Two Men Arrested at Amsterdam's Schiphol International Airport | May Have Been on a Test Run with Electronic Devices Attached to Bottles | Video | Photos
source: http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/08/30/netherlands.airport.arrests/index.html?hpt=T1
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Dutch arrests may have been dry run, U.S. source says
By the CNN Wire Staff
August 30, 2010 10:20 p.m. EDT
The arrestees had flown from the U.S. to the Netherlands, but luggage from one was on a different plane, an official said.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
* NEW: Men in custody may have been testing security
* NEW: The items included bottles with phones or watches attached
* Arrests follow Chicago-to-Amsterdam flight
* Dutch investigators keep lid on details
(CNN) -- Two men held in the Netherlands may have been trying to test U.S. airport security by putting bottles with electronic devices attached in checked baggage, a U.S. law enforcement source said Monday.
The men were taken into custody after landing in Amsterdam on a flight from Chicago, Illinois, Dutch prosecutors said. Both men were being held at Amsterdam's Schiphol International Airport at the request of Dutch national police, airport spokesman Robert Kapel said.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said they were arrested after "suspicious items" in their luggage raised concern.
"The items were not deemed to be dangerous in and of themselves, and as we share information with our international partners, Dutch authorities were notified of the suspicious items," the U.S. agency said. "This matter continues to be under investigation."
Those items were an empty shampoo bottle with watches attached to it and an empty bottle of a stomach medicine with mobile phones attached, according to the U.S. law enforcement source, who has been briefed on the investigation. That has raised concern that the men may have been testing a future terrorist plot, the source said.
Attempts to sneak liquid explosives aboard jetliners were at the heart of a 2006 plot broken up by British authorities. That case led U.S. authorities to ban all but small quantities of liquids from aircraft cabins.
U.S. law enforcement officials told CNN that the checked bags contained knives and box cutters as well. Passengers have been banned from carrying those items on aircraft since the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington.
The source identified the men aboard United Airlines Flight 908, from Chicago, Illinois, to Amsterdam, as Ahmed Mohamed Nasser al-Soofi and Hezem al-Murisi. Al-Soofi began his trip by boarding a flight in Birmingham, Alabama, and al-Murisi originally flew from Memphis, Tennessee, the law enforcement source said.
Another U.S. law enforcement official said both men were in the United States legally, but their countries of origin were not immediately known. That official said neither of the passengers were carrying items that are barred from aircraft, and federal air marshals were aboard the Chicago-to-Amsterdam flight.
However, the law enforcement source said al-Soofi was ticketed for a flight that went to Washington's Dulles International Airport, with continuing stops in Dubai and Yemen, while both he and al-Murisi were aboard the Chicago-to-Amsterdam flight. Al-Soofi's luggage went aboard the Chicago-to-Washington flight without him, the source said, in what amounted to another violation of U.S. safety protocols.
A U.S. government official said items in at least one of the bags were being examined by law enforcement authorities at Dulles on Monday night.
The official said al-Soofi and al-Murisi were seated near each other on the Chicago-to-Amsterdam flight, but were not seated next to each other. Authorities are still looking into whether the men were traveling together or simply had similar itineraries, the official said.
CNN's Nic Robertson, Jeanne Meserve, Mike Ahlers and Susan Candiotti contributed to this report.
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The New York Times | Two Airline Passengers Held on Fears of a Terrorist Plot
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/31/us/31plane.html?_r=1&hp
August 30, 2010
2 Airline Passengers Held on Fears of a Terrorist Plot
By SCOTT SHANE and ERIC SCHMITT
WASHINGTON — Two United States residents of Yemeni descent who flew from Chicago to Amsterdam on Sunday night were detained by the Dutch police after landing on Monday in a bizarre episode that American officials feared might be a dry run for a terrorist plot.
But American law enforcement officials cautioned on Monday night that the men had not been charged with any crime and that the episode might be a misunderstanding. “There’s nothing at all confirmed at this point that’s associated with terrorism,” one official said.
A search of one of the men by airport security screeners in Birmingham, Ala., as he waited to board a flight to Chicago earlier on Sunday found that he was carrying $7,000 in cash and that his luggage contained a cellphone taped to a bottle of Pepto-Bismol, three cellphones taped together and several watches taped together, a senior law enforcement official said.
Because no evidence of explosives was found, the man, 48, was permitted to fly to O’Hare Airport in Chicago. He was joined there by the second man, a 37-year-old, and they both boarded United Airlines Flight 908 to Amsterdam.
American officials said federal air marshals had been aboard the flight, which continued to its destination without incident.
