Seth
01-19-2006, 12:09
AP Interview: FBI’s LA boss says homegrown terrorists top concern
By JEREMIAH MARQUEZ
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The FBI’s new regional chief says the threat
of homegrown militants remains a top concern five months after
authorities uncovered an alleged terrorism plot by Americans
targeting synagogues and military recruiting centers around Los
Angeles.
“What keeps me awake at night? A homegrown cell that has taken
seed and grown,” J. Stephen Tidwell, assistant director in charge
of the Los Angeles field office, told The Associated Press in an
interview Wednesday. “That is one of the things that we fear the
most.”
Three men — two of them U.S. born — were indicted last month on
federal charges of conspiring to wage war against the government
through terrorism for allegedly planning shooting rampages at the
Los Angeles-area sites. All three have pleaded not guilty.
Tidwell said the homegrown threat has increased as terrorist
groups have spread their ideology overseas through propaganda. He
said one of the suicide bombers in the July attacks on London’s
public transit system was a citizen who’d been radicalized in a
year.
“Now, it’s an idea,” he said. “That’s why you’ve got
radicalized homegrown entities picking up the sword ... that gives
us pause.”
Also Wednesday, Tidwell announced that appointment of a 20-year
FBI veteran as the bureau’s anti-terrorism chief in Los Angeles.
Warren T. Bamford will serve as special agent in charge of
counterterrorism and domestic terrorism. He is currently section
chief of the bureau’s Strategic Information and Operations Center,
a 24-hour clearinghouse for strategic information and the center
for crisis management and special event monitoring.
Though there currently is no specific credible threat against
Los Angeles-area sites, Tidwell noted that the region is home to a
number of possible targets, from Hollywood studios to the Los
Angeles-Long Beach port complex, one of the world’s busiest.
He expressed concern terrorists would try to carry out suicide
bombings on those targets.
“That’s why you see so much talk about suicide bombings,” he
said. “That’s why you see every police department of any size
going over to Israel to see how they’re dealing with it.”
AP-WS-01-19-06 0308EST
By JEREMIAH MARQUEZ
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The FBI’s new regional chief says the threat
of homegrown militants remains a top concern five months after
authorities uncovered an alleged terrorism plot by Americans
targeting synagogues and military recruiting centers around Los
Angeles.
“What keeps me awake at night? A homegrown cell that has taken
seed and grown,” J. Stephen Tidwell, assistant director in charge
of the Los Angeles field office, told The Associated Press in an
interview Wednesday. “That is one of the things that we fear the
most.”
Three men — two of them U.S. born — were indicted last month on
federal charges of conspiring to wage war against the government
through terrorism for allegedly planning shooting rampages at the
Los Angeles-area sites. All three have pleaded not guilty.
Tidwell said the homegrown threat has increased as terrorist
groups have spread their ideology overseas through propaganda. He
said one of the suicide bombers in the July attacks on London’s
public transit system was a citizen who’d been radicalized in a
year.
“Now, it’s an idea,” he said. “That’s why you’ve got
radicalized homegrown entities picking up the sword ... that gives
us pause.”
Also Wednesday, Tidwell announced that appointment of a 20-year
FBI veteran as the bureau’s anti-terrorism chief in Los Angeles.
Warren T. Bamford will serve as special agent in charge of
counterterrorism and domestic terrorism. He is currently section
chief of the bureau’s Strategic Information and Operations Center,
a 24-hour clearinghouse for strategic information and the center
for crisis management and special event monitoring.
Though there currently is no specific credible threat against
Los Angeles-area sites, Tidwell noted that the region is home to a
number of possible targets, from Hollywood studios to the Los
Angeles-Long Beach port complex, one of the world’s busiest.
He expressed concern terrorists would try to carry out suicide
bombings on those targets.
“That’s why you see so much talk about suicide bombings,” he
said. “That’s why you see every police department of any size
going over to Israel to see how they’re dealing with it.”
AP-WS-01-19-06 0308EST