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Rana has pleaded not guilty and his attorney, Patrick Blegen, says he appears to be an honest businessman who may have been duped by Headley. Headley was born in 1960 in Washington, where his Pakistani father, Syed Saleem Gilani, worked for Voice of America, according to Headley's half-brother, Danyal Gilani, a public relations officer for Pakistan's prime minister. The family moved to Pakistan soon after Headley's birth. He and Rana met as teens at the Hasan Abdal Cadet College, a prestigious Pakistani military boarding school outside Islamabad. A highly disciplined, traditional atmosphere prevailed among the neat red brick buildings and manicured grounds. The two men entered in 1974, but administrators say Headley left after three years to live with his mother, Serrill Headley, in the United States, after his parents divorced. Rana completed the five-year term. In the 1970s, Headley worked at a bar his mother opened in Philadelphia's Old City neighborhood called the Khyber Pass Pub. Lacovara, the man who helped her open it, said that even though Headley's interest in Islam was plainly growing during his teenage years, he did not seem intent on violence. But he did seem troubled. "He felt that (his mother) had abandoned him when she left Pakistan," Lacovara said. Few if any traces of Headley remain in Philadelphia. At one point, he and his mother opened a video store, but it has long since closed. Serrill Headley closed the bar in 1988, but it has since reopened. She died last year.
According to Danyal Gilani, the family in Pakistan had little contact with Headley after he left for the United States. In 1998, Headley -- using the name Gilani -- was convicted of conspiring to smuggle heroin into the U.S. He was sentenced to 15 months in prison. "In fact because of his involvement with issues related to drugs, my father wanted the rest of the family to stay away from his influence," Gilani said in a statement. "His having another name or changing his name at some stage in life has come as a surprise to me." Gilani says his half-brother has a Pakistani wife and four children. A neighbor says they moved into a three-story apartment building about a year ago. He also says he last saw Headley when he visited Pakistan a few days after their father died last December. Both Rana and Headley occasionally worshipped on Fridays at Jame Masjid of Chicago, sometimes heading around the corner to Zum Zum, a sweet shop where men in the neighborhood often gather to talk politics and cricket over samosas and chai.
[Associated
Press;
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