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Investigators found a string of anti-American rhetoric, possible links to suspected terrorists in foreign countries and an e-mail sent by Sadequee in 2001 in which he said he wanted to join the Taliban in Afghanistan. It was enough to delve deeper in the case. Eventually, the FBI dispatched four surveillance teams to track Ahmed, Sadequee and others believed to be involved. The lead investigators were working weekends, holidays and could hardly sleep through the night without getting an update. Greg Jones, the FBI's agent in charge in Atlanta, was getting daily briefings on the case. As many as 150 people worked to slowly gather evidence that Sadequee met other extremists as he delved deeper into online forums devoted to violent jihad, Jones said. One was Ahmed, a former Georgia Tech student. Authorities said the two took a bus to Toronto in March 2005 and met with at least three other subjects of a federal investigation to discuss possible attack sites. A month later, the pair drove Ahmed's pickup truck to Washington, D.C., to videotape 62 choppy clips of U.S. landmarks. One of the videos, which was eventually played for jurors, showed the two driving as Sadequee said: "This is where our brothers attacked the Pentagon." Authorities made their move in early 2006, arresting Ahmed in March and Sadequee a month later in Bangladesh. In separate trials, both sought to portray their online discussions about jihad as empty talk. Sadequee, who like Ahmed represented himself at trial, said he never considered following through on the boastful chatter. "We were immature young guys who had imaginations running wild," Sadequee told jurors in his closing arguments in August. "But I was not then, and am not now, a terrorist." When the two were convicted over the summer, a wave of relief washed over the investigators. But Jones said they wouldn't have waited if they knew something was going to happen. "Public safety wins out every time," Jones said. "The slightest hint that an individual possesses something that can harm or kill, you let the case go to hell."
[Associated
Press;
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