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- <text id=93TT0133>
- <title>
- July 12, 1993: Laying Hands On An Unwanted Guest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 12, 1993 Reno:The Real Thing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 27
- Laying Hands On An Unwanted Guest
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Preceded by a decoy, Sheik Abdel Rahman leaves a Brooklyn mosque
- and surrenders to waiting feds
- </p>
- <p> The first sheik was a fake. A figure clad in white robes and
- a red-and-white cap left the Abu Bakr Mosque in Brooklyn, New
- York, on Thursday night and got into a waiting van. Federal
- agents with guns drawn quickly surrounded the vehicle, crying,
- "Get out!" The man did, looked up--and the feds immediately
- saw he was not Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman.
- </p>
- <p> The second sheik was the real thing. A figure dressed the same
- way left the mosque a little after 6 p.m. on Friday. Surrounded
- by his supporters and under the eyes of federal agents and New
- York City cops, he walked between police barricades and past
- a crowd of onlookers, some chanting "Go to hell!" Getting him
- to come out required 20 hours of painstaking negotiations, partly
- about where he would go. Abdel Rahman wanted to be driven in
- his own car to New Jersey, to turn himself in at the Newark
- offices of the Immigration and NatuService. The feds wanted
- him to surrender at INS headquarters in Manhattan. They compromised
- on a firehouse across the street from the mosque, where the
- sheik entered an INS van and was driven to a federal facility
- in Otisville, New York, about 75 miles northwest of New York
- City. The blind Egyptian cleric could be held until the resolution
- of his appeal of a deportation order issued by an immigration
- judge in March.
- </p>
- <p> Abdel Rahman has been spiritual mentor to members of not one
- but two rings of suspected terrorists. The first group allegedly
- bombed the World Trade Center on Feb. 26. The second is accused
- of planning to bomb the United Nations building, a federal office
- building and the Holland and Lincoln tunnels; some of its members
- were arrested in the act of mixing the explosives. Officially,
- though, the sheik's detention had nothing to do with terrorism.
- Attorney General Janet Reno determined that there was insufficient
- evidence linking Abdel Rahman to the bomb plots, and she clung
- to that stand despite reports that the FBI had taped the sheik
- saying "American blood must be spilled on its own soil." (That,
- said one of the sheik's allies, was just "Arabic hyperbole--good Arabic, bad English.")
- </p>
- <p> But the March deportation order empowered the INS to detain
- the sheik, who had been on parole ever since. One reason for
- revoking parole is suspicion that the suspect might flee. Abdel
- Rahman obligingly provided grounds for such suspicion by leaving
- his apartment in Jersey City Wednesday night and leading federal
- agents who had been watching him on a car chase before holing
- up in the Brooklyn mosque.
- </p>
- <p> In Egypt, where a judge last week issued a warrant for the sheik's
- arrest, Abdel Rahman's supporters vowed a global bomb campaign
- to avenge his U.S. detention. Which did little to reassure New
- Yorkers about their safety. On Thursday bomb scares closed the
- Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel and one entrance to Kennedy Airport.
- A ninth suspect in the case of the would-be U.N. bombers was
- arrested, but some other plotters may be still at large. Meanwhile,
- at bail hearings for some of the original eight suspects, FBI
- officials charged that their targets also included the George
- Washington Bridge and the diamond district, a single block in
- Manhattan where gems are cut and polished, mostly by Jews. On
- an FBI tape, one terrorist excitedly envisioned the results:
- "Boom--broken windows, Jews in the streets."
- </p>
- <p>-- By George J. Church. Reported by Sharon E. Epperson and Janice
- C. Simpson/New York and Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-