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WASHINGTON A Virginia man
who came to the US from Pakistan
has been charged with supporting
Lashkar-e-Taiba, the radical Islamist
terrorist group behind the 2008
shooting attack in Mumbai, India.
Justice Department officials said
Friday that Jubair Ahmad, 24, of
Woodbridge, received religious
training from the terrorist group as a
teenager in Pakistan and later
attended one of its training camps.
He came to the United States in
2007 with his family. He's been
under investigation for two years,
ever since the FBI got a tip that he
might be connected to the group, the
officials said.
Court documents say that last fall, he
produced and uploaded a propaganda
video to YouTube on behalf of of the
group, showing its leader and
purporting to show "jihadi martyrs"
and armored trucks exploding after
having been hit by improvised
explosive devices. Investigators say
when asked about the video, Jubair
falsely denied having anything to do
with it.
Story: Pakistan braces for Indian
pressure in wake of Mumbai blasts
The State Department has
designated Lashkar-e-Taiba as a
terrorist group. It is among nearly a
dozen rebel groups operating in the
disputed Himalayan territory of
Kashmir. India accuses Pakistan of
supporting the group even though it
is officially banned there.
In June, a Pakistani-born
businessman in Chicago was found
guilty of providing support to
Lashkar-e-Taiba in the 2008 Mumbai
assault but not guilty of taking part in
the attack. Tahawwur Rana, 50, a
former Pakistan Army doctor with
Canadian citizenship, was also found
guilty of conspiring to attack a Danish
newspaper, a plot hatched by the
militant group but never carried out.
The key witness in that case
Rana's childhood friend, David
Headley implicated Pakistan's
intelligence agency, ISI, in the
Mumbai attack, which killed 166
people.
Headley admitted scouting targets
for the Mumbai attackers sent by
Lashkar-e-Taiba.
This report from NBC News' Pete
Williams includes information from
Reuters and The Associated
Press.
the United States in
2007 with his family. He's been
under investigation for two years,
ever since the FBI got a tip that he
might be connected to the group, the
officials said.
Court documents say that last fall, he
produced and uploaded a propaganda
video to YouTube on behalf of of the
group, showing its leader and
purporting to show "jihadi martyrs"
and armored trucks exploding after
having been hit by improvised
explosive devices. Investigators say
when asked about the video, Jubair
falsely denied having anything to do
with it.
Story: Pakistan braces for Indian
pressure in wake of Mumbai blasts
The State Department has
designated Lashkar-e-Taiba as a
terrorist group. It is among nearly a
dozen rebel groups operating in the
disputed Himalayan territory of
Kashmir. India accuses Pakistan of
supporting the group even though it
is officially banned there.
In June, a Pakistani-born
businessman in Chicago was found
guilty of providing support to
Lashkar-e-Taiba in the 2008 Mumbai
assault but not guilty of taking part in
the attack. Tahawwur Rana, 50, a
former Pakistan Army doctor with
Canadian citizenship, was also found
guilty of conspiring to attack a Danish
newspaper, a plot hatched by the
militant group but never carried out.
The key witness in that case
Rana's childhood friend, David
Headley implicated Pakistan's
intelligence agency, ISI, in the
Mumbai attack, which killed 166
people.
Headley admitted scouting targets
for the Mumbai attackers sent by
Lashkar-e-Taiba.
This report from NBC News' Pete
Williams includes information from
Reuters and The Associated
Press.
Virginian accused of making YouTube terror video - TODAY News - TODAY.com
who came to the US from Pakistan
has been charged with supporting
Lashkar-e-Taiba, the radical Islamist
terrorist group behind the 2008
shooting attack in Mumbai, India.
Justice Department officials said
Friday that Jubair Ahmad, 24, of
Woodbridge, received religious
training from the terrorist group as a
teenager in Pakistan and later
attended one of its training camps.
He came to the United States in
2007 with his family. He's been
under investigation for two years,
ever since the FBI got a tip that he
might be connected to the group, the
officials said.
Court documents say that last fall, he
produced and uploaded a propaganda
video to YouTube on behalf of of the
group, showing its leader and
purporting to show "jihadi martyrs"
and armored trucks exploding after
having been hit by improvised
explosive devices. Investigators say
when asked about the video, Jubair
falsely denied having anything to do
with it.
Story: Pakistan braces for Indian
pressure in wake of Mumbai blasts
The State Department has
designated Lashkar-e-Taiba as a
terrorist group. It is among nearly a
dozen rebel groups operating in the
disputed Himalayan territory of
Kashmir. India accuses Pakistan of
supporting the group even though it
is officially banned there.
In June, a Pakistani-born
businessman in Chicago was found
guilty of providing support to
Lashkar-e-Taiba in the 2008 Mumbai
assault but not guilty of taking part in
the attack. Tahawwur Rana, 50, a
former Pakistan Army doctor with
Canadian citizenship, was also found
guilty of conspiring to attack a Danish
newspaper, a plot hatched by the
militant group but never carried out.
The key witness in that case
Rana's childhood friend, David
Headley implicated Pakistan's
intelligence agency, ISI, in the
Mumbai attack, which killed 166
people.
Headley admitted scouting targets
for the Mumbai attackers sent by
Lashkar-e-Taiba.
This report from NBC News' Pete
Williams includes information from
Reuters and The Associated
Press.
the United States in
2007 with his family. He's been
under investigation for two years,
ever since the FBI got a tip that he
might be connected to the group, the
officials said.
Court documents say that last fall, he
produced and uploaded a propaganda
video to YouTube on behalf of of the
group, showing its leader and
purporting to show "jihadi martyrs"
and armored trucks exploding after
having been hit by improvised
explosive devices. Investigators say
when asked about the video, Jubair
falsely denied having anything to do
with it.
Story: Pakistan braces for Indian
pressure in wake of Mumbai blasts
The State Department has
designated Lashkar-e-Taiba as a
terrorist group. It is among nearly a
dozen rebel groups operating in the
disputed Himalayan territory of
Kashmir. India accuses Pakistan of
supporting the group even though it
is officially banned there.
In June, a Pakistani-born
businessman in Chicago was found
guilty of providing support to
Lashkar-e-Taiba in the 2008 Mumbai
assault but not guilty of taking part in
the attack. Tahawwur Rana, 50, a
former Pakistan Army doctor with
Canadian citizenship, was also found
guilty of conspiring to attack a Danish
newspaper, a plot hatched by the
militant group but never carried out.
The key witness in that case
Rana's childhood friend, David
Headley implicated Pakistan's
intelligence agency, ISI, in the
Mumbai attack, which killed 166
people.
Headley admitted scouting targets
for the Mumbai attackers sent by
Lashkar-e-Taiba.
This report from NBC News' Pete
Williams includes information from
Reuters and The Associated
Press.
Virginian accused of making YouTube terror video - TODAY News - TODAY.com