A Chicago man of Pakistani origin, with suspected links to Harkat-Ul-Jihadi Islamiya chief Ilyas Kashmiri, was arrested on Friday on charges of providing material support to a terrorist organisation.
Raja Lahrasib Khan, a naturalised citizen of the US who worked as a taxi driver in Chicago is alleged to have discussed a plot to attack a stadium in the US and is to be produced in a Chicago court on Friday, officials said. The investigation in the case was not related to the case of Lashkar-e-Tayiba operatives David Coleman Headly and his associate Tahawwur Hussain Rana, and there was "no imminent domestic danger," said a statement from FBI's Chicago Office.
Khan, 56, was arrested while working in downtown Chicago by Chicago FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force. He was charged with two counts of providing material support to terrorism in a criminal complaint filed in US District Court in Chicago, said Patrick J Fitzgerald, US Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, and Robert D Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of FBI. According to a 35-page complaint, Khan, who claims to have known Ilyas Kashmiri for approximately 15 years, had learnt by at least 2008 that Kashmiri was linked to Al Qaeda, was purportedly receiving orders from Al Qaeda's leader, Osama bin Laden.
"According to Khan, during his meeting or meetings with Kashmiri, among other things, Khan learned that Kashmiri wanted to train operatives to conduct attacks in the United States... and Kashmiri told Khan that he needed money, in any amount, to be able to purchase materials from the blackmarket," it said. The charges allege that on Nov 23, 2009, Khan sent a money transfer of approximately US $ 950 from a currency exchange in North LaSalle Street in Chicago to Individual A, who was in either Mirpur or Bhimber, in Pakistan. David Kris, Assistant Attorney General for National Security said the arrest and charges are the result of an outstanding cooperative law enforcement and intelligence effort and "underscore the domestic and international aspects of the terror threat we face".
The complaint identifies Kashmiri as the
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