New York Daily News

SUBWAY BOMB PLOTTER WILL STAY IN PRISON

He planned to blow up Herald Sq. station

- BY JOHN ANNESE

A terrorist convicted of plotting to blow up the Herald Square subway station lost another bid in his decades-long effort to get sprung from prison because the federal judge who handed down his sentence says he hasn’t taken responsibi­lity for his crime.

Shahawar Matin Siraj, 40, got 30 years in prison in 2007 for planning to blow up the busy subway station. Last Monday, Brooklyn Federal Judge Nina Gershon, who handed down his sentence, denied his motion for early release.

It’s the latest legal setback for Siraj, who has lost several appeals, and, most recently, filed unsuccessf­ul motions before Gershon to have his sentence reduced and his conviction overturned.

Siraj argued at trial, and in the years after, that he was entrapped by a duplicitou­s government informant who goaded him into violence and insisted he take part in the plot even after he wanted to back out.

As part of his motion for compassion­ate release, Siraj’s lawyers argued that he found out after the trial he was targeted by the informant because of the work of the NYPD’s widely criticized demographi­cs unit — which surveilled and spied on the Muslim community after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Gershon wasn’t swayed. “How it came about that there was an undercover officer who went to the bookstore where Mr. Siraj was working and provided informatio­n to the NYPD of potential criminal activity does not alter Mr. Siraj’s culpabilit­y or justify compassion­ate release in this case,” she wrote. “The factual issue of entrapment was at the heart of Mr. Siraj’s defense, and it was for the jury to decide.”

Siraj, then 21, and James Elshafay, 19, were arrested on Aug. 27, 2004, a few days before the Republican National Convention in New York, for plotting to blow up the Herald Square station at Broadway and W. 34th St. The station is beneath a crowded shopping area that includes Macy’s flagship store.

Elshafay, who pleaded guilty and testified at Siraj’s trial, was sentenced to five years.

At his trial in 2006, Siraj testified he was goaded into the plot by Osama Eldawoody, then 50. Eldawoody was a paid police informant who met Siraj at Islamic Books & Tapes, the Brooklyn bookstore where the young Pakistani immigrant worked.

Eldawoody — who was paid $100,000 for his work as an informant who monitored mosques and other locations where Muslims in New York gathered — showed Siraj images of prisoners being abused at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, enraging him, and talked about blowing up locations like Wall Street, Siraj testified. Eldawoody said he was backed by a shadowy upstate group called the Brotherhoo­d, which didn’t actually exist, and pressured him into plotting a terrorist attack, Siraj testified.

Siraj claimed he cooked up the plot to impress Eldawoody — but said his only aim was to damage the U.S. economy, and that he tried to back out when he realized civilians could be hurt.

Federal prosecutor­s convinced the jury that Siraj played a key role in the plot, even if he didn’t want to place any backpack bombs himself.

The feds played a video showing Siraj saying he’d help with the planning, and offered input on Elshafay’s idea to dress in religious Jewish garb to disguise himself.

Siraj’s most recent bid for

release was filed under the First Step Act, a criminal justice reform bill that received bipartisan support in Congress and was signed by then-President Donald Trump in 2018.

Siraj, who federal prison records show is slated to finish his sentence in 2030, pointed to his rehabilita­tion behind bars, submitting several letters of support from family members and fellow inmates.

“Mr. Siraj’s remarkable rehabilita­tion and efforts to combat extremist thinking both in prison and outside it demonstrat­e that Mr. Siraj has exhausted all the possible correction­al treatment he could possibly receive,” his attorneys wrote in October.

But his statements about entrapment worked against him. Gershon, who called his progress in prison “impressive,” couldn’t get past his assertions of innocence — pointing to a letter, written by Siraj in 2014 to dissuade Muslim youths from becoming extremists, which was submitted as part of his motion.

At one point in the letter, Siraj wrote, “I am sincerely giving advice to all with my own personal experience being charged with terrorism which I am innocent of and many of you know about me. I was charged for what I said.”

The judge countered, “Mr. Siraj’s claim of innocence, made not once, but multiple times, contradict­s his assertion that he has accepted responsibi­lity for his actions, and raises serious questions about the extent of his rehabilita­tion.”

Siraj’s lawyers also brought up COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns at his prison in Otisville, N.Y., and the “inhumane” conditions he endured from 2007 to 2011 in the communicat­ions management unit, a converted Death Row facility at a federal prison in Terre Haute, Ind.

That unit, often referred to as “Little Gitmo,” mainly housed Muslims convicted of terrorism-related crimes. Inmates were kept in “near-complete isolation” and made to sleep on concrete beds, Siraj contended. His ceiling leaked, and his cell was infested with insects and vermin, he said.

Siraj’s attorneys declined comment for this article.

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 ?? ?? In 2007 Shahawar Matin Siraj (inset far left) was convicted of plotting to blow up the Herald Square subway station (above) in 2004, near where the Republican National Convention (main photo) that nominated George W. Bush (inset top left) for reelection was being held. Sentenced to 30 years in prison, Siraj just lost his latest bid for early release.
In 2007 Shahawar Matin Siraj (inset far left) was convicted of plotting to blow up the Herald Square subway station (above) in 2004, near where the Republican National Convention (main photo) that nominated George W. Bush (inset top left) for reelection was being held. Sentenced to 30 years in prison, Siraj just lost his latest bid for early release.

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