But officials discovered that at Birmingham, the 48-year-old passenger had checked his luggage on a different set of flights, to Dulles International Airport outside Washington and on to Sana, Yemen, by way of Dubai. After security agents realized that he had not boarded the flight from Chicago to Dulles, they ordered the airliner back to the gate and retrieved his luggage, which contained the suspicious items.
“The items were not deemed to be dangerous in and of themselves, and as we share information with our international partners, Dutch authorities were notified of the suspicious items,” said Amy Kudwa, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security. “This matter continues to be under investigation.”
ABC News first reported the incident on Monday night.
A Dutch official said the two men had been detained by the police upon their arrival at Schiphol Airport at the request of the American authorities “on the basis of suspicions of preparation for terrorist attacks.” The official said the men were being questioned by the police.
Omar Sufi of Detroit, who said he was a cousin of the passenger who boarded in Alabama, said his relative’s actions did not sound unusual.
He said that his cousin had most likely been trying to take medication and phones back to his family, and that it was common to bind together items meant for the same recipient. “This is our culture,” he said.
He described his cousin as “a nice guy” who worked as a cashier in Alabama and spoke little English.
Pakistanis Removed From Flight
A delegation of Pakistani military officers, traveling to the United States Central Command headquarters in Tampa, Fla., was removed from a flight at Dulles International Airport outside Washington, a Pakistani official said Monday night.
The nine passengers were removed before takeoff from United Airlines Flight 727 after one of them made what a flight attendant considered to be an “inappropriate remark,” a spokesman for the airline said. (An American military official confirmed the accounts.)
Members of the delegation, led by a two-star general, were offended by their treatment and canceled the Central Command meeting, the official said. He said Defense Department officials had apologized for the incident.
Nick Bunkley contributed reporting from Detroit.
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ABC7 News
http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?section=news/national_world&id=7639614
AMSTERDAM (KABC) -- Two men have been arrested and charged with what Dutch police call "preparation of a terrorist attack."
Ahmed Mohamed Nasser al Soofi, of Detroit, was stopped at a Birmingham, Alabama airport for additional screening because of what officials said was his "bulky clothing."
Officials said al Soofi was found to be carrying $7,000 in cash and a check of his luggage found a cell phone taped to a Pepto-Bismol bottle, three cell phones taped together and several watches taped together. Box-cutters and knives were also found. However, no explosives were found, so he was cleared to go onto Chicago O'Hare.
Once in Chicago, officials say he had checked luggage on a flight to Washington, D.C., but never boarded the plane. They say he met Hezam al Murisi, and the two got on a United Airlines flight Sunday night from Chicago to Amsterdam, despite security concerns.
When the flight landed in Amsterdam, they were detained by Dutch authorities at the request of American authorities.
When Customs and Border officials learned al Soofi was not on the flight from Dulles to Dubai, the plane was ordered to return to the gate so his luggage could be removed. Officials said additional screening found no evidence of explosives.
Al Soofi is believed to have ties to Yemen. His flight to Washington, D.C. had connections on flights to Dubai and the Yemen.
ABC News reporters Richard Esposito, Christine Brouwer and Brian Ross contributed to this report.
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BBC News...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-11134521
30 August 2010 Last updated at 22:03 ET
Dutch police question two men on trans-Atlantic flight
Dutch police have questioned two men who arrived at Amsterdam airport from Chicago, after US authorities spotted "suspicions items" in their luggage.
One man's bags contained a mobile phone strapped to a medicine bottle, knives and watches, said US officials.
However, a spokeswoman for the US Department of Homeland Security said none of the items were dangerous "in and of themselves".
But the information was passed to the Dutch authorities, who held the men.
They were travelling on United Airlines Flight 908 from Chicago O'Hare to Amsterdam Schiphol.
One man, who started his journey in Birmingham, Alabama, was reportedly stopped there because of his "bulky clothing", ABC News reported.
Security staff found one mobile phone taped to a bottle of Pepto-Bismol, three other mobile phones taped together and several watches, also taped together.
But he was cleared for travel, as no explosives were found, the US network said, quoting officials.
"The items were not deemed to be dangerous in and of themselves and as we share information with our international partners, Dutch authorities were notified of the suspicious items," the US Department of Homeland Security said in a statement.
US federal air marshals were travelling on the flight.
NBC News reported that US concern about the incident was "low", but the authorities wanted to make sure that this was not an attempt to test airline security prior to a future attack.
A Nigerian man was detained in the US on Christmas Day, after flying from Amsterdam to Detroit, and charged with trying to detonate a bomb.
- 1 year ago
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