claimed a celebrated military background, but claimed no such past in his application.

Credibility in question

The professor added that checking Gilbert’s stories with FBI contacts bolstered the professor’s assessment of him as trying to gain power with inaccurate depictions of his forays into counter-terrorism.

Gilbert said he told the professor that he was using a cover as a former military man, but never tried to deceive. He also says the FBI regarded him as “dangerous,” but that they need someone like him “to go into the mosques and do this kind of work.”

A reserve Hialeah police lieutenant who owns a Hollywood police supply shop where Gilbert hung out also questioned Gilbert’s credibility.

“He wants respect, and he wants to be noticed,” said Walter Philbrick, president of International Protective Services.

Gilbert remains convinced the FBI missed the opportunity he offered them to learn more about a possible terrorist network in South Florida, and says they fired him because he exposed their apathy.

Mandhai was but a follower, Gilbert says, not a leader. He acknowledged helping Mandhai draw up a list of weapons and “Skills Necessary for Jihad,” and FBI agent Carpinteri confirmed this in testimony.

“[Mandhai] needs someone like me to lead him by the nose to show him what to do,” Gilbert said. “I needed him to get me in the network.”

Leonard Fenn, who was appointed to defend Mandhai last week and is still researching the case, said it appeared Gilbert played a younger Mandhai “like a fiddle.” Fenn said informants allowed too much latitude can get carried away.

“We always scrutinize them as close as we can, because unless they’re kept on a short leash, they break the rules,” Fenn said.

Gilbert is critical of Mohammad, the informant the FBI inserted as they were telling him to stay away.

“Whoever trained him didn’t do a very good job,” said Gilbert, who says he met once with Mandhai and Mohammad together.

For now, Gilbert is pursuing a book deal and hoping the Atkins diet will help him strip off the 90 pounds he gained after the FBI’s rejection sent him into a depression. After Sept. 11, Gilbert wished to “reinfiltrate” South Florida mosques, but says the FBI ignored his phone messages.

“I’ve had to sit back and watch this war on terrorism,” he said. “I wanted so very badly to be in it, and it was very, very hard for me.”

Tanya Weinberg can be reached at tweinberg@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385-7923.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/southflorida/sfl-informant061202.story
NS
06/13/02 at 08:59:16
Kashif
Allah ta'ala says....
DeRayeMustafaMille
06/13/02 at 13:57:47
as reported by Abu Huraira in the sahih hadith found in the collection of Al-Bukhari, it says:

"Allah ta'ala says:  I have declared war on anyone who is an enemy of any of my allies.  There is nothing better with which my slave can come closer to me than fulfilling all that I have made obligatory upon him.  Then, my slave will continue to come closer to me by making extra efforts until I love him.  When I love him, I am his hearing with which he hears, his sight with which he sees, his hand with which he strikes, and his leg with which he walks.  I f he asks me, I will give him, if he seeks refuge with me, I will give him refuge.  I have not hesitated in anything which I do as I hesitate in  taking the soul of my believing slave.  He dislikes death, and I dislike annoying him, but he must meet his death."


Madinat al-Muslimeen Islamic Message Board
A R C H I V E S

Individual posts do not necessarily reflect the views of Jannah.org, Islam, or all Muslims. All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. Comments are owned by the poster and may not be used without consent of the author.
The rest © Jannah.Org