Richard Colvin Reid
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Richard Colvin Reid | |
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Born | August 12, 1973 Bromley, South London, U.K. |
Richard Colvin Reid (born August 12, 1973), also known as the shoe bomber, is an individual convicted on charges of terrorism and currently serving a life sentence in the United States for attempting to detonate a commercial aircraft in-flight using plastic explosives contained in his shoes. According to al-Qaeda operative Mohammed Mansour Jabarah (who was captured and interrogated in Oman in 2003), Reid was a member of al-Qaeda and had been sent on the bombing mission by Khaled Shaikh Mohammed, a senior member of the organization.[1]
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[edit] Background
A British citizen born in Bromley, South London and educated at Thomas Tallis School in Kidbrooke, London, he is the son of an English mother and a Jamaican father, who spent most of Richard's childhood years in prison. Reid became involved in street crime and spent time in a number of prisons, including Feltham Young Offenders' Institution, where he converted to Islam.
[edit] Trial & Verdict
On January 30, 2003, he was found guilty on terrorism charges at a federal court in Boston, Massachusetts. During the sentencing hearing he openly stated that he was an Islamic fundamentalist and declared himself an enemy of the United States and in league with Al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden.
He was sentenced to life imprisonment on each of the 3 charges, 20 years imprisonment on 4 other charges, and 30 years on 4 other counts, to be served consecutively, followed by five years of supervised release. Eight fines of $250,000, restitution of $298.17 and $5,784,800 special assessment were imposed. He is serving his sentences in the ADX Florence, a Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado.
[edit] Role in 9/11 attacks
Zacarias Moussaoui stated on March 27, 2006 at his sentencing hearing that on September 11, 2001 he and Reid had intended to hijack a fifth aircraft and crash it into the White House as part of the attacks that took place that day. However, through his lawyers, Reid has denied involvement with Moussaoui. Moussaoui's own defense lawyers dismissed this as fantasy on the part of their client, saying that he was not an operative in Al-Qaeda, but only a "hanger-on".[1]
[edit] Further Federal Authority Investigation
Federal authorities are seeking to further question Reid for important information about ongoing terror plots. Notably, they want to question him without the presence of his federal public defenders. The Federal government says he is not entitled to the defender since his federal case is over. The federal judge wants the case transferred to Colorado where Reid is serving his prison sentence.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Ressa, Maria. "Sources:Reid is al Qaeda operative.". Retrieved on September 15, 2006. CNN.com, December 6, 2003.
[edit] External links
- Shoe bomb suspect 'one of many'
- Mosque leaders warns over extremist converts
- Statements from Reid and the Judge at Reid's sentencing hearing (CNN)
- Reid files guilty plea (CNN)
- Timeline of Reid's actions before and during his attempted terrorist act (CNN)
- Source for date of birth (CNN)
- Details of the scuffle (Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)
- Inmate locator - Richard Colvin Reid at U.S. Bureau of Prisons
- Richard Reid's Indictment (PDF Document)
- 11 Lives: The Flight Attendants (Time, Sunday September 1, 2002)
- The Shoe-bomb Terrorist
Categories: 1973 births | Al-Qaeda members | British Islamist terrorists | British Muslims | Converts to Islam | Federal Supermax Prisoners at Florence, Colorado | Jamaican-English people | Living people | People convicted on terrorism charges | People imprisoned for terrorism | Terrorist incidents in 2001