By MIKE KELLY
PETER MONSEES / THE RECORD
Scott Nawrocki, who directs the task force’s special response squad,
said it’s dangerous for counterterror agents to assume that future
terrorists will try to duplicate the 9/11 attacks.
Osama bin Laden may be hiding in the impenetrable mountains near the
Afghanistan border, but FBI counterterror officials say they have
identified several of his associates in a far more accessible spot --
northern New Jersey.
The FBI's elite Joint Terrorism Task Force in Newark says it is not
only monitoring a number of North Jersey residents with ties to
al-Qaida, but that agents have quietly "disrupted" their activities and
even deported a few.
These glimpses into North Jersey's war on terrorism, from a series of
interviews with task force leaders, come on the heels of revelations
last summer that Bin Laden's terror network had regained strength. But
that rebuilding was thought to have taken place overseas.
This is the first time since the 9/11 attacks that FBI counterterror
officials have revealed an al-Qaida presence in North Jersey.
"There are definitely facilitators in this state," said Kevin Cruise,
the veteran FBI counterterror agent who directs Newark's 100-member
terrorism task force of FBI and CIA agents as well as state police and
even local beat cops.
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One of Cruise's deputies was even more specific.
"There are people in your county who are affiliated with known al-Qaida
members overseas," said Jack Jupin, the FBI agent who heads the
counterterror squad for Bergen County.
Cruise, who supervised FBI investigations of terrorist bombings of U.S.
embassies in East Africa and the USS Cole before taking over the Newark
task force, cautioned that his agents have no information about an
imminent attack here. But he said several al-Qaida sympathizers would
try if given the chance.
"There are many people who are like-minded who want to commit acts of
terrorism and have just not taken that extra step," said Cruise, who
keeps a "wanted" poster of Bin Laden on his office wall.
Sometimes, he said, counterterror agents "disrupt" these North Jersey
residents with al-Qaida ties.
Cruise declined to describe any case in detail. But in general, such
disruption methods ranged from outright deportations to quiet visits by
FBI agents in which suspected terrorists are told their activities are
being monitored.
"There are many disruptions that occur that the public does not know
about," Cruise said.
Taliban aren't here
For the past six years, FBI officials have routinely declined to
discuss counterterror measures in northern New Jersey. But last week,
the FBI granted The Record limited access to the offices of its Joint
Terrorism Task Force, in a gleaming glass building in Newark
overlooking the Passaic River.
This unusual glimpse into the inner workings of North Jersey's primary
counterterrorism force revealed the following:
Task force investigators have discovered that every major terrorist
group in the world, including Hamas and Hezbollah, has at least one
North Jersey contact. The lone exception is Afghanistan's
ultra-fundamentalist sect, the Taliban.
The task force is currently conducting more than 400 counterterror
investigations. These range from probes into Bin Laden's network to
neo-Nazis to environmental terrorists.
Each month, a task force "response" squad receives as many as a dozen
new tips about possible nuclear, biological or chemical terrorism in
New Jersey. These range from citizen concerns about a mysterious powder
to the report that three ships were sailing to New Jersey with
radiological material on board. Squad members were even dispatched to
Emerson last month after school administrators received a threat to
blow up schools.
Undercover agents attend all professional football games at Giants
Stadium. Agents also plan to monitor the upcoming Breeders' Cup at
Monmouth Park Racetrack.
Task force agents routinely travel overseas. One is currently in Iraq;
another is in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, helping to question suspected
al-Qaida captives at the U.S. naval base there. Newark-based agents
also played a role in the investigation of the murder of Wall Street
Journal reporter Daniel Pearl and provided information to assist the
interrogation of 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammed.
Task force agents say they are united by one common fear -- that they
may overlook information that could stop a potential terrorist attack.
Indeed, almost every office seems to contain some reminder of the 9/11
attacks.
'Daily reminder'
In weighing his own fear of an attack, Cruise noted that northern New
Jersey has a wide range of tempting and vulnerable targets, from
tunnels and bridges to sports venues, shopping malls and chemical
plants.
"My greatest fear in New Jersey is that somebody or some group will
slip through our grasp," he said.
Scott Nawrocki, the FBI agent who directs the task force's special
response squad, keeps a photograph of the World Trade Center on the
wall by his desk. On the opposite wall is a poster with a mushroom
cloud from a nuclear bomb. "The first things I see are a daily reminder
of why I'm here," Nawrocki said.
But he added that it's dangerous for his counterterror agents to fall
into the trap of assuming that future terrorists will try to duplicate
the 9/11 attacks.
"We use our imagination when we conduct assessments," Nawrocki said.
William Sweeney Jr., whose squad monitors potential terrorists in
Hudson County, said some tips for local investigations can originate in
the unlikeliest places.
In one case, Sweeney described how U.S. soldiers confiscated a laptop
computer when they captured a suspected al-Qaida operative in Iraq.
When the laptop's files were examined, investigators discovered several
New Jersey phone numbers.
"Why was a person in New Jersey in the address book of a bad guy picked
up in Iraq?" Sweeney asked. "We have to check it out."
He declined to describe the result. But the process, described by
Sweeney, is not uncommon for the task force.
As a result, task force agents are in daily contact with officials at
the CIA and other American intelligence agencies who monitor phone and
Internet traffic from North Jersey to known operatives for al-Qaida and
other terrorist groups.
"I talk to them 10 times a day," Jupin said of the CIA.
Listening in
Cruise holds several top-secret intelligence briefings each week with
fellow agents as well as police from such small towns as Old Tappan and
Ho-Ho-Kus.
Amid the wash of tips and ongoing cases, though, Cruise said the task
force has to make difficult calculations -- especially when monitoring
phone or Internet contacts.
"If it's somebody who is simply communicating with somebody who is
known to be an al-Qaida operative, that in itself is not illegal,"
Cruise said. "It's what they intend to do."
To better understand some of his enemies, Cruise even listens to Arabic
language CDs during his commute. But he tries to keep himself and his
agents from becoming too confident.
"We have better security measures in place and we have better
intelligence," he said. "But we are still vulnerable."
Original
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