Dead terror suspect planned to kill US police officers

This handout photo released June 2, 2015 by the Boston Police Department in Boston, Massachusetts shows the knife brandished by suspect Usaama Rahim (AFP Photo/Handout

This handout photo released June 2, 2015 by the Boston Police Department in Boston, Massachusetts shows the knife brandished by suspect Usaama Rahim (AFP Photo/Handout

This handout photo released June 2, 2015 by the Boston Police Department in Boston, Massachusetts shows the knife brandished by suspect Usaama Rahim (AFP Photo/Handout
This handout photo released June 2, 2015 by the Boston Police Department in Boston, Massachusetts shows the knife brandished by suspect Usaama Rahim (AFP Photo/Handout

New York (AFP) – A 26-year-old security guard shot dead by police and the FBI in Boston plotted to behead American police officers at random to wage violent jihad, court papers said Wednesday.

Usaamah Rahim purchased three military-style knives and a sharpener from Amazon.com in the days leading up to his alleged plan to “go after” the “boys in blue” this week.

But he was killed outside a pharmacy at 7:00 am on Tuesday. Police said he refused to drop his weapon and lunged towards five retreating officers, who then shot him to save their lives.

An alleged associate David Wright, 25, appeared in court Wednesday charged with conspiring to obstruct a federal investigation. He allegedly ordered Rahim to delete his phone and computer data.

Court papers said Rahim, who lived in Boston, worked as a private security officer and had been “planning to engage in a violent attack in the United States” since May 26.

He allegedly ordered three knives from Amazon, which were delivered through the mail, and discussed his plan with Wright and a third person on a beach in Rhode Island last Sunday.

Wright allegedly told the FBI the first plan was to behead an unnamed victim in another state, but that Rahim telephoned him at 5:00 on the morning of his death to change his mind.

Instead he told Wright that he was going to “go after” the “boys in blue,” and randomly kill police officers in Massachusetts — either on Tuesday or Wednesday — the court papers said.

The documents then accused Wright of instructing Rahim to delete data, then destroy his smart phone and wipe his laptop.

It was with one of the knives purchased from Amazon that Rahim lunged towards officers two hours later, court papers alleged.

Wright was arrested overnight and accused with conspiring with Rahim to destroy, mutilate, conceal and cover up his smart phone in order to obstruct an investigation, which is a federal offense.

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– Not shot in the back –

Boston Police Commissioner William Evans said there had been intelligence for “weeks” that military and law enforcement lives were at threat.

Authorities put out “several notices” about the threat of attack on law enforcement and military bases, he added.

The court papers made no mention of when, where or how Rahim may have become susceptible to extremist Islamist thought.

A senior official warned last week that the United States launches a new investigation into suspected sympathizers of the Islamic State extremist group in Iraq and Syria almost every day.

On Wednesday, a Muslim community leader shown a video of the incident, said there was no evidence to back up a claim from Rahim’s family that he had been shot in the back as he waited for the bus.

“It was not at a bus stop. He was not shot in the back,” Imam Abdullah Faaruuq told reporters.

It was not clear what happened and the knife was not visible but “he was approaching them. They did back up,” Faaruuq said.

Evans said the video showed five law enforcement officers retreating with their hands up, and that witness and officer accounts had detailed commands on the suspect to drop his weapon.

“You see them go a good 15 yards with a threat coming at them. We can all agree. The weaponry is not clear, but with five officers coming at them, there was no doubt in the video,” said Evans.

If convicted, Wright faces up to five years in prison and a fine of $250,000.

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