In
Boston Shooting, Islamists Damn First, Ignore Facts Later
IPT News
June 3, 2015
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Virtually
everything Islamist activists in the United States claimed about Tuesday's
fatal shooting of terror suspect Usaama Rahim in Boston appears to have
been debunked within 24 hours.
Authorities say they shot Rahim, 26, after he repeatedly lunged at them
with a military-style knife as they tried to question him. The skepticism
was fueled by online posts by Rahim's brother, Imam Ibrahim Rahim. His
claims, which fueled the immediate and reflexive condemnation of the Boston
police and FBI, turned out to be wrong. Usaama Rahim was not shot in the
back. He was not on the telephone with his father when he was shot. Law
enforcement did back up and give Rahim several opportunities to end the
confrontation peacefully.
Officials showed the surveillance video proving this to a group of
Boston community leaders Wednesday. "We're very comfortable with what
we saw," said Urban League President Darnell Williams. While
those who saw the video say it was too grainy to see the knife, a Boston
Globe photograph shows a long knife being removed from the scene.
In a criminal complaint unsealed Wednesday afternoon, FBI
Special Agent J. Joseph Galietta wrote that Rahim bought an Ontario Spec
Plus Marine Raider Bowie fighting knife and an SP6 Spec Plus Fighting Knife
from Amazon in the past week.
In conversations recorded by the FBI, which had Rahim under constant
surveillance for months, Rahim and a friend discussed beheading someone
outside the state of Massachusetts. That changed in a 5 a.m. telephone call
Rahim made to friend David Wright Tuesday morning. He said he no longer was
interested in beheading the target previously discussed.
"I'm just going to ah go after them, those boys in blue,"
Rahim allegedly said in the recorded conversation. "Cause, ah,
it's the easiest target and, ah, the most common is the easiest for
me..."
Wright then advised Rahim to destroy his computer and smartphone
"Because, at the scene, at the scene, CSI will be looking for
that particular thing and so dump it, get rid of that. At the time you are
going to do it, before you reach your destination you get rid of it.
That suggestion prompted the complaint against Wright charging him with
conspiring to obstruct an investigation. Once arrested, Wright waived his
Miranda rights and verified agents' beliefs that cryptic conversations they
heard between Wright and Rahim were about plots to kill people.
When Rahim pulled the knife Tuesday and officers told him to drop it,
Rahim replied, "you drop yours," Galietta wrote.
Thus far, none of the activists who jumped to an erroneous conclusion
Tuesday, who unrealistically expected a full accounting of the incident
within hours, have acknowledged their error.
Arab American
Association of New York Executive Director Linda Sarsour minimized statements by Boston religious
and political activists who reviewed the video of the Rahim shooting.
"If you haven't seen the video of killing of #UsaamaRahim, don't talk
to me about it," she wrote on Twitter. "I don't know what it
shows or doesn't show. Questions still remain," she wrote in a
separate post.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), which routinely criticizes counter-terror investigations as
unjust and rooted in prejudice, issued a news release seeking an "independent and
thorough" investigation, saying it has a "duty to question every
police-involved shooting to determine if the use of deadly force was
necessary, particularly given the recent high profile shootings of
African-American men."
If history is a guide, CAIR won't accept the findings no matter what. It
sought, and obtained, an independent investigation into the 2009 shooting
of Detroit imam Luqman Abdullah.
In 2010, CAIR asked for, then rejected, investigations by the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, the
Dearborn Police Department and Michigan attorney general's office after an imam was shot and
killed after he fired on a K9 dog leading an FBI SWAT team.
Video from that investigation shows Imam Luqman Abdullah, who preached
that followers should not go peacefully if police came for them, tried to
run away as agents moved in to arrest him. He refused their orders to lie
down, lurked behind a corner and kept his hand hidden despite repeated
instructions to show them.
CAIR's Michigan director dismissed the DOJ investigation as
"superficial and incomplete" and continues to cite the incident
as an example of FBI excessive force and mistreatment of Muslims.
It sought, and obtained, an independent investigation into the 2013
shooting in Orlando of Ibragim Todashev, a friend of Boston Marathon
bombers Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.
Investigations by the Justice Department and an independent Florida state
attorney conclude that Todashev, a "skilled mixed-martial arts
fighter," tried to attack agents shortly after acknowledging having
"some involvement" in a 2011 triple homicide in Massachusetts
also under investigation in connection with the Tsarnaevs. Todashev
reportedly heaved a coffee table, striking an FBI agent in the
head before grabbing a five-foot-long metal pole over his head "with
the end of the pole pointed toward [the FBI agent] as if intended to be
used to impale rather than strike." The agent shot him three times,
but Todashev again tried to charge, prompting the agent to fire three or
four more shots, killing Todashev.
The Justice Department review reached the same conclusions.
It noted that Todashev's half-written confession was found at the scene.
"The last sentence that Todashev wrote on the tablet of paper
specifically related conduct by him that acknowledged complicity in the crime,"
the DOJ report said.
"The only person who can contradict the government's narrative is
now dead and the investigation into his death relied on evidence gathered
by agents of the same agency involved in his death," CAIR-Florida
official Hassan Shibly said. Shibly, an attorney, is now involved in filing
a wrongful death claim against the FBI.
He did not comment on Tuesday's shooting in Boston, and Shibly did post an acknowledgement that the video shows Rahim was
not shot in the back as claimed.
CAIR Michigan
chapter leader Dawud Walid, who posted comments skeptical about law
enforcement, made no direct statement about the new disclosures Wednesday
after the activists spoke about what the video showed. Earlier, he lumped
Rahim in with Abdullah adn Todashev. San Francisco chapter official Zahra Billoo challenged someone who urged restraint in
pre-judging the situation and dared to mention the rule of law.
So far, all the emerging information backs up law enforcement claims
about Rahim and debunked the Islamist narrative. But the damage here may be
immeasurable. The inaccurate information plays right into the hands of ISIS
and other radical Islamist recruiters. The reckless, false narrative fuels
the notion of the West's alleged war on Islam, that Muslims must wage
attack to protect the lives of their brethren.
That is the ideology that motivated the terrorists responsible for the Fort Hood shooting and the Boston Marathon bombing, among others.
CAIR and other Islamists say they are merely asking questions. Next
time, perhaps they can at least wait for an autopsy before spreading false,
inflammatory gossip.
Related Topics: Homegrown
Terror, Prosecutions,
Usaama
Rahim, FBI,
Boston
Police, Ibrahim
Rahim, J.
Joseph Galietta, David
Wright, Darnell
Williams, CAIR,
Zahra
Billoo, Dawud
Walid, Linda
Sarsour, Luqman
Abdullah, Ibragim
Todashev, Hassan
Shibly, war
on Islam narrative, Homegrown
Terror, Prosecutions
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