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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TideGlider who wrote (190153)3/15/2016 5:14:47 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224868
 
Canadian Muslim Stabs Two at Military Centre, “ALLAH told him to”: Police Chief Frets About ISLAMOFAUXBIA
Pamela Geller by Pamela Geller

“I want to be very, very careful, when it comes to the national security piece, that we don’t through that Islamophobia nonsense,” Police Chief Mark Saunders said. “I don’t want this categorizing of a large group of people. That would be very unfair and very inaccurate.”

Yesterday whe n I was first to post this, this same chief said the suspect uttered “certain comments” that are of concern, but declined to say what they were. The blood of the victims was still fresh and the police chief is scrubbing and whitewashing the murderous motive.

These clueless clowns worry me more than the jihadis.


Every day there is jihad slaughter. And in the wake of every Islamic attack the response is always the same, “fear of reprisals” – which never happen.

This jihad savage was born on Montreal. This shows time and time and time again — whether it was the Muslims doctors who tried to blow up the Glasgow airport; or the wealthy, educated diplomat’s son who attempted to bomb a plane right out of the sky over Detroit on Christmas day; or the group of 45 Muslim doctors who plotted Islamic terror raids in the US; or the rich, well-educated Osama Bin Laden; or the 19 9/11 hijackers. Jihad has nothing to do with wealth or education. It’s a belief system and every soldier in Allah’s army is following the same playbook – Quran.

“Suspect said ‘Allah told me to do this’ during double stabbing at Canadian Forces recruitment centre, police say,” National Post, March 15, 2016:

A Toronto man who attacked a Canadian military recruiting centre Monday said Allah told him to do it, according to Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders.

Twenty-seven-year-old Ayanle Hassan Ali, who was born in Montreal and moved to Toronto in 2011, was arrested Monday and charged with three counts of attempted murder, aggravated assault and assault with a weapon.


Toronto Police Handout -- Ayanie Hassan Ali, 27, faces five charges, including attempted murder.
Ali appeared briefly in bail court Tuesday afternoon. He wore a white, prison-issue jump suit and spoke only to say his own name.

His case was put over until Friday, when a full bail hearing will be held.

Ali has a neat black beard that stretches several inches off his chin and very short black hair. He kept his eyes down throughout the hearing and shuffled at times from foot to foot.

Outside the courthouse, his lawyer, David Burke, described Ali as very scared and unhappy.

“This is a very serious incident, nobody can deny that,” Burke said. “I seen it in the news myself before I even became involved. I knew it was a serious incident…. But I think at the end of the day it remains to be seen exactly what kind of person we’re dealing with.”

Burke wouldn’t say much about his client. He refused to say if he was employed or studying or who he lived with.He did say Ali “seems like an intelligent enough young man.”

Ali was briefly hospitalized after his arrest. But Burke said he has not yet asked for a mental health assessment.

“I probably know as much about the actual facts surrounding the case as you people do,” Burke said.

Police say Ali walked into a Canadian Forces office in north Toronto and attacked several soldiers inside with a large knife.

“While at the scene, the accused stated: “Allah told me to do this. Allah told me to come here and kill people,’” Saunders said at a press conference Tuesday morning.


Ryan Kong and Jesus Castillo were taken to hospital, treated and released Monday.

“To date, there is nothing to indicate the accused is working with anyone or in concert with any organization,” Saunders said. “It will take some time to have a complete picture.”

According to police, Ali walked into the recruitment centre, on the ground floor of a large federal government building in the old suburb of North York, just before 3 p.m. Monday.

A master corporal was sitting inside, at a table near the entrance to the office. When the solider tried to engage Ali, Ali walked quickly around the table and attacked him, knocking him out of his chair.

The soldier managed to get back to his feet, only to be attacked again, this time with a knife. Ali allegedly slashed the man in the upper arm, then continued further into the recruitment centre. He tried to slash another soldier, but Tracy Ann Gerhardt escaped mostly unharmed.

While this was happening, military staff corralled a group of civilian applicants and got them to safety. A group of soldiers then subdued Ali and held him until police arrived.

The investigation has only just begun. But Saunders said there was nothing yet to indicate that Ali was working with any outside organization or individual.

“I want to be very, very careful, when it comes to the national security piece, that we don’t through that Islamophobia nonsense,” Saunders said. “I don’t want this categorizing of a large group of people. That would be very unfair and very inaccurate.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted his support for the injured military personnel Tuesday and wished them a full recovery.




