news/2009/11/ap_forthood_imam_110909
Fort Hood suspect reached out to imam
Posted : Wednesday Nov 11, 2009 7:10:32 EST
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Army psychiatrist accused of the Fort Hood massacre apparently acted alone and without outside direction in the attack, investigative officials said Monday night.
Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan will be charged by the U.S. military rather than in a civilian court, they said.
Hasan communicated 10 to 20 times with a radical imam overseas who in the past came under scrutiny for possible links to terror groups, the investigative officials and another U.S. official disclosed. The investigative officials said the communications began last year and continued into this year and “were consistent with the subject matter of his research.” The U.S. official said the communications were with the imam, Anwar al-Awlaki.
U.S. officials were aware of the communications since last year, but no formal investigation was ever opened based on them, the officials said.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they said they were not authorized to discuss the investigation on the record. Al-Awlaki, who was released from a jail in Yemen last year, writes a blog that denounces U.S. policies as anti-Muslim.
The officials said Hasan would be tried in a military court. Authorities have not said when charges would be filed.
Investigators tried to interview Hasan on Sunday at the military hospital where he is held under guard, but he refused to answer and requested a lawyer, the officials said.
Hasan, 39, is accused of opening fire at the Army post on Thursday, killing 13 people and wounding 29 before civilian police shot him in the torso.
Hasan was awake and talking on Monday, said Dewey Mitchell, a spokesman for Brooke Army Medical Center.
Investigators are trying to establish a motive for the shootings. Details that have emerged indicate Hasan was an observant Muslim who was strongly opposed to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and appeared to have been struggling to reconcile his faith and his duty as a U.S. Army military officer. His family said he was to have been sent to Afghanistan in November and was trying to get out of the assignment.
Galligan questioned whether Hasan could get a fair trial, particularly given President Barack Obama’s planned visit to the base on Tuesday for a memorial service.
“You’ve got his commander in chief showing up tomorrow,” Galligan said. “That same kind of publicity naturally creates an issue as to whether you find a fair and impartial forum, whether that’s in the military or even if it were in a federal forum.”
Meanwhile, al-Awlaki, a radical American imam who had contact with two of the Sept. 11 hijackers and was a spiritual leader at a Virginia mosque where Hasan was said to have worshipped occasionally, praised the U.S. soldier on his personal Web site Monday.
“Nidal Hassan is a hero,” wrote al-Awlaki, who lives in Yemen. “He is a man of conscience who could not bear living the contradiction of being a Muslim and serving in an army that is fighting against his own people.”
In December, al-Awlaki, on his Web site, encouraged Muslims across the world to kill U.S. troops in Iraq.
Al-Awlaki left the United States in 2002, eventually traveling to Yemen. His whereabouts have been unknown since he was released from a Yemeni jail last year. He is on Yemen’s most-wanted militant list, according to three Yemeni security officials.
The officials said al-Awlaki was arrested in 2006 with a small group of suspected al-Qaida militants. They said he was released more than a year later after signing a pledge not to break the law or leave the country. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.
Hasan’s family attended the Dar al-Hijrah Islamic Center in Falls Church, Virginia, where al-Awlaki was preaching in 2001. Hasan’s mother’s funeral was held at the mosque on May 31, 2001, according to her obituary. That was around the same time two 9/11 hijackers worshipped at the mosque.
Imam Johari Abdul-Malik, outreach director for the Dar al-Hijrah Islamic Center, said Monday that staff members of the mosque saw Hasan at prayer services occasionally. But he said he didn’t know if Hasan ever heard al-Awlaki speak, and added that Hasan was not an active member.
“As we understand it, there was no relationship between Imam al-Awlaki and Maj. Hasan, not to our knowledge,” he said.
The Falls Church mosque is one of the largest on the U.S. East Coast, and thousands of worshippers attend prayers and services there every week.
___
Baker reported from Killeen, Texas; Associated Press writers Angela K. Brown, Allen Breed and Jeff Carlton at Fort Hood; Michelle Roberts in San Antonio; Pamela Hess and Eileen Sullivan in Washington; Nafeesa Sayed in Falls Church, Va.; Ben Nuckols in Baltimore; Matthew Barakat in McLean, Va., and Ahmed al-Haj in San’a, Yemen, contributed to this report.
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