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Officials retrace Reid's travels
12/27/2001
By JOHN SOLOMON Associated Press Writer
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 Suspect
Richard C. Reid AP
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WASHINGTON — Aided by intelligence
from foreign police, U.S. authorities are reconstructing Richard Reid's recent
travels across Europe and the Mideast looking for any ties to terrorist groups,
government officials said Thursday.
Initial testing on the material
found in Reid's shoes also indicated the presence of PETN, a material used to
make the explosive Semtex that was detonated by Libyan terrorists to down Pan Am
Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in the late 1980s, the officials said.
The tests also indicated there was no metal in the shoes, and that the
bomb may have been foiled in part because the nonmetal fuse picked up enough
moisture to make it difficult to ignite, the officials said, speaking only on
condition of anonymity.
U.S. officials cautioned they haven't
drawn any conclusions yet about whether Reid was acting alone or was part of an
organized terrorist group when he allegedly tried to detonate explosives hidden
in his shoes on an international flight last week.
Some officials who
have been briefed on the investigation said the growing portrait of Reid
suggests he may have had help.
``I would doubt very seriously he did it
by himself,'' said Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., chairman of the House aviation
subcommittee. He called the construction of the shoe bombs a sophisticated
operation.
But one of Reid's court-appointed lawyers said she knew of no
evidence connecting her client to terrorists.
``We are unaware of any
evidence to support a link between the offense charged and any terrorist
organization or individual,'' assistant federal public defender Tamar R.
Birckhead said. ``We urge the press and the public to maintain open minds.''
Reid is scheduled to appear in court Friday in Boston.
Federal
investigators are carefully retracing Reid's movements in the last six months,
reviewing reports and records from foreign police and intelligence suggesting he
traveled or spent money in Israel, Egypt, the Netherlands, Belgium and France.
Among those travels, a few stops have drawn increased scrutiny, the
officials said.
FBI agents are exploring whether Reid purchased
any explosive materials or shoes during a recent stop in Amsterdam, and whether
he was stopped by security officials suspicious about his shoes before he
boarded a plane in Israel earlier this summer, the officials said.
The
Dutch secret service said Thursday it was investigating reports that Reid was in
the Netherlands in December, allegedly to purchase the shoes.
``We are
looking into the case and whether Mr. Reid was in Amsterdam,'' said spokesman
Vincent van Steen of the Internal Security Service
An Israeli security
official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there were indications Reid
visited Israel several months ago.
The Israeli newspaper Yediot
Ahronot reported Reid visited that country in June for a week. Reid was
questioned by security personnel but later released, the newspaper said.
Across the world in Afghanistan, U.S. officials are attempting to
corroborate claims from some low-level al-Qaida prisoners that Reid trained with
them at Osama bin Laden's camps in Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, authorities
continued to reconstruct Reid's final movements in December. They said they
believe he went to Amsterdam and then Brussels, Belgium, where he got a new
British passport.
Officials said they believe Reid took a train Dec. 16
to Paris, where he bought, in cash, his airline ticket for the American Airlines
flight from Paris to Miami.
He was scheduled to leave on that
flight last Friday but missed the jetliner because he was questioned by French
authorities. He then made it onto the same flight Saturday.
Reid was
overpowered by flight attendants and passengers after he allegedly tried to
detonate explosives. The flight was diverted to Boston, where he was arrested
and charged with intimidation or assault of a flight crew.
Reid's mother
in England, Lesley Hughes, released a statement through a law firm Thursday
saying ``she has no knowledge of this matter'' other than what she has learned
from the news media.
``As any mother would be, she is deeply shocked and
concerned about the allegations made against her son, but has no further comment
to make,'' the statement said.
U.S. authorities are also
examining whether foreign authorities missed some opportunities to detect Reid's
plans.
The security company at the Paris airport reportedly twice
objected to letting Reid board because he raised concerns in the passenger
profiling system — a new passport, a one-way ticket paid in cash, no checked
luggage, and a small carryon, officials said. He was permitted to board the
Saturday flight.
In Britain, the leader of the mosque that Reid attended
said local police failed to act on warnings that Islamic radicals were
recruiting young Muslims at his mosque.
Authorities have confirmed both
Reid and Zacarias Moussaoui, the first man charged with conspiracy to murder
thousand in the Sept. 11 attacks, worshipped at the Brixton mosque in south
London.
``We've been saying for a long time that these people
are recruiting,'' said Abdul Haqq Baker, the mosque's chairman. ``We've been
warning about them, and look what's happened now.''
Eds:
Reporters Beth Gardiner in London and Jonathan Salant in Washington contributed
to this report.
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