Call & Times

Shooting suspect’s estate sues feds

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BOSTON (AP) — The estate of a Boston man who was shot to death by a city police detective and an FBI agent in 2015 during a terrorism investigat­ion is suing the federal government for $5 million on wrongful death allegation­s.

Usaamah Rahim and two other men were accused of participat­ing in a plot to behead conservati­ve blogger Pamela Geller, who angered Muslims by organizing a Prophet Muhammad cartoon contest in Garland, Texas, in 2015. The plot was not carried out.

Authoritie­s said officers shot the 26-year-old Rahim when he lunged at them with a knife in Boston. At the time, an anti-terrorism task force was surveillin­g Rahim around the clock because authoritie­s had learned of the beheading plot.

Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley concluded the officers were justified in shooting Rahim.

The Boston Globe reported Rahim’s estate filed the lawsuit in federal court in Boston on Thursday. It alleges law enforcemen­t officers “unlawfully seized, assaulted and killed” Rahim, and accuses officials of acting “negligentl­y and recklessly in their use of excessive force, and deadly force.”

The lawsuit also says no fingerprin­ts were recovered from the knife and there were inconsiste­nt accounts by officials about how Rahim pulled the knife.

The FBI and Boston police declined to comment.

Authoritie­s said Rahim’s nephew, David Daoud Wright, and Nicholas Rovinski also were in on the plot against Geller. Wright is serving a 28-year prison sentence for conspiring to kill Americans on behalf of the Islamic State, and Rovinski is serving 15 years behind bars for plotting to commit acts of terrorism.

During the 2015 cartoon contest, two other men opened fire outside and wounded a security guard before they were killed in a shootout with law enforcemen­t assigned to guard the event.

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