NEW YORK: New York authorities announced on Sunday they had arrested and charged a US al-Qaida sympathizer in a plot to build a pipe bomb to kill government workers, elected officials and returning US troops.Mayor Michael Bloomberg said 27-year-old Jose Pimentel was targeting police, postal facilities and others and said he was a "lone wolf" without affiliation to foreign terrorist organizations. "He was not part of a larger conspiracy," said the mayor.City police commissioner Raymond Kelly said Pimentel, though not affiliated with an outside group, was a follower of slain radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaqi, who was killed in a US raid earlier this year."He talked about changing his name to Osama Hussein, to celebrate his heroes, Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein," Kelly said.Kelly said Pimentel, a native of the Dominican Republic who was a US citizen, had followed a online magazine from Awlaqi including an article "How to make a bomb in the kitchen of your mom."
Pimentel "talked about killing US servicemen returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, particularly US army and marine corps personnel. He talked about bombing post offices in and around Washington Heights and police cars in New York City, as well as a police station in New Jersey," the police chief said.
"We think what set him off was the elimination of Anwar al-Awlaqi," Kelly added.Awlaqi, suspected of involvement in several attacks on the United States and of recruiting Americans for his cause, was killed in an air strike in Yemen in late September. Some called it an extrajudicial killing by US forces.The suspect, said Kelly at a press conference late Sunday, "planned to test the effectiveness of the bombs by planting them in mailboxes and detonating them."Once beginning his bombing campaign, Kelly said the Pimental hoped the US public "would know that there were mujaheddin in the city."Authorities said they had built a duplicate of Pimental's alleged device, detonating it at a secure location.At the media event announcing the charges, officials showed reporters a video of the device apparently blowing apart a small car. Bloomberg touted increased New York Police Department resources dedicated to counterterrorism duties and integral to the case, saying "this is just another case where our precautions paid off.
Pimentel "talked about killing US servicemen returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, particularly US army and marine corps personnel. He talked about bombing post offices in and around Washington Heights and police cars in New York City, as well as a police station in New Jersey," the police chief said.
"We think what set him off was the elimination of Anwar al-Awlaqi," Kelly added.Awlaqi, suspected of involvement in several attacks on the United States and of recruiting Americans for his cause, was killed in an air strike in Yemen in late September. Some called it an extrajudicial killing by US forces.The suspect, said Kelly at a press conference late Sunday, "planned to test the effectiveness of the bombs by planting them in mailboxes and detonating them."Once beginning his bombing campaign, Kelly said the Pimental hoped the US public "would know that there were mujaheddin in the city."Authorities said they had built a duplicate of Pimental's alleged device, detonating it at a secure location.At the media event announcing the charges, officials showed reporters a video of the device apparently blowing apart a small car. Bloomberg touted increased New York Police Department resources dedicated to counterterrorism duties and integral to the case, saying "this is just another case where our precautions paid off.