Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ Questions remain about the early release of a terror convict who killed two in London.

Plotter who killed two was freed early in 2018

- By Gregory Katz

LONDON — Usman Khan was convicted on terrorism charges but let out of prison early. He attended a Learning Together conference for ex-offenders and used the event to launch a bloody attack, stabbing two people to death and wounding three others.

Police shot him dead after he flashed what seemed to be a suicide vest. Khan is gone, but the questions remain: Why was he let out early? Did authoritie­s believe he no longer believed in radical Islam? Why didn’t the conditions imposed on his release prevent the carnage?

Britons looked for answers Saturday as politician­s sought to pin the blame for what was a breakdown in the security system.

Police said Khan was convicted in 2012 of terrorism offenses and released in December 2018 “on license,” which means he had to meet certain conditions or face recall to prison. Several British media outlets reported that he was wearing an electronic ankle bracelet that allowed police to track his movements at the time of the attack.

Authoritie­s seemed quick to blame “the system” rather than any one component.

The Parole Board said it played no role in Khan’s early release. It said the convict “appears to have been released automatica­lly on license (as required by law), without ever being referred to the board.”

Neil Basu, the Metropolit­an Police counterter­rorism police, said Saturday that the conditions of Khan’s release had been complied with. He didn’t spell out what those conditions were or why they failed to prevent him from killing two people.

The automatic release program means no agency was given the task of determinin­g if Khan still believed in radical views he had embraced when he was first imprisoned for plotting to attack several sites and individual­s in London.

It is not yet known whether he took part in any of the “de-radicaliza­tion” programs used by British authoritie­s to try and reform known jihadis.

The former head of Britain’s National Counter Terrorism Security Office, Chris Phillips, said it is unreasonab­le to ask police and security services to keep the country safe while at the same time letting people out of prison when they are still a threat.

“We’re playing Russian roulette with people’s lives, letting convicted, known, radicalize­d jihadi criminals walk about our streets,” he said.

Khan had been convicted as part of an al-Qaida linked group that was accused of plotting to target major sites including Parliament, the U.S. Embassy and individual­s including Prime Minister Boris Johnson, then the mayor of London, the dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral in London and two rabbis.

Khan admitted to a lesser charge of engaging in conduct for the preparatio­n of acts of terrorism. He had been secretly taped plotting attacks and talking about martyrdom as a possibilit­y.

Khan and his accomplice­s had links to radical preacher Anjem Choudary, a high-profile face of radical Islam in Britain.The preacher was released from prison in 2018 but is under heavy surveillan­ce and a curfew.

 ?? Steve Parsons The Associated Press ?? Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, second from right, Home Secretary Priti Patel, center, and Metropolit­an Police Commission­er Cressida Dick, second from left, on Saturday view the scene of Friday’s attack on London Bridge.
Steve Parsons The Associated Press Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, second from right, Home Secretary Priti Patel, center, and Metropolit­an Police Commission­er Cressida Dick, second from left, on Saturday view the scene of Friday’s attack on London Bridge.
 ??  ?? Usman Khan
Usman Khan

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