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Though the FBI has said little publicly about the case, it is scrambling behind the scenes to silence the ex-informant. In recent days, Associate General Counsel Henry R. Felix has asked Monteilh's lawyer to disclose any information he shares with civil rights lawyers representing his former targets and has warned Monteilh a nondisclosure agreement he signed remains in effect. The unusual case underscores the risks the FBI takes when it relies on outsiders to help build cases in sensitive counterterrorism investigations. It is not uncommon for informants to feel disillusioned at having worked for the government when investigations end, but it's rare for an informant to turn against the FBI, said Ken Wainstein, former general counsel for the FBI. "Like any relationships, sometimes the handler-confidential informant relationship can go south," he said. Monteilh is no stranger to legal woes. The one-time machine operator at a Wonderbread factory has a lengthy rap sheet dating to the 1980s, and a history of evictions and debts for everything from car payments to rent to credit cards. His brushes with the law accelerated dramatically after a bitter divorce in 2000, when his ex-wife alleged in court papers he had threatened her life, tried to choke her and pulled a gun on her. In court papers and his ACLU declaration, he says he was asked to work as an informant for local law enforcement in 2004, when he became friendly with some police officers in a local gym. By 2006, he was promoted to the FBI's counterterrorism operations. Monteilh alleges he gathered phone numbers and contact information for hundreds of Muslim-Americans and recorded thousands of hours of conversation using a device on his key fob or cell phone during his stint with the FBI. His said his handlers told him to work out with Muslims at gyms, asked him to get codes for security systems so they could enter mosques at night and encouraged him to ask mosque members about "jihad" and supporting terrorist operations abroad. In June 2007, however, mosque members became suspicious of Monteilh and requested a restraining order, saying that he had spoken repeatedly about engaging in jihad. A judge granted the order and roughly six months later, the Irvine police arrested him for the steroid case. Monteilh was released from prison in 2008 and now lives with his second wife in Orange County.
[Associated
Press;
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