To: TideGlider who wrote (190153)3/15/2016 6:18:45 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
locogringo

  Respond to of 224868
 
This is law enforcement under the Kenyan Chimp.
=============================================
Feds blocked from person of interest after San Bernardino attack ...

Fox News-2 hours ago

Feds blocked from person of interest after San Bernardino attack, lawmakers told

Feds reveal turf battle following San Bernardino attack

Federal agents who sought to interview a man later charged in connection with the San Bernardino terror attack were not even allowed to enter a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services office where he was slated to be questioned a day after the massacre, stunned lawmakers were told at a hearing Tuesday.

On Dec. 3, 2015, just one day after Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik murdered 14 people and injured 22 others at a Christmas office party in the Southern California community, the FBI learned that Enrique Marquez, a friend of Farook’s suspected of supplying the assault rifles used in the terrorist attack, was scheduled for an interview at the San Bernardino USCIS office. The FBI asked Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to intercept Marquez at the facility, but when the ICE agents arrived, they were denied entry, as well as access to Marquez’s file.

Details of the turf battle were revealed at a Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs hearing Tuesday, when Senate Chairman Ron Johnson, R-Wis., questioned directors of both USCIS and ICE.

“This is the kind of mistake that can get people killed."

- Jessica Vaughan, Center for Immigration Studies

“How can you explain that they would not let Homeland Security agents in the building when they are saying, ‘Listen you could have a potential terrorist here involved in what just happened yesterday in the slaughter of 14 Americans?’” an incredulous Johnson asked. “And they don’t even allow them in the office? How could that have possibly happened?”

USCIS Director Leon Rodriguez replied that the agency operates “under certain protocols” and that the administrator in charge of the San Bernardino office checked with his superiors but somehow screwed up anyway.

“The guidance was to facilitate what Homeland Security Investigations was trying to accomplish. Unfortunately, it all happened so quickly that it was incorrectly perceived that our folks were trying to obstruct what ICE was trying to do,” said Rodriguez. “Do we need to look at our protocols to make sure this is something that does not occur? It may well be something we need to do. But there was never an actual intent to prevent them from doing what they needed to do.”

ICE Director Sarah Saldana said she was initially concerned when her agents were blocked, but told lawmakers there was “confusion” and “chaos” in San Bernardino the day after the attack.

“We had immediate conversations when it came to my attention,” she said. “It was taken care of and clarified immediately. We did get the information we needed.

“We can always do things better, and if we don’t, as I tell my son, learn from the mistakes we make, then shame on us,” she added.

Johnson, who learned of the situation from a letter sent to his committee, said it exposes a “potential breakdown of agencies cooperating.”

“I find it pretty disconcerting to say the least,” Johnson said. “Putting myself in the position of the USCIS, if I had the day after a terrorist attack, I had a team, armed, coming into my office and saying, ‘We believe somebody who is involved in that terrorist attack is in your building, we want to come in,’ I would say, ‘Come on in.’ There would not have been a question in my mind, and yet that is not what happened. It is quite puzzling.”

USCIS agents were investigating Marquez for marriage fraud, stemming from his 2014 union with Mariya Chernykh, a Russian national married to Farook’s brother. Marquez, who is now in jail and awaiting trial this summer, is accused of supplying the guns as well as marriage fraud.

The incident reveals how federal immigration agencies are increasingly hostile to the mission of homeland security, said Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies for the Center for Immigration Studies, a Washington-based research institute.

“I was completely flabbergasted to hear that USCIS managers had obstructed ICE agents in the midst of an urgent terror investigation – one that was the worst terror attack since the Boston Marathon bombing,” Vaughan said after watching the hearing. ”I cannot imagine any possible excuse for USCIS to block agents from their sister homeland security agency from making an arrest in a federal building during a terror investigation, nor can there be any good reason to deny them access to the files.

“This is the kind of mistake that can get people killed, and someone needs to be held accountable for this egregious behavior,” Vaughan added.

Both Farook and Malik were killed by law enforcement after their morning attack. Marquez is accused of making false statements in connection with his weapons purchases used in the San Bernardino shooting. Prosecutors also have alleged that Marquez and Farook plotted in 2011 and 2012 to carry out attacks at Riverside City College and on the 91 Freeway.

Marquez has pleaded not guilty to the charges filed against him. If convicted of all counts, Marquez faces up to 50 years in prison.