Cornflakes of Mass Destruction
More than a year before the Sept. 11,
2001, attacks, the FBI nabbed two Arab grocers loading boxes onto a
tractor-trailer outside a drab gray apartment building here. The cargo: stolen
Kellogg's cereal.
Agents did
not charge the men that day, and set them free. But 16 months later, soon after
hijacked planes had crashed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the
FBI was back. This time, agents arrested the pair and a third Arab grocer. After
they were grilled about the terrorist attacks, the men were charged and pleaded
guilty -- to conspiracy to possess the pilfered cornflakes.
To this day, the three grocers remain on
the federal government's list of terrorism cases, although they never were
charged with a terrorism-related crime. Often cited to emphasize the
government's success fighting terrorism, the list that includes Nasser Abuali,
Hussein Abuali and Rabi Ahmed is made up in large part of men caught up in the
post-Sept. 11 dragnet that targeted Middle
Easterners.It also includes a
Sudanese actor released after his name was mixed up with that of Sept. 11
mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed, as well as four Jordanians convicted in an
immigrant-marriage scam in Florida. Neither the actor nor the Jordanians were
linked to terrorism.Wash Post
Posted: Sun - June 12, 2005 at 07:48 PM