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  • FBI informant scares Muslim suspects so much with his talk of violent jihad that they report HIM to authorities (2010)

    An FBI informer sent to infiltrate a California mosque was made the subject of a restraining order after scaring Muslim worshippers with demands for holy war.
    Craig Monteilh was known to members of the Irvine Islamic Center as Farouk al-Aziz, an apparently devout and at times over-zealous Muslim.
    But when he began speaking of jihad and plans to blow up buildings, senior figures at the mosque reported him the FBI – the very people who sent him.
    Informant: FBI operative Craig Monteilh was sent to spy on Muslims but was thrown out and reported to his handlers for extremist beahviour
    Informant: FBI operative Craig Monteilh was sent to spy on Muslims but was thrown out and reported to his handlers for extremist beahviour
    Now the FBI is facing criticism for its use of such stooges which have backfired in a number of cases.
    The law enforcement agency’s problems have been confounded after Monteilh, a petty criminal with forgery convictions, went public with claims he received $177,000 tax free in 15 months for his work.

    Shakeel Syed, of the Islamic Shura Council of Southern California which represents more than 75 mosques told the Washington Post: ‘The community feels betrayed.
    ‘They got a guy, a bona fide criminal, and obviously trained him and sent him to infiltrate mosques.
    ‘And when things went sour, they ditched him and he got mad. It’s like a soap opera, for God’s sake.’
    The emergence of details of the FBI’s attempted infiltration comes after an Oregan man was arrested for planning to bomb a Christmas tree lighting ceremony.
    An explosive device he was discovered in possession of had been supplied to him by an undercover FBI agent and was made by FBI technicians in a case of apparent entrapment.
    Sacred: The informant was send to the mosque to secretly record conversations (file picture)
    Sacred: The informant was send to the mosque to secretly record conversations (file picture)
    The FBI defended its tactics, claiming such operations had prevented further terrorist atrocities in the wake of 9/11.
    Steven Martinez, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office, said that in certain circumstances, if there is evidence of a crime, FBI agents may ‘conduct an activity that might somehow involve surveillance in and about a mosque.’
    He added: ‘I know there’s a lot of suspicion that that’s the focus, that we’re looking at the mosques, monitoring who is coming and going. That’s just not the case.’
    Monteilh claims he was already working for the FBI when he was approached about infiltrating mosques and was told ‘Islam is a threat to our national security’.
    He agreed and became Farouk al-Aziz, code name Oracle, a French Syrian in search of his Islamic roots.
    He was trained by the FBI and claims he was told to infiltrate mosques in Orange County and two other counties.
    Worshippers said that in Monteilh’s 10 months at the mosque, he became almost manic in his devotion, attending prayers five times a day but he was secretly recording conversations.
    However, when he began to tell Muslims he had access to weapons they became convinced he was a terrorist and ironically reported the informant to the FBI.

    UPDATED: 22:42 GMT, 6 December 2010

    Find this story at 6 December 2010

    © Associated Newspapers Ltd