Chelsea bomber tried to radicalize inmates, prosecutors say
Story highlights
- Ahmad Khan Rahimi shared terrorist propaganda with other prisoners, prosecutors say
- He was convicted in October in the 2016 bombing in New York's Chelsea neighborhood
(CNN)The
man convicted in the 2016 bombing in New York's Chelsea neighborhood
that injured 30 people has been trying to radicalize other inmates,
federal prosecutors say.
Ahmad Khan Rahimi also told a judge he is on a hunger strike.
Rahimi
provided inmates with copies of terrorist propaganda and jihadist
materials, including speeches by Osama Bin Laden and the late militant
cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, bomb making instructions, books on jihad and
issues of the al Qaeda-backed magazine Inspire, prosecutors said.
Rahimi
"has been attempting to radicalize fellow inmates in the Metropolitan
Correction Center by, among other things, distributing propaganda and
publications issued by terrorist organizations," according to a letter
from Acting US Attorney Joon H. Kim to US District Judge Richard Berman.
Rahimi let other inmates view the
items on his laptop and gave them electronic copies, Kim's letter said.
Discs of the materials were found in two inmates' possession.
Defense attorneys for Rahimi have yet to respond to the allegations.
Prosecutors
said Rahimi began distributing these materials in October if not
earlier. Rahimi was convicted October 16 on eight federal charges in
connection with the Chelsea bombing.
Among
the inmates Rahimi gave the materials to, prosecutors say, is Sajmir
Alimehmeti, who is scheduled to go on trial next month on
terrorism-related charges.
Alimehmeti
is represented by attorney Sabrina Shroff, who is also on Rahimi's
defense team. Kim wrote to Berman asking for a hearing to make sure
Rahimi "has knowingly waived the potential conflict of interest that
exists between [Rahimi] and his attorneys."
Hunger strike
Rahimi
also says he's on a hunger strike. In an undated handwritten letter to
Berman, Rahimi states that he began a hunger strike on December 8 out of
protest because he says his wife and children have not been able to
visit him since the end of his trial.
"I
am on a short time because my sentencing date is on January 18, 2018.
Because of this short time and the frustration I have decided to go on a
hunger strike," Rahimi wrote.
Berman
received the letter December 21 and has ordered attorneys for both the
government and defense to respond, according to court documents.
Rahimi
was arrested and charged after a pressure cooker bomb went off in New
York's Chelsea neighborhood on September 17, 2016. A second pressure
cooker bomb was found a few blocks away, on 27th Street, but didn't
detonate.
Earlier the same day, a bomb went off near the start of a Marine Corps charity run in Seaside Park, New Jersey.
After
a two-week trial and roughly four hours of jury deliberation, Rahimi
was convicted of charges including the use and attempted use of a weapon
of mass destruction, bombing a public place, destroying property by
means of fire or explosives, and using a destructive device in
furtherance of a crime of violence.
During
the trial, the prosecution presented evidence -- including DNA and
fingerprints -- linking Rahimi to the bombs that were placed in New
Jersey and New York.
Rahimi faces a mandatory sentence of life in prison, according to an earlier statement from Kim.
Rahimi
faces separate charges in other jurisdictions in connection with the
bomb that went off in Seaside Park, a backpack containing improvised
explosive devices found the following day at a transit station in
Elizabeth, New Jersey, and a shootout he had with police before being
taken into custody.
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