- Mar 16, 2012
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Not a day goes by that these animals try to massacre innocent people in the name of their terrorist prophet. Islam is truly a cancer upon modern civilization.
But wait, didn't our liar in chief tell us that this has NOTHING to do with Islam?
http://www.newsweek.com/report-two-...-attack-nyc-result-isis-radicalization-319069
Updated | Two women were arrested in the New York City area and accused of planning a bomb attack, federal authorities told ABC News. The women were reportedly radicalized by ISIS and were suspected of targeting military and government entities rather than civilians. The funeral of slain police officer Rafael Ramos was considered a target location for a bombing.
The women were identified as Noelle Velentzas, 28, and Asia Siddiqui, 31, in a complaint released by the United States attorney's office for the Eastern District of New York. The two were roommates in Queens and are both U.S. citizens.
According to two neighbors, three NYPD officers arrived at Siddiqui's Queens home on Thursday morning around 7:30 AM. Shortly thereafter, the neighbors spotted several men in FBI jackets and an SUV with dark, tinted windows. "What's to say they wouldn't do that to us? They may come down here and throw a bomb into the house," the neighbor, Sandy, who declined to give her last name, told Newsweek. Another neighbor described the street as quiet and said Siddiqui lived in a multifamily building.
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An undercover officer met with both women during the investigation. At one point in the probe, Velentzas said the undercover officer had found two "terroristic-ass friends" in the women.
The FBI had investigated the women's online presence, which included research into creating a homemade bomb and accessing ISIS propaganda. Siddiqui was "in possession of multiple propane gas tanks, as well as instructions for how to transform propane tanks into explosive devices," the complaint stated. Velentzas was "obsessed with pressure cookers since the Boston Marathon attacks." Those attacks killed several and injured dozens; one of the suspected attackers died, and the second is currently being tried in Boston.
Velentzas "repeatedly expressed an interest in terrorist attacks committed within the United States" and praised the September 11, 2001, attacks. She reportedly said her heroes were Osama bin Laden and Abdullah Azzam, his mentor.
In one instance, Velentzas "pulled a knife from her bra and demonstrated how to stab someone to show Siddiqui and the [undercover officer] what she should do if attacked. Velentzas said, "Why we can't be some real bad bitches?" Velentzas said she carried a knife in her bra and kept an ax and knife in her home.
After news broke about the three London schoolgirls traveling to Syria to join ISIS, Siddiqui said, "This could be us, but we old and [Velentzas is] married." Velentzas replied, "You never know, there is other ways.... There's other ways to do that."
In February, three New York City men were arrested on similar charges. They had watched ISIS propaganda material online, and one of the three considered an attack on Coney Island, according to authorities. Velentzas was Facebook friends with Tairod Pugh, an Air Force veteran arrested for trying to join ISIS in mid-March.
ISIS commonly recruits women online, particularly through Twitter and blog posts. One female ISIS recruiter wrote a manual training Western women on how to travel to Syria to join the terrorist group. The three British teenagers made their way to Syria after interacting with a recruiter through social media.
But wait, didn't our liar in chief tell us that this has NOTHING to do with Islam?
http://www.newsweek.com/report-two-...-attack-nyc-result-isis-radicalization-319069
Updated | Two women were arrested in the New York City area and accused of planning a bomb attack, federal authorities told ABC News. The women were reportedly radicalized by ISIS and were suspected of targeting military and government entities rather than civilians. The funeral of slain police officer Rafael Ramos was considered a target location for a bombing.
The women were identified as Noelle Velentzas, 28, and Asia Siddiqui, 31, in a complaint released by the United States attorney's office for the Eastern District of New York. The two were roommates in Queens and are both U.S. citizens.
According to two neighbors, three NYPD officers arrived at Siddiqui's Queens home on Thursday morning around 7:30 AM. Shortly thereafter, the neighbors spotted several men in FBI jackets and an SUV with dark, tinted windows. "What's to say they wouldn't do that to us? They may come down here and throw a bomb into the house," the neighbor, Sandy, who declined to give her last name, told Newsweek. Another neighbor described the street as quiet and said Siddiqui lived in a multifamily building.
Try Newsweek for only $1.25 per week
An undercover officer met with both women during the investigation. At one point in the probe, Velentzas said the undercover officer had found two "terroristic-ass friends" in the women.
The FBI had investigated the women's online presence, which included research into creating a homemade bomb and accessing ISIS propaganda. Siddiqui was "in possession of multiple propane gas tanks, as well as instructions for how to transform propane tanks into explosive devices," the complaint stated. Velentzas was "obsessed with pressure cookers since the Boston Marathon attacks." Those attacks killed several and injured dozens; one of the suspected attackers died, and the second is currently being tried in Boston.
Velentzas "repeatedly expressed an interest in terrorist attacks committed within the United States" and praised the September 11, 2001, attacks. She reportedly said her heroes were Osama bin Laden and Abdullah Azzam, his mentor.
In one instance, Velentzas "pulled a knife from her bra and demonstrated how to stab someone to show Siddiqui and the [undercover officer] what she should do if attacked. Velentzas said, "Why we can't be some real bad bitches?" Velentzas said she carried a knife in her bra and kept an ax and knife in her home.
After news broke about the three London schoolgirls traveling to Syria to join ISIS, Siddiqui said, "This could be us, but we old and [Velentzas is] married." Velentzas replied, "You never know, there is other ways.... There's other ways to do that."
In February, three New York City men were arrested on similar charges. They had watched ISIS propaganda material online, and one of the three considered an attack on Coney Island, according to authorities. Velentzas was Facebook friends with Tairod Pugh, an Air Force veteran arrested for trying to join ISIS in mid-March.
ISIS commonly recruits women online, particularly through Twitter and blog posts. One female ISIS recruiter wrote a manual training Western women on how to travel to Syria to join the terrorist group. The three British teenagers made their way to Syria after interacting with a recruiter through social media.