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Two terror suspects arrested at JFK

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NEW YORK (Reuters) - Two New Jersey men were arrested late Saturday at a New York airport trying to catch flights for meetings with militant groups in Somalia with the intent to kill people, authorities said Sunday.

Mohamed Mahmood Alessa, 20, of North Bergen, and Carlos Eduardo Almonte, 24, of Elmwood Park, were arrested at John F. Kennedy International Airport as they tried to board separate flights to Egypt on their way to Somalia, the U.S. Attorney for New Jersey said.

They were charged with conspiring to commit an act of international terrorism by waging "violent jihad" through Al Shabaab, a youth movement tied to al Qaeda.

Federal officials said there was no active plot and the pair, who had been under surveillance since October 2006 following a tip from an acquaintance, did not pose an immediate threat.

Alessa and Almonte are slated to appear on Monday in federal court in Newark, New Jersey.

The arrests were first reported by The Newark Star-Ledger, which said federal and local law enforcement officials had searched the homes of both men and removed papers, a computer and other materials.

According to the complaint filed by the U.S. attorney, an undercover New York Police Department (NYPD) Intelligence Division officer recorded several meetings with the suspects starting in 2009 in which they expressed intent to kill people abroad, and possibly in the United States.

"We'll start (killing) here, if I can't do it over there," Alessa allegedly said last November, using an Arabic word for killing, court papers said.

"I wanna, like, be the world's worst-known terrorist," he allegedly said, according to the complaint.

Alessa told his family he was going to Egypt to attend school, the complaint said.

The pair discussed preparations including saving funds, getting in physical condition -- more strength meant the ability to kill more non-Muslims -- acquiring military gear and apparel and engaging in paintball, before buying tickets to Cairo on March 20 with a July 11 return date, it said.

On Jan. 31, Almonte said in a recorded conversation that he was born and raised in the United States. "I just want the troops to come home safely," to which Alessa adds "In body bags, in a caskets ... sliced up in 1,000 pieces."

In late April, Almonte noted U.S. troops would be in Somalia soon, which was good because it would not be fun to kill only Africans, according to the complaint.

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School: NJ Terror Suspect Was Dangerous as Student
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS June 8, 2010
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NORTH BERGEN, N.J. (AP) -- One of two terrorism suspects arrested at an airport over the weekend was considered so dangerous as a student that he was removed from the local high school and was taught in a private room at a public library with a security guard present, school officials said Tuesday.

Mohamed Mahmood Alessa was placed ''on home instruction'' three months after transferring from an Islamic high school in 2004, North Bergen High School spokesman Paul Swibinski said.

Swibinski declined to say what made officials consider Alessa to be dangerous, but said it was not a specific incident or physical altercation, but more a pattern of behavior.

''School officials were very concerned about having him in the building,'' Swibinski said. ''They were concerned for the safety of the other students and the staff.''

Authorities say Alessa, 20, and Carlos Eduardo Almonte, 24, tried to fly out of New York's Kennedy Airport on Saturday in hopes of getting terrorism training in Somalia. Alessa, who was born in the United States, is the son of Palestinian immigrants. Almonte is a naturalized citizen who was born in the Dominican Republic. Both are Muslim.
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