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U.S. Cell Phone Calls Traced to Al-Qaida Locations

by John Solomon, The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Government agents have recently uncovered numerous calls from difficult-to-track prepaid cellphones, Internet-based phone service, prepaid phone cards and public pay phones in the United States to known al-Qaida locations overseas, federal officials said.

The calls are one piece of a growing body of evidence pointing to the presence of suspected members of terrorist sleeper cells operating on U.S. soil and a growing sophistication on their part to keep their communications secret, the officials said.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the effort to follow the phone-call trail has involved numerous federal agencies and is the result of improved post-Sept. 11 coordination between the traditional law enforcement of the FBI and the intelligence gathering of the National Security Agency (NSA), the nation’s premier overseas electronic-intercept agency.

“Things have really improved, and that gives us the ability to better track terrorists both in the United States and abroad, and prevent things before they happen,” one senior law-enforcement official said.

The officials said the process works like this: U.S. intelligence learns of a communication to known al-Qaida locations overseas and then alerts the FBI and other law-enforcement agencies, who try to track down the source and origin of the U.S. callers.

Authorities said the calls point to the clear presence of one or more sleeper cells in the United States and attempts by al-Qaida sympathizers in the United States to make their calls difficult to trace, using tactics employed by U.S. criminals in the 1990s.

With Friday’s arrest of five American men of Yemeni descent in a Buffalo, N.Y., suburb, Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson said that U.S. law enforcement “has identified, investigated and disrupted an al-Qaida-trained terrorist cell on American soil.”

In other recent steps to disrupt suspected domestic-terrorist activities, the indictment of several men in Detroit cited the possible presence in the Midwest of a “combat squad” of terrorists. Also, the government in the past few weeks charged James Ujaama, a former Seattle resident, with trying to help al-Qaida set up a terrorist-training camp in Oregon.

Investigators have found several instances in which suspected al-Qaida calls from the United States to overseas numbers were made on prepaid cellphones, prepaid telephone credit cards or public phone booths. One official said there also has been some instances of suspect calls made through Internet-based phone services.

Stewart Baker, a lawyer who formerly served as the NSA’s general counsel, said the operation of al-Qaida on U.S. soil, including the Sept. 11 hijackers, suggests a change in terrorists’ method of operation. Instead of entering the country just before they perpetrate attacks, they now stay on U.S. soil for months and talk on U.S. communications system as they wait to carry out orders.

“Now we have to begin looking very closely at people who haven’t committed any crimes yet because of the concern that the first one they’ll commit is going to be a doozy,” he said.

The feared use of prepaid cellphones and cards by criminals and terrorists is not new. Attorney General John Ashcroft cited it as one reason Congress needed to pass the Patriot Act and expand the FBI’s surveillance powers so agents could track people who changed cellphones to elude FBI surveillance.

Oklahoma City bombing convicts Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols used a prepaid telephone card to make calls in the two years before that 1995 attack was carried out.