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"For years, I've been watching them," he said of the fuel tanks while on a reconnaissance mission with the informant. He also marveled at the lack of security, saying, "No solider. Nothing at all." In other tapes, Defreitas ranted about punishing the United States with an attack that would "dwarf 9/11." He told the informant his U.S. citizenship gave him cover. "They don't expect nobody in this country to do something like this," he said. "They have their eyes on foreigners, not me." Kadir testified in his own defense, denying he was a militant Muslim who spied for Iran for years before joining the JFK scheme. He told jurors that he warned the plotters: "Islam does not support aggression or killing innocent people." As part of the plot, Defreitas and the informant traveled to Guyana to try to meet with Kadir and show him homemade videotapes of the airport's so-called fuel farms. The plotters also discussed reaching out to Adnam Shukrijumah, an al-Qaida member and explosives expert who was believed to be hiding out in the Caribbean at the time. Shukrijumah, an FBI-most wanted terrorist, was indicted in federal court in Brooklyn this month on charges he was involved in a failed plot to attack the New York City subway system with suicide bombers. Another man, Abdel Nur, pleaded guilty to a lesser charge in the case and is awaiting sentencing. The case of a fourth suspect, Kareem Ibrahim, was severed from the others' after he fell ill. It's not clear when he would be tried.
[Associated
Press;
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