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Suspected recruiter of 'Jihad Jane' is arrested in Spain


Jonathan Fairfield

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Suspected recruiter of 'Jihad Jane' is arrested in Spain

ALAN CLENDENNING, Associated Press

CIARAN GILES, Associated Press


MADRID (AP) — An Algerian-Irish man accused of recruiting an American woman who called herself "Jihad Jane" and plotted to kill a Swedish artist has been arrested in Spain, officials said Friday.


Ali Charaf Damache was arrested Thursday in Barcelona based on a U.S. warrant issued stating he was a suspected recruiter for an Islamic extremist group, according to the Interior Department for the northeastern region of Catalonia. Damache was taken to the National Court in Madrid on Friday and ordered jailed while the request for his extradition is reviewed.


Damache is wanted by U.S. authorities in connection with emails sent in the United States between 2009 and 2010 that indicated he was recruiting for al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb and was trying to establish cells, the department said.


The U.S. Justice Department says Damache, while living in Ireland, recruited Colleen LaRose in 2009 and another U.S. woman via jihadist websites. Damache married the other woman, Jamie Paulin-Ramirez, in a Muslim ceremony on the day she arrived in Ireland from Colorado.


Larose used the online nickname "Jihad Jane" and was convicted of agreeing to kill Swedish artist Lars Vilks, whose drawings depicting the prophet Muhammad as a dog offended Muslims. She was sentenced last year to 10 years in prison.


LaRose became obsessed with the cause after meeting a Muslim man on vacation in Amsterdam after a fight with her boyfriend, her lawyer said. She pursued it online when she returned to her rural Pennsylvania home. With her blond hair, blue eyes and U.S. passport, she forever changed the face of terror in the United States, prosecutors said.


Jamie Paulin-Ramirez was sentenced last year in the U.S. to eight years in prison for supporting Damache's work.


Damache initially fought extradition from Ireland. His path from Ireland to Spain was unclear. His arrest in Barcelona came after police received information he was in the city, changing hotels every few days.


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-- (c) Associated Press 2015-12-12

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So LaRose was convicted of "conspiracy to commit murder and providing material support to terrorists." Those are both bullshit charges, especially the "material support." That can include advising designated "terrorist" groups to not engage in violent tactics. Conspiracy, in the U.S., used to require that at least one member of the conspirators commit an illegal act in furtherance of the objective. Now it just means two or more people discussed the possibility of doing something. The U.S. has not been a nation of laws for a very long time.

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So LaRose was convicted of "conspiracy to commit murder and providing material support to terrorists." Those are both bullshit charges, especially the "material support." That can include advising designated "terrorist" groups to not engage in violent tactics. Conspiracy, in the U.S., used to require that at least one member of the conspirators commit an illegal act in furtherance of the objective. Now it just means two or more people discussed the possibility of doing something. The U.S. has not been a nation of laws for a very long time.

Utter nonsense post.

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