Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Al-Qaida suspect linked to cartoonist plot extradited to US

- By Maryclaire Dale and Sadie Gurman

PHILADELPH­IA » An al-Qaida suspect linked to a plot to kill a Swedish cartoonist has been brought to Philadelph­ia from Spain to face terrorism charges in federal court, despite President Donald Trump’s promises to send terror suspects to the military prison at Guantanamo Bay.

Ali Charaf Damache, 52, of Algeria, appeared in court Friday and will be arraigned next month on charges that he conspired with two American women and a high school honors student from Maryland, court officials said.

A 2011 indictment accused him of aiding terrorism, including the plan to kill Swedish artist Lars Vilks, who depicted the prophet Muhammad as a dog. The plot never materializ­ed.

The Trump administra­tion’s decision to bring him to the United States marks a break from Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ oft-stated belief that Guantanamo Bay is the best place for “these kinds of dangerous criminals.”

During the presidenti­al campaign, Trump said he not only wanted to keep the detention center in Cuba open after the Obama administra­tion had long fought to close it, but promised to “load it up with some bad dudes.”

Obama’s Justice Department maintained the U.S. civilian court system was the most legally sound forum in which to prosecute terror suspects captured in the U.S. and overseas and cited hundreds of conviction­s in New York and other cities as proof.

Yet Sessions and other Republican­s have long expressed concern that civilian courts afford legal protection­s to which suspected terrorists are not entitled. He has warned valuable intelligen­ce can be lost if a detainee is advised of his or her right to remain silent and to have a lawyer.

The Justice Department did not say what led officials to send Damache to federal court or whether it signals a shift in Sessions’ views. The attorney general made no mention of the case during a Friday speech in Philadelph­ia on sanctuary cities and fighting violent crime.

“The individual involved in this case was indicted in 2011 in federal district court,” the department said in a statement. “The United States has consistent­ly used the extraditio­n process to obtain indicted fugitives who are overseas, so that they can stand trial in our federal courts.”

Damache married a Colorado woman the day she traveled to Ireland to meet him in 2009. Jamie PaulinRami­rez eventually helped the FBI investigat­e the terror cell, which included a Pennsylvan­ia woman who called herself “Jihad Jane” online.

Damache, known as “Black Flag” had been fighting extraditio­n after his 2015 arrest in Spain. Lawyer Joseph Mancano, appointed Friday to represent him, said he did not have any immediate comment.

Officials said that Damache joined co-defendants Mohammad Hassan Khalid, Colleen “Jihad Jane” LaRose and Paulin-Ramirez in forming a cell that recruited men online to wage jihad in South Asia and Europe, and to recruit women with western passports to travel through Europe in support of the cause.

LaRose is serving a 10year prison term and Paulin-Ramirez eight years after pleading guilty to providing material aid to terrorism while Khalid, whose family had immigrated from Pakistan, was sentenced to five years.

Paulin-Ramirez took her 6-year-old son with her to Waterford, where he was taught to be a warrior and hate non-Muslims. The boy also endured physical abuse during the four-month stay, according to prosecutor­s who showed a video at her 2014 sentencing of him reciting inflammato­ry verses and thrusting a toy weapon as his mother laughed. She told the judge she hoped the boy would forget what she put him through.

 ?? PETER MORRISON - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this 2010 file photo, Ali Charaf Damache arrives at the courthouse in Waterford, Ireland. Damache, an al-Qaida suspect known as Black Flag who has been linked to a plot to kill Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks, appeared in federal court in Philadelph­ia...
PETER MORRISON - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this 2010 file photo, Ali Charaf Damache arrives at the courthouse in Waterford, Ireland. Damache, an al-Qaida suspect known as Black Flag who has been linked to a plot to kill Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks, appeared in federal court in Philadelph­ia...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States