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FBI Worries About Al-Qaida Ties To Mob

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  • FBI Worries About Al-Qaida Ties To Mob

    FBI WORRIES ABOUT AL-QAIDA TIES TO MOB
    By Pat Milton, Associated Press Writer

    Los Angeles Times
    Oct 1 2006

    WASHINGTON -- The FBI's top counterterrorism official harbors lots of
    concerns: weapons of mass destruction, undetected homegrown terrorists
    and the possibility that old-fashioned mobsters will team up with
    al-Qaida for the right price.

    Though there is no direct evidence yet of organized crime collaborating
    with terrorists, the first hints of a connection surfaced in a recent
    undercover FBI operation. Agents stopped a man with alleged mob ties
    from selling missiles to an informant posing as a terrorist middleman.

    That case and other factors are heightening concerns about a real-life
    episode of the Sopranos teaming with Osama bin Laden's followers.

    "We are continuing to look for a nexus," said Joseph Billy Jr.,
    the FBI's top counterterrorism official. "We are looking at this
    very aggressively."

    The new strategy involves an analysis of nationwide criminal
    investigations, particularly white collar crime, side by side with
    intelligence and terrorist activity.

    "We have developed an ability to look harder and broader in a greatly
    enhanced way to see if there is any crossover," Billy said in an
    interview with The Associated Press.

    Organized crime syndicates could facilitate money transfers or
    laundering, human smuggling, identification fraud or explosives and
    weapons acquisitions, officials said.

    The options are many for terrorists groups.

    There are the five reputed La Cosa Nostra families in New York,
    Russian criminal enterprises from Brighton Beach in the New York
    borough of Brooklyn to Moscow, and the emerging Asian crime syndicates
    that operate in many Islamic countries with al-Qaida offshoots.

    A contract study produced recently for the Pentagon and obtained
    by the AP warned that the potential for organized crime assisting
    terrorists is growing.

    "Although terrorism and organized crime are different phenomena, the
    important fact is that terrorist and criminal networks overlap and
    cooperate in some enterprises," the study said. "The phenomenon of the
    synergy of terrorism and organized crime is growing because similar
    conditions give rise to both and because terrorists and organized
    criminals use similar approaches to promote their operations."

    The traditional mafia has highly developed networks for acquiring
    goods and services and money, all for a price.

    The mob's potential interest in helping a terrorist has nothing to
    do with ideology or sympathy but with greed, said Matt Heron, head
    of New York FBI's organized crime unit.

    "They will deal with anybody, if they can make a buck," Heron said.

    "They will sell to a terrorist just as easily as they would sell to
    an order of Franciscan monks. It's a business relationship to them."

    "If the mob has explosives and a terrorist wants them and they have
    the money, they could become instant friends," he said.

    Pat D'Amuro, a retired senior FBI official and now chief executive
    of Giuliani Security, said a Mafia boss once acknowledged that the
    mob would help terrorists.

    "I am aware of a high-level Mafia figure, who was cooperating with
    authorities, being asked if the Mafia would assist terrorists in
    smuggling people into Europe through Italy," D'Amuro said. "He said,
    'The Mafia will help who ever can pay.'"

    Officials said they have no specific evidence that such a relationship
    has been cemented. But concerns were heightened last year after an
    Armenian immigrant was arrested in New York for allegedly leading
    a plot to sell military weapons to an FBI informant posing as a
    middleman for terrorists.

    Arthur Solomonyan had claimed to be able to deliver shoulder-fired
    missiles from his connection in Russian organized crime to the
    informant, who claimed to have ties to al-Qaida, federal prosecutors
    said. Solomonyan and 17 others in New York, Florida and California
    were charged in the case.

    Solomonyan is scheduled for trial this month. His lawyer, Seth
    Ginsberg, said he plans to "vigorously contest" the charges and call
    the government's confidential informant to the stand to challenge
    his motives. The Italian, Russian, and Asian mafia remain active,
    particularly in New York, even though the government has successfully
    prosecuted numerous figures in recent years.

    In the past three years, well over 100 associates from all five La
    Cosa Nostra families have been arrested in New York, Heron noted.

    While the potential of a gangster-terrorist marriage is on the FBI's
    radar, homegrown terror cells and weapons of mass destruction are
    also big concerns for those in the FBI given the job of stopping the
    next terrorist attack.

    "We are not only aware that they want to come across the ocean to
    attack us but they may be physically here developing in our own
    homeland," Billy said.

    The Internet has become the new Afghanistan, allowing terrorist
    sympathizers to promote their radical ideas and to recruit and train
    followers right their home computers. That makes it far more difficult
    for investigators to identify them.

    Billy said his biggest concern remains weapons of mass destruction.

    While Hezbollah and Hamas are more defined terrorist groups, with
    a territorial focus and a political platform, al-Qaida is more
    unpredictable.

    "We know they were trying to acquire it prior to 9/11, bin Laden's
    own words said that," said Billy. "What makes us think they are still
    not trying?"
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