Al-Qaida terror suspect grew up in Pelham
By The Associated Press
Published: Sunday, Feb. 18, 2007
A
former Houston resident accused of training with al-Qaida to overthrow
the government in Somalia grew up in Pelham and attended a mosque in
Methuen, Mass.
Daniel
Maldonado, 28, got in trouble “a lot” as a teenager for things like
traffic violations and loud parties, but did not commit any serious
crimes, said Pelham police Capt. Joseph Roark.
Roark told The
Eagle-Tribune of Lawrence that he and other veteran officers have been
doing some soul-searching since learning that Maldonado has been
charged in Texas with trying to help Muslim extremists oust the Somali
government.
He said Maldonado, a minority student in an
“overwhelmingly” white community, may have thought police were picking
on him because of his race – but they weren’t.
“We were saying we hope we didn’t push him over the edge,” Roark said. “We certainly never profiled him.”
Maldonado
grew up in Pelham and attended Pelham High School, but dropped out in
1997, his junior year. He moved to Manchester after his parents left
Pelham, then lived in Methuen for several years. His parents now live
in Londonderry.
He moved to Houston in August 2005, then in
November moved to Egypt with his wife and three children. Last fall, he
went to Somalia. Now he faces federal charges of undergoing military
training with a terrorist organization and conspiring to use a
destructive device.
Dorothy Mohr, principal of Pelham High, told
The Boston Globe that Maldonado was opinionated, charismatic and
passionate about politics.
“Danny was always an outspoken
student, though I use the word student lightly,” Mohr said. “He’d show
up late for class, without the materials or homework, but he would know
what we were talking about. Then he would go off on a tangent and get
adamant about it.”
About seven years ago, Maldonado went to the
Selimiye Mosque in Methuen and asked for help converting to Islam, then
took the name Daniel Aljughaifi, the Globe said.
Over the next
few years, his increasingly purist views led him to criticize other
Muslims for their lack of religious observance. The imam who helped
convert him told him to refrain
from judging others or leave the mosque; he chose to leave.
Soner Uguz, identified by others at the mosque Friday as Maldonado’s best friend, said he met him the week he converted.
“He
was cool. He dressed in T-shirts and jeans and didn’t hide any of his
tattoos. His hair was in dreadlocks. He was eager, and he had a lot of
questions,” Uguz told the Globe.
That changed, however. He began
wearing traditional Arab clothing, tried to grow a beard, and blamed
his Puerto Rican heritage when he couldn’t. His wife wore a burkah and
gloves, exposing only her eyes, and the couple’s daughter wore a hijab
headcovering. They renamed their son, Anthony, as Mohammed.
Maldonado
used to say he wanted to live in Yemen because “they spoke the purest
Arabic there,” Uguz said. “We told him to cut it out. We never thought
he’d do it, for the sake of the kids.”
Another worshipper,
Matthew Yusuf Trombly, said Maldonado fell victim to “the zeal of the
convert.” Most members of the congregation felt “that he was just
learning Islam and maybe trying to do too much too fast, and got
confused.”
He and others said they feared Maldonado’s actions would reflect badly on their mosque and religion.
“We
saw him as a person who was into studying, rather than physical jihad,”
Trombly said. “But everything about him changed, so I can’t say I am
completely surprised.”
Maldonado is scheduled to appear in federal court Tuesday. He faces up to life in prison if convicted.
Maldonado’s
arrest marks the first criminal prosecution of an American suspected of
joining terrorists in Somalia, said Assistant Attorney General Kenneth
Wainstein.
The Houston Chronicle reported Friday that
Maldonado’s wife died of a high fever, probably from malaria contracted
during their time in Africa. Their children are living with their
grandparents in New England, the newspaper said.
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