Suspect Possessed a Military Sites List

Officials tighten security after a list of purported targets is found in the
apartment of one of two men held in a string of South Bay robberies.


By Greg Krikorian and David Rosenzweig
Times Staff Writers

July 9, 2005

It started late Tuesday night, when police closed in on two men they
suspected in 10 robberies across the South Bay.

But the case took a strange twist hours later, when a search of one
suspect's apartment uncovered documents suggesting that the men might be
targeting local U.S. military facilities, law enforcement sources said
Friday. 

Now federal and local counterterrorism investigators have joined together to
determine why two robbery suspects would have such lists. 

Among the items purportedly found at the South Los Angeles home of Levar
Haney Washington, 25, was a list of addresses that included the locations of
at least one Army recruitment center and National Guard facilities, the
sources said. 

Lt. Col. Douglas Hart, public affairs director for the California National
Guard, confirmed that Torrance police had notified Guard officials late
Thursday of potential threats to facilities that he did not identify.

"We did receive word on three specific armories from the local police who
initially got the information," Hart said. "We're aware of it, and we are
proceeding appropriately to guard those facilities."

He would not say more about the alleged threats or locations, except that
they were "in the Los Angeles area."

Hart also noted that all large National Guard installations were protected
by armed personnel around the clock. 

Although authorities emphasized that they were in the early stages of their
investigation, an FBI counterterrorism task force has been assembled to
determine whether Washington and Gregory Vernon Patterson, 21, were engaged
in more than the 10 robberies with which they have been charged.

Reached by telephone Friday, Patterson's attorney, Winston McKesson, said he
was confident that "once this investigation is done, it's going to be
convincingly clear that Mr. Patterson in no way intended to take any
aggressive action against his country."

Washington's attorney could not be reached for comment.

The two men, believed to be Islamic converts, were arrested about 10 p.m.
Tuesday by Torrance police who had them under surveillance in connection
with a string of robberies of gas stations and convenience stores from May
30 to July 3.

After the arrests, law enforcement sources said, investigators went to
Washington's Los Angeles apartment and discovered the documents that drew
the interest of counterterrorism officials. During a search Wednesday
morning, Los Angeles police sent bomb technicians and bomb-sniffing dogs to
be certain that there were no explosives at the apartment on West 27th
Street. No explosives or bomb-making materials were found.

Washington and Patterson were in Torrance Superior Court on Thursday and
held on bail of $2 million and $1 million, respectively. Although it was
unclear whether Patterson had a criminal record, Washington could be facing
his third strike in the robbery case, because he was convicted in Orange
County in 1999 of assault with a deadly weapon, robbery and belonging to a
street gang.

On Friday, federal and local officials continued to refuse comment on the
case other than to acknowledge that it was under investigation by the FBI's
Joint Terrorism Task Force.

The military installations were not the only addresses found on the list at
Washington's apartment, sources said. It also included some public and
private facilities that have previously been identified as potential
terrorist targets, according to the sources. Those locations were not
disclosed. 

Washington's mother, who was in court Thursday, did not return a call
seeking comment about the case. 

 

 
<http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-robbers9jul09,1,5071872,print.story
>
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-robbers9jul09,1,5071872,print.story

 

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