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Jihadist hit list spurs terrorism case


KING SALMON: Muslim convert, wife lied about document targeting 15 people as
enemies of islam.

By RICHARD MAUER and KYLE HOPKINS
Anchorage Daily News

Published: July 22nd, 2010 11:39 AM
Last Modified: August 17th, 2010 07:39 AM

A King Salmon weatherman and his British-born, stay-at-home wife, the first
people to face a domestic terrorism case in Alaska, on Wednesday pleaded
guilty to lying to the FBI about a jihadist hit list.

 
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Red-bearded Paul Gene Rockwood Jr., 35, a convert to Islam and a follower of
a radical, anti-American cleric, faces an eight-year prison sentence -- the
maximum -- under his plea deal. Nadia Piroska Maria Rockwood, 36, a dual
U.S. and British citizen, is set to get five years probation, which she will
be allowed to serve in Great Britain.

The blue-eyed couple admitted in back-to-back hearings in U.S. District
Court that they misled counter-terrorism agents in Anchorage about the
source and nature of an assassination list containing the names of about 15
people in the Lower 48 they deemed enemies of Islam.

Charging documents filed by the U.S. Attorney's office said Paul Rockwood
drew up the hit list based on websites he read while a federal employee in
King Salmon and considered shooting his targets or sending them package
bombs. On a visit to Anchorage in April, Nadia Rockwood delivered the list
to an unnamed person, and it somehow found its way to the FBI. The couple
was interrogated about the list on May 19, which is when they lied,
according to charging documents and their admissions.

U.S. District Judge Ralph Beistline set sentencing for Aug. 23. He withheld
his decision about whether he will accept the plea deals. If he doesn't, or
decides to send Nadia Rockwood to prison, the couple can withdraw their
pleas and go to trial. Lying to a federal agent normally carries a maximum
five-year penalty, but three years can be added if the lying concerned
domestic terrorism.

Nadia Rockwood is five months pregnant with the couple's second child. Their
4-year-old boy came to court with his Batman backpack and a set of crayons
and watched his parents enter their pleas from a back bench.

As the surprising case unfolded Wednesday, many questions were left
unanswered. For instance, though officials knew about the hit list around
the time that Nadia Rockwood brought it to Anchorage in April and they
confronted the couple about it May 19, neither was ever taken into custody.
After leaving King Salmon several months ago, they lived a relatively normal
life in Anchorage until Paul Rockwood was led away to jail following his
guilty plea Wednesday. Prosecutors agreed that Nadia Rockwood could remain
free without having to post a cash bond.

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At a news conference after the hearings, U.S. Attorney Karen Loeffler and
the head of Anchorage FBI office, Kevin Fryslie, declined to say why neither
was jailed during the previous months. Fryslie said steps were taken to
protect the targets on the list but wouldn't go into details. 

There was also no information about who was on the list, other than a
statement in the charges that some might have been U.S. military personnel.
The list might have included institutions -- at one place in Paul Rockwood's
plea agreement, prosecutors said the list contained "names and entities."

Loeffler and Fryslie wouldn't elaborate on the identities.

As victims, the people on the list were given a telephone number to call
into court to listen to the proceedings, and five did. The court clerk
advised them not to provide their names because they could be heard in open
court. As they announced they were on line, four sounded like men and one
appeared to be a woman.

The plea agreement said that Paul Rockwood gave his wife the list in April
to deliver it in Anchorage to another person "who Paul Rockwood believed
shared his beliefs." Neither the documents, nor Loeffler and Frylie, said
whether that person was an agent, informant or someone else. Also secret was
how the list got from that person to the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force in
Anchorage.

Did either Rockwood take any actions to further an assassination plot other
than to draw up a list and read about making bombs? Loeffler wouldn't say.

"Obviously the case went beyond simply going on the Web and looking at
sites, because that is First Amendment (protected) speech," Loeffler said.
"But when it got to handing out a target list and talking about taking
action -- that's all that we have in the plea agreement, and I won't go
beyond that."

