Shaher Elsohemy

A prominent Egyptian-Canadian Muslim, Shaher Elsohemy was paid $4 million by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police for his role in infiltrating the alleged terrorist plot in the 2006 Toronto terrorism case; although some have claimed he acted as an agent provocateur, their claim failed in court.[1][2][3]

He was given legal immunity to "knowingly facilitate a terrorist activity" and asked to help the accused acquire credit cards and purchase explosives.[2] After the arrests, he was subsequently placed in witness protection for his safety.[4][5]

Life

The Agricultural engineering graduate studied and spent much of his early life in Cairo, Egypt, but returned to Canada in 2000 and started a five-year career as a flight attendant for Air Canada.[6]

Described as a man who "loved the good life", he once took a friend on a one-day trip to Poland simply because they wanted to try eating duck properly.[2] Another time, he began describing his favourite restaurant to a friend and decided to take him on a one-day trip to South America to eat at the restaurant.[7]

He left his job to open his own catering business, which closed the following year.[6] Changing his direction, he opened a new businesses, setting up a travel agency.[2]

Role in the plot

On April 29, 2006, the man was asked by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) with whom he was asked to volunteer as an informant to set up a meeting between himself and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.[2] He told the police agency that he was willing to infiltrate the group they were monitoring. Negotiations started at $15 million. It is believed that his help "stopping the terrorist act, would be worthy of that amount".[2]

The RCMP negotiated with him for six hours but were unable to convince him to help them for any less than $13.4 million, and at 10pm, they agreed to schedule a meeting the following day to continue their negotiation. The RCMP refused to meet his demands and the meeting ended still without resolution, although an internal memo stated that the police force had better agree to meet his price or else he might "become hostile as a witness, difficult to control and seek other avenues to be compensated". At their final meeting, the police agreed they would pay him an award of $500,000 although the cost of relocation and protection was estimated at 4.1 million.[2]

He was given legal immunity to "knowingly facilitate a terrorist activity" and asked to help the accused acquire credit cards and purchase ammonium nitrate from disguised police officers, and to facilitate the storage of the explosive fertilizer in a Newmarket warehouse.[2] He was given $2000 by Shareef Abdelhaleem as an alleged downpayment to purchase the explosives since he had an agricultural engineering degree.[8]

A month later, both intelligence and police units co-operated to stage a series of raids across the Greater Toronto Area, arresting 16 young men and an older man alleged to have acted as their ringleader. By April 2008, seven of the alleged terrorists, including the alleged ringleader, were released after the Crown suggested there was no evidence they had planned anything themselves.[9][10]

gollark: Anyway, I successfully carcinized the backend.
gollark: `cargo build --release`-irl
gollark: I see.
gollark: > Conceptually, a Rust program is a series of operations which will be executed on a computer.Fascinating.
gollark: I wonder, would performance issues result if I just had each each task poll the counter every 50ms?

See also

References

  1. El Akad, Omar. The Globe and Mail, Online leaks get around publication ban, June 2, 2007
  2. Michael Friscolanti. Macleans, The four-million dollar rat Archived 2012-02-22 at the Wayback Machine, February 7, 2007
  3. Teotonio, Isabel. Toronto Star, Toronto 18 attack was to mimic 9/11, June 23, 2009
  4. CBC, 2nd mole played key role in bomb plot probe, October 13, 2006
  5. Freeze, Colin. The Globe and Mail, Was imam another informant in Toronto terror plot? Archived 2007-01-18 at the Wayback Machine, January 16, 2007
  6. El Akkad, Omar and Colin Freeze. The Globe and Mail, “Police had second mole in terror plot: Informant expected to be key witness”, October 14, 2006
  7. el Akkad, Omar and Colin Freeze, The Globe and Mail, “Police had a second mole”
  8. CBC, Among the Believers; Timeline
  9. Toronto Star, editorial, Now it's the Toronto 11, April 17, 2008
  10. CTV, Alleged ring leader in Ont. terror case gets bail Archived 2007-11-08 at the Wayback Machine, November 5, 2007
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