Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Suspect in terror plot pleads innocent

- JENNIFER PELTZ

NEW YORK — A man accused of plotting to attack police and soldiers with homemade bombs pleaded innocent Tuesday to rarely used state- level terrorism charges.

Jose Pimentel nearly whispered “not guilty” in a case authoritie­s describe as taking down an overt al-qaida sympathize­r who was building a pipe bomb to act on his violent beliefs but his lawyers call an example of police overreachi­ng.

“We think that when a jury hears both sides of this case, they’ll see it for what it really is,” one of his lawyers, Susan J. Walsh, said as she left court.

A Dominican-born Muslim convert also known as Muhammad Yusuf, Pimentel had a website detailing his belief in jihad, or holy war, and said he believed that Muslims were obligated to attack Americans as retaliatio­n for U.S. military action in Muslim countries, authoritie­s said.

Pimentel told an informant that he wanted to attack targets that included police cars and stations, post offices and soldiers returning home from abroad, authoritie­s said. He was arrested while making his homemade bomb in November, according to prosecutor­s and police.

“Jose Pimentel engaged in a plot to build improvised explosive devices and use them to commit acts of violent jihad,” crossing a line between rhetoric and trying to take action, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. said in a statement after Pimentel was indicted last month on charges including weapons possession and conspiracy as terror crimes. Both carry the possibilit­y of up to life in prison if Pimentel, 27, is convicted.

The terrorism charges stem from a state law passed shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Most terrorism cases are federal, and the state law has been used only a handful of times, including in another Manhattan case against two men charged in allegation­s of plotting to attack synagogues.

Police Commission­er Raymond Kelly has said federal authoritie­s were apprised of the investigat­ion into Pimentel, but circumstan­ces ultimately compelled investigat­ors to act fast and use state charges.

Two law enforcemen­t officials, however, have said the FBI stayed out of the case because agents felt he wasn’t inclined or able to act without the informant’s involvemen­t. The officials spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the case.

Pimentel’s lawyers have said he was broke, lonely and curious — “prime pickings” for an informant out to help himself with his own legal trouble, they said.

A person familiar with the matter has said the informant’s case was a minor marijuana arrest; the person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the informatio­n hasn’t officially been made public.

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