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Rediff.com  » News » LeT operative Headley charged for 26/11 conspiracy

LeT operative Headley charged for 26/11 conspiracy

Last updated on: December 07, 2009 23:50 IST
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Pakistan-born American citizen David Coleman Headley was on Monday charged in a court in Chicago with criminal conspiracy in the Mumbai terror attacks that killed 166 people, including many foreigners.

The charges filed in the Federal Court in Chicago allege that Headley conducted extensive surveillance of targets in Mumbai for more than two years preceding the November 26, 2008, terrorist attack.

Headley was charged in a 12-count criminal information with six counts of conspiracy to bomb public places in India, murder and maim persons in India and Denmark, provide material support to foreign terrorist plots, provide material support to terror group Lashkar-e-Tayiba, and six counts of aiding and abetting the murder of US citizens in India.

The charges were announced by US Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois Patrick J Fitzgerald and Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation Robert D Grant,

Headley, 49, allegedly attended terrorism training camps in Pakistan run by the LeT and conspired with its members and others in planning and executing the attacks in both India and Denmark, federal law enforcement officials announced today.

Abdur Rehman Hashim Syed, a retired major in the Pakistani military, was also charged with conspiracy in planning to attack a Danish newspaper that published cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed in 2005, to murder and maim persons in a foreign country and providing material support to terror conspiracy.

Rehman allegedly participated in planning a terrorist attack in Denmark, coordinated surveillance of the intended targets, facilitated communications regarding the surveillance and planning with a member of Lashkar and (Ilyas) Kashmiri.

Headley, along with Chicago resident Tahawwur Rana, was arrested in October for planning terror attacks in India and Denmark. Through his attorneys, Headley has authorised the Justice Department to disclose that he is cooperating in the ongoing investigation of both the Indian and Danish terror plots.

He has remained in federal custody without bond since he was arrested in Chicago. No date has been set yet for his arraignment in the US districtcCourt in Chicago, according to a statement by the US attorney.

Major Rehman, who was not named previously but whose alleged participation was described in the initial charges against Headley and Rana, played the central role in communicating with Headley and facilitating contacts with other co-conspirators in Pakistan, including LeT members.

According to the charges filed against Headley, he changed his name from Daood Gilani on February 15, 2006, in Philadelphia, after he learnt from members of the LeT in late 2005 that he would be traveling to India to perform surveillance for Lashkar.

He changed his name in order to present himself in India as an American who was neither Muslim nor Pakistani, the charges said. Headley made five trips to Mumbai in September 2006, February and September 2007, and April and July 2008 -- each time taking photographs and making videotapes of various targets, including those attacked in November 2008.

After each trip Headley undertook to India between September 2006 and July 2008, he returned to Pakistan, met other co-conspirators and provided them with photographs, videos and oral descriptions of various locations, the charges said.

In March 2008, Headley and his co-conspirators discussed potential landing sites for a team of terrorists who would travel to Mumbai by sea, and he was instructed to take boat trips in and around the Mumbai harbour and take surveillance video, which he did during his visit in April 2008, the charges allege.

Headley attended LeT training camps in Pakistan between February and August 2002 and between August and December 2003. At various times, he conducted surveillance of other locations in Mumbai and elsewhere in India, including the National Defence College in Delhi, the charges said.

According to the charges, after being tasked in late 2005 with gathering surveillance in Mumbai and changing his name in early 2006, Headley traveled to Chicago in June 2006 and advised a person, identified in the charges as Individual 'A', of his assignment.

Headley obtained Individual A's approval to open an office of First World Immigration Services in Mumbai in 2006 as cover for his surveillance activities, the charges said, adding that he misrepresented his birth name, father's true name and the purpose of his travel in his visa application.

Attorney Fitzgerald said the investigation would continue and the prosecutors will continue to seek charges against the other persons responsible for these attacks.

"This case serves as a reminder that the terrorist threat is global in nature and requires constant vigilance at home and abroad," said Assistant Attorney General for National Security David Kris.

"We continue to share leads developed in this investigation with our foreign and domestic law enforcement partners as we work together on this important matter," Kris said.

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