Posted on 08/14/2003 7:31:40 PM PDT by quidnunc
KIRO 7 Eyewitness News has learned that two passengers arrested at Sea-Tac Airport last weekend may be linked to a suspect's deadly plunge from a high-rise balcony in Vancouver, British Columbia during a raid.
Federal sources both in British Columbia and in Seattle tell KIRO Team 7 Investigators the weekend arrest at Sea-Tac of two men on the terrorist "no-fly" list may be just the tip of the iceberg.
We're told the FBI is very interested in trying to connect three separate and recent incidents involving Pakistani illegals.
Federal sources told KIRO Team 7 Investigators that about a month ago, two Pakistani men tried to illegally enter the U.S. at Sumas, just east of Blaine, Washington. That meant little at the time, but this week's arrest of two different Pakistani men at SeaTac Airport is raising suspicions.
According to Port of Seattle police reports, those men were on a terrorist "no-fly" list and tried to buy one-way tickets to New York.
KIRO Team 7 Investigators have learned that a drug raid at an apartment in Vancouver, British Columbia, last weekend was really a raid by an elite anti-terrorism squad.
-snip-
(Excerpt) Read more at kirotv.com ...
Federal agents have searched several Western Washington locations in an expanding investigation of two Pakistani men arrested at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on Saturday after their names appeared on terrorism watch lists.
Agents also have scrutinized passenger lists for possible associates of the men on the American Airlines and JetBlue flights for which they tried to buy tickets. The men, who bought one-way tickets with cash, have not been charged with a crime and have not been publicly identified.
One, a 29-year-old with a New York driver's license, had been detained and released at an unnamed airport once before and had been under scrutiny as a possible terrorist by the CIA, which had listed him on the no-fly list, several federal sources said yesterday.
One source said that incident occurred the day before the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Two other sources said it occurred close to that date but could not be specific.
Airline employees at Sea-Tac called authorities Saturday night after the two men tried to take separate flights to New York City. One abandoned his ticket and left the counter after security was called. The second man, 36, had a Vancouver, B.C., driver's license. His name appeared on the Transportation Security Administration's (TSA) "selectee" list, which mandates additional scrutiny of that passenger but is less stringent than the no-fly list.
The men, who had been seen together earlier in the evening, went to separate ticket counters about an hour apart, law-enforcement sources said.
Later, during questioning, the men told investigators they had been smuggled across the U.S. border from British Columbia several weeks ago. They are being held on immigration charges.
It could be weeks before the men are given an immigration hearing. The timing will depend on the outcome of the criminal investigation, said Michael Milne, a Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman.
One law-enforcement source said FBI agents had executed search warrants in Western Washington and elsewhere in connection with the investigation. Details of the searches were not available, and the warrants remained sealed.
The FBI has sent inquiries to law-enforcement and intelligence agencies in Pakistan and Canada, according to sources who spoke on condition of anonymity. The State Department, on its official Web site, has identified Pakistan as a stronghold of Islamic extremism.
The Seattle investigation has taken on urgency because of recent events and intelligence gathered by authorities in the United States and Canada, a federal source said yesterday.
On Aug. 3, President Bush and Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said the U.S. had obtained credible evidence that terrorists were continuing to target airlines.
Tuesday in Newark, N.J., the FBI arrested a British arms dealer in a sting in which agents posing as terrorists purchased a shoulder-fired missile that could down a commercial airliner.
Buying one-way tickets with cash as the two men at Sea-Tac did Saturday has been a red flag for security officials. Several Sept. 11 hijackers made similar purchases.
Good. Find out where they stayed here. If was a hotel, find out who else stayed there recently and haul their ass in for questioning if they're on any lists (or Muslims).
The Pakistanis arrested should be on an American airplane alright: a USAF C-141 to Gitmo for a few years of cooling off.
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