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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1994-03-25
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<text id=93TT0133>
<title>
July 12, 1993: Laying Hands On An Unwanted Guest
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 12, 1993 Reno:The Real Thing
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER, Page 27
Laying Hands On An Unwanted Guest
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Preceded by a decoy, Sheik Abdel Rahman leaves a Brooklyn mosque
and surrenders to waiting feds
</p>
<p> The first sheik was a fake. A figure clad in white robes and
a red-and-white cap left the Abu Bakr Mosque in Brooklyn, New
York, on Thursday night and got into a waiting van. Federal
agents with guns drawn quickly surrounded the vehicle, crying,
"Get out!" The man did, looked up--and the feds immediately
saw he was not Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman.
</p>
<p> The second sheik was the real thing. A figure dressed the same
way left the mosque a little after 6 p.m. on Friday. Surrounded
by his supporters and under the eyes of federal agents and New
York City cops, he walked between police barricades and past
a crowd of onlookers, some chanting "Go to hell!" Getting him
to come out required 20 hours of painstaking negotiations, partly
about where he would go. Abdel Rahman wanted to be driven in
his own car to New Jersey, to turn himself in at the Newark
offices of the Immigration and NatuService. The feds wanted
him to surrender at INS headquarters in Manhattan. They compromised
on a firehouse across the street from the mosque, where the
sheik entered an INS van and was driven to a federal facility
in Otisville, New York, about 75 miles northwest of New York
City. The blind Egyptian cleric could be held until the resolution
of his appeal of a deportation order issued by an immigration
judge in March.
</p>
<p> Abdel Rahman has been spiritual mentor to members of not one
but two rings of suspected terrorists. The first group allegedly
bombed the World Trade Center on Feb. 26. The second is accused
of planning to bomb the United Nations building, a federal office
building and the Holland and Lincoln tunnels; some of its members
were arrested in the act of mixing the explosives. Officially,
though, the sheik's detention had nothing to do with terrorism.
Attorney General Janet Reno determined that there was insufficient
evidence linking Abdel Rahman to the bomb plots, and she clung
to that stand despite reports that the FBI had taped the sheik
saying "American blood must be spilled on its own soil." (That,
said one of the sheik's allies, was just "Arabic hyperbole--good Arabic, bad English.")
</p>
<p> But the March deportation order empowered the INS to detain
the sheik, who had been on parole ever since. One reason for
revoking parole is suspicion that the suspect might flee. Abdel
Rahman obligingly provided grounds for such suspicion by leaving
his apartment in Jersey City Wednesday night and leading federal
agents who had been watching him on a car chase before holing
up in the Brooklyn mosque.
</p>
<p> In Egypt, where a judge last week issued a warrant for the sheik's
arrest, Abdel Rahman's supporters vowed a global bomb campaign
to avenge his U.S. detention. Which did little to reassure New
Yorkers about their safety. On Thursday bomb scares closed the
Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel and one entrance to Kennedy Airport.
A ninth suspect in the case of the would-be U.N. bombers was
arrested, but some other plotters may be still at large. Meanwhile,
at bail hearings for some of the original eight suspects, FBI
officials charged that their targets also included the George
Washington Bridge and the diamond district, a single block in
Manhattan where gems are cut and polished, mostly by Jews. On
an FBI tape, one terrorist excitedly envisioned the results:
"Boom--broken windows, Jews in the streets."
</p>
<p>-- By George J. Church. Reported by Sharon E. Epperson and Janice
C. Simpson/New York and Elaine Shannon/Washington
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>