Ehsanul Sadequee

Ehsanul "Shifa" Sadequee (born July 30, 1986, in Fairfax, Virginia)[2] is an American who was arrested by the FBI on four terrorism charges, convicted, and sentenced to 17 years in prison, to be followed by 30 years of supervised release.[2][3]

Ehsanul Sadequee
BornJuly 30, 1986 (1986-07-30) (age 34)
Other namesShifa
Conviction(s)2009
Criminal charge2006 Toronto terrorism arrests
*making a false statement to law enforcement
PenaltySentenced to 17 years in prison, to be followed by 30 years of supervised release[1]

Life

Sadequee was born in Virginia and grew up in Atlanta, Georgia, the youngest of four siblings in a Bangladeshi-American family.[4] He lived with his mother, brother, and sister at the family home in Roswell, Georgia before his arrest.[2]

He and Syed Haris Ahmed became active on several web forums discussing Islam.[1] In March 2005, Sadequee and Ahmed both traveled to Toronto aboard a Greyhound bus, to meet with people met online, Fahim Ahmad, Jahmaal James and another youth,[5] who were subjects of a Canadian anti-terrorism investigation.[6] Police informant Mubin Shaikh later stated that he believed the two Americans had been asking whether they would be able to hide in Canada if they were to carry out attacks in the United States.[6]

On August 18, 2005, he travelled to his ancestral home of Bangladesh to marry. Prior to his departure, in the John F. Kennedy Airport he was questioned by two Joint Terrorism Task Force agents. When questioned about the bus trip, Sadequee stated he had traveled alone and stayed with his aunt Manju in the city, rather than with the subject of a Canadian anti-terrorism investigation.[2] Upon searching his luggage, the agents discovered two CD-ROMs hidden in the lining of his suitcase.

His story, including interviews with his family and former counter-terrorism officials, is told in the February 2016 HBO Documentary Homegrown.

Arrest

After the Toronto terror arrests in June 2006, he was charged with making a false statement for his lie in the airport about the bus trip, and placed under arrest.

In a bail hearing for Sadequee, prosecutors alleged that both men traveled to Washington, D.C. to make "casing videos" of the United States Capitol building, the World Bank, a Masonic temple and a fuel depot, and that Sadequee had then sent the video to Irhabi007 of London who in 2007 was found guilty of incitement to commit acts of terrorism and sentenced to 16 years in prison.[5]

gollark: I think an interesting solution to this sort of issue is federated social networks, but they have their own scale issues and also nobody uses them.
gollark: Humans don't seem to be very good at rationally optimising for a goal. Unless it's an extremely weird goal.
gollark: You need to be very sure about the specification I guess.
gollark: … no? It's just a thing which can perform some set of general intelligence tasks.
gollark: If you program the thing to optimise some utility function - and didn't make a mistake - it won't decide to stop optimising for that.

References

  1. http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2009/December/09-nsd-1338.html
  2. United States of America -against- Ensanul Islam Sadequee, Affidavit in support of arrest warrant by Michael Scherck, March 28, 2006
  3. "Separate Trials Sought In Terrorism Case". firstcoastnews.com. 2007-07-11. Retrieved 2007-10-24.
  4. Kanya D’Almeida (May 13, 2016). "Living in the Shadow of Counterterrorism: A Daily Struggle for Muslim Women". Rewire.
  5. CBC, Among the Believers; Timeline
  6. PBS, Frontline, Canada: The Cell Next Door, January 30, 2007
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