10/16/2007
US
based newspaper The Daily News today (October 16) said "a
band of men linked to Tamil Tiger terrorists" led by Sri
Lankan Tamils "who used a fake passports to get security
clearance at Newark Airport has been busted in a massive plot
to loot city ATMs".
Quoting
legal sources, the online edition of the newspaper said that the
gang of eight men who had ties with LTTE terrorists have stolen
USD 250,000 in New York alone and "tens of millions from
ATMs worldwide.
Read
the news in full:
Sri
Lankan terror gang busted in ATM heist plot
By BARBARA ROSS
DAILY
NEWS STAFF WRITER
Tuesday,
October 16th 2007
A
band of men linked to Tamil Tiger terrorists - led by a Sri Lankan
who used a fake passport to get security clearance at Newark Airport
- has been busted in a massive plot to loot city ATMs.
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| Rasanayagan |
Manhattan
prosecutors told the Daily News the eight men had ties to the
terror group and were part of a scheme to use stolen credit card
numbers to steal $250,000 in New York - and tens of millions from
ATMs worldwide.
Six
were nabbed in January in a raid at the Chelsea Inn, a reputed
lair for the ultraviolent Sri Lankan separatist group.The other
two, including alleged ringleader Sivapalasri Velayuthampillai,
31, of Newark, were busted in July.Until
his arrest, Velayuthampillai worked three jobs at Newark Airport
as a security agent and baggage handler with complete security
clearance.
Prosecutors
said Velayuthampillai entered the U.S. with a fake passport and
dubious tale of persecution. He was given political asylum in
December 2001 under circumstances still under investigation by
District Attorney Robert Morgenthau.
"The
defendant is part of a large, highly organized ring of international
criminals who steal account and PIN numbers ... and then come
to the United States to steal money from our financial institutions,"
Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Kim Han said in court papers.
The
U.S. and other Western governments consider the Tamil Tigers a
terror
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| Abdifatah |
organization.
Velayuthampillai and the other alleged cell members came from
families who emigrated from Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Somalia.
Prosecutors
contend the men became part of a massive global identity theft
scam last year when credit card numbers and PINs were stolen from
thousands of customers at 200 gas stations in the United Kingdom.
In recent bail arguments, Han said Velayuthampillai booked hotels
for his "criminal cohorts," rented cars, drove them
to various banks, moved them to different hotels every few days
and hooked them up with a man who sent the money abroad.
Han
said Velayuthampillai had 30 forged cards on him when he was arrested
in midtown in July and more than 400 bogus cards in his rented
car, all bearing account numbers stolen from two U.K. gas stations.
The
operation was accidentally uncovered in the Chelsea Inn on 11th
Ave. when NYPD narcotics detectives raided the hotel and one investigator
shouted to everyone in the lobby, "Freeze! I will shoot you
if you move!"
That's
when one rattled suspect, Ibrahim Abdifatah, 27, dropped 67 blank
credit cards on the floor, police said.
"These
are playing cards. We play with them," Abdifatah said.
 |
Until
his arrest, alleged ringleader Sivapalasri Velayuthampillai
