Details Emerge in London Terror Arrests - East Idaho News
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Details Emerge in London Terror Arrests

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Getty 101714 LondonSkyline?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1413562959390iStock/Thinkstock(LONDON) — The four men arrested in London on terrorism charges allegedly had a silenced weapon and had conducted “hostile reconnaissance” of a police station and an army barracks, police said Friday.

A post on the London’s Metropolitan Police website lays out a list of accusations against the four men, who were all arrested over the last two weeks, in connection to the charge that they, “with the intention of committing acts of terrorism, or assisting others to commit such acts…engaged in conduct in preparation for giving effect to that intention.”

Four men, including 21-year-old Tarik Hassane, nicknamed “The Surgeon,” are accused of, among other things, taking an “oath of allegiance” to the brutal Iraqi terror group the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), acquiring a silenced handgun and ammunition, using code words when discussing money or firearms, looking at Instagram images of individual cops, and using Google Street View to conduct “hostile reconnaissance” of a police station and army barracks.

The men had also allegedly downloaded “jihadi material” including issues of the Al Qaeda magazine Inspire.

A fifth man faces weapons charges for allegedly providing the gun.

In another post on the MET website Friday, National Policing Lead for Counter Terrorism Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley wrote that the MET has made over 200 arrests this year and is running “exceptionally high numbers of counter-terrorism investigations, the likes of which we have not seen for several years.”

“These plots are of varied sophistication, from individuals planning to carry out spontaneous yet deadly attacks to more complex conspiracies, almost all seemingly are either directed by or inspired by terrorism overseas,” he said. “Public safety is our number one priority and we will always focus our disruption activity against those posing the greatest and most imminent threat. Sometimes this means intervening very early — essential to prevent attacks, but presenting enormous challenges in securing sufficient evidence to charge.”


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