Paul Rockwood is specifically charged with denying at the May 19 meeting
that he created the list, denying the purpose of the list and denying ever
having such a list of names. Nadia Rockwood denied delivering a hit list,
telling the FBI it was only a book and an ordinary letter.

In court, both defendants spoke clearly and directly, though they declined
the judge's offer to give any statements other than yes or no answers to his
questions. Nadia Rockwood spoke with a distinct middle-class English accent.

According to the charging documents, Rockwood was living in Virginia when he
converted to Islam in late 2001 or early 2002. He soon became an adherent of
the radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, a jihadist born in Las Cruces, N.M., and
now believed to be hiding in Yemen. Al-Awlaki met with some of the 9/11
hijackers and has solicited jihadists for al-Qaeda over Internet sites.

In 2006, the Rockwoods moved to King Salmon, a fishing town thick with
government workers in the Bristol Bay region, about 280 miles southwest of
Anchorage. Jim Wendt, Nadia Rockwood's appointed attorney, said the National
Weather Service paid for the move.

In King Salmon, population 380, Nadia Rockwood quickly found friends among
other young mothers. The circle of friends gathered for crafting sessions
and subsistence setnet fishing, knitting and berry picking, said Rebecca
Hamon, who spent time with Nadia Rockwood several times a week and talked to
her daily.

Early on, Nadia Rockwood told friends that she and Paul were Muslims, but
the couple never went out of their way to talk religion or politics, Hamon
said. "It was never a feeling that these were radical people at all."

The Rockwoods lived in government housing with other federal employees as
neighbors, residents said. Nadia Rockwood sang in the community choir and
taught ballet. The couple worked to start deliveries of fresh produce to
remote town from farms in Washington state, Hamon said. When the fruit and
vegetables arrived, the Rockwoods would leave their garage unlocked and
produce club members would stop by to pick up their boxes.

Nadia Rockwood was one of the first to join a fledging theater group that
started in the community about a year ago, Hamon said. Their first play was
a comedy about the big bad wolf standing trial for harassing other fairy
tale characters, she said. Nadia Rockwood played the fairy godmother.

"She really threw herself into everything that's available in a town like
this," Hamon said. Others knew her as the lady selling cotton candy and hot
chocolate to raise money for the theater at school functions.

Paul Rockwood, meantime, worked odd hours at the National Weather Service
and wasn't as visible around town. Hamon said she didn't know who his close
friends or hunting partners might be. He liked fishing and seemed to be a
good husband, she said.

Sometimes the couple brought their maroon Chevy Suburban to Terry's Repair,
where mechanic Terry Stichler would patch up the old vehicle. Paul Rockwood
wasn't especially social -- he never showed up at the taverns, where alcohol
is taboo for Muslims -- but seemed like a decent enough guy, Stichler said.
"He sure didn't seem like a terrorist to me."

Until mid-May -- about the time that the FBI met with the couple -- Paul
Rockwood worked as a Weather Service technician, said Debra Elliot, an
official with the agency there. His job included observing the weather and
writing short-term forecasts, she said.

"He was a good employee. I didn't have any problems with him," Elliott said.

Neither did the police. The only time the Bristol Bay Borough Police
Department came into contact with the couple was when they once complained
of a loose dog in their neighborhood, said Chief Rodney Enevoldsen.

But when it was time for the theater group to start rehearsing for its next
performance in March, Nadia Rockwood had already told friends the couple was
moving out of Alaska.

Paul Rockwood complained of health problems and needed treatment out of
state, Hamon recalled. The couple said they planned to visit his parents on
the East Coast and then move to England, where her mother lived.

"There were probably 30 people that came to the airport to see them off, and
we were all crying," Hamon said.

Hamon said she's shocked by the charges against the couple. "I absolutely
know nothing about these people that would ever have caused me to believe
anything that I'm hearing now, and we only feel very sad about what we're
hearing is happening in Anchorage."

Adal Raja, 25, said he met the Rockwoods in Anchorage and helped them with
food. He and Paul Rockwood would pray together and talk, he said. Raja said
he never heard Rockwood threaten anyone. They talked about everyday stuff,
he said.



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