The Columbus Dispatch

NY bomb suspect radicalize­d via web

- By Tom Hays and Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK — The Bangladesh­i immigrant arrested in a botched suicide bombing in the New York subway mocked President Donald Trump on Facebook on his way to carry out the attack, writing “Trump you failed to protect your nation,” authoritie­s said Tuesday as they brought federal charges against him.

Akayed Ullah, 27, was accused of detonating a pipe bomb strapped to his body in an undergroun­d passageway between Times Square — the city’s busiest subway station — and the bustling Port Authority Bus Terminal. The device did not fully detonate, and Ullah was the only one seriously hurt in the Monday morning attack.

At the hospital where he was taken with burns on his hands and torso, Ullah waived his Miranda rights, according to the complaint, and he told officers: “I did it for the Islamic State.”

Also, a search of his Brooklyn apartment turned up a passport in his name, scrawled with the words “O AMERICA, DIE IN YOUR RAGE,” authoritie­s said.

At a news conference, Acting U.S. Attorney Joon H. Kim said Ullah picked a rush hour on a weekday to maximize casualties in his quest “to kill, to maim and to destroy.”

Ullah, “with a hate-filled heart and an evil purpose,” carried out the attack after researchin­g how to build a bomb a year ago and planning his mission for several weeks, Kim said.

The bomb was assembled in the past week using fragments of a metal pipe, a battery and a Christmas-tree light bulb, along with metal screws as shrapnel, authoritie­s said. They said it was strapped to his body with wires and zip ties.

The defendant “had apparently hoped to die in his own misguided rage, taking as many innocent people as he could with him, but through incredible good fortune, his bomb did not seriously injure anyone other than himself,” Kim said.

Ullah was charged with providing material support

to a terrorist group, use of a weapon of mass destructio­n and three bomb-related counts. He could get life in prison.

According to the court papers, Ullah started to become radicalize­d in 2014 and began researchin­g how to build a bomb after watching ISIS propaganda materials online, include a video urging supporters to carry out attacks in their home countries. Law-enforcemen­t officials said there was no evidence that he had direct contact with the militants.

In reaction to the bombing, the president demanded a tightening of immigratio­n rules.

Ullah entered the country in 2011 on a visa available to certain relatives of U.S. citizens. Less than two months ago, also in Manhattan, an Uzbek immigrant who came to the U.S. through a visa lottery was accused of killing eight people by mowing them down with a truck along a bike path.

Trump said at the White House: "We're going to end both of them — the lottery system and chain migration. We're going to end them fast."

Ullah lives with his father, mother and brother in a Brooklyn neighborho­od with a large Bangladesh­i community, residents said. He was licensed to drive a livery cab from 2012 to 2015, but the license was allowed to lapse, officials said.

He "was living here, went through number of jobs, was not particular­ly struggling financiall­y or had any known pressures," John Miller, the New York Police Department's deputy commission­er for counterter­rorism, said Tuesday on CBS. He added that Ullah "was not on our radar at NYPD, not on the FBI radar."

Overseas, Bangladesh counterter­rorism officers questioned Ullah's wife and other relatives, officials said. Relatives and police said Ullah last visited Bangladesh in September to see his wife and newborn son.

 ?? [SETH WENIG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? As part of heightened security Tuesday, police patrol the passageway connecting New York City’s Port Authority bus terminal and the Times Square subway station, near the site of Monday’s explosion.
[SETH WENIG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] As part of heightened security Tuesday, police patrol the passageway connecting New York City’s Port Authority bus terminal and the Times Square subway station, near the site of Monday’s explosion.

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