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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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October 18, 2017
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Edmonton
Terrorist's Movements Highlight Threat to U.S. Southern Border
by John Rossomando • Oct 18, 2017
at 5:02 pm
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Fears about a terrorist using the U.S.-Mexican border as a gateway for
an attack have been realized. Evidence shows that Somali Edmonton terrorist
Abdulahi Hasan Sharif crossed the U.S.-Mexican border
from Tijuana into San Diego at the San Ysidro border crossing on July 12,
2011.
Sharif allegedly hit an Edmonton police officer with a white Chevrolet
Malibu on Sept. 30. He then got out of his car and stabbed the officer with
a knife. A police manhunt ensued. The attacker then stole a U-Haul and
drove it into four pedestrians before police apprehended him.
Investigators found an ISIS flag in his car, but the jihadist group has
not claimed responsibility for his attacks.
Canadian press reports indicate that when he entered the U.S in 2011,
Sharif lacked valid travel documents and almost immediately
ended up in the hands of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). An
immigration judge ordered Sharif deported to Somalia. But ICE released him because Somalia lacks a functioning government. He fell of the radar and U.S. authorities were unable to
locate him.
He entered Canada in 2012 and obtained refugee status, Canadian officials said. It
isn't clear why Canadian officials were unaware of Sharif's deportation
from the United States. Privacy laws in both countries could keep that
information secret, adding to widespread speculation that he received
asylum in the U.S. Asylum applications are confidential, which further
complicates the public's right to know.
Reports of Sharif's radicalism, including his open support for ISIS, first surfaced in 2015 after
coworkers reported him to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Sharif would
rant about how "polytheists" needed to die and how he hated
Shiite Muslims, a coworker told the Canadian Broadcasting Company (CBC).
The other question is how Sharif got to the U.S.-Mexican border – nearly
10,000 miles from Somalia.
Sharif likely worked with "long haul smugglers," national
security expert Todd Bensman theorized in a recent post on his LinkedIn account, using prior
court-established smuggling patterns as a baseline. Bensman wrote his Master's thesis for the Naval Postgraduate School
on Somali smuggling patterns.
Many Somalis travel from Kenya to South Africa on the first leg of their
trip to the U.S. From there they make their way to Brazil and then made his
way northward through Latin America until they reach the U.S.-Mexican
border.
Sharif's penetration of the U.S.-Mexican border isn't unique, Bensman wrote. He notes that others with ties to Al-Shabaab
have also been identified but were apprehended before they could do
anything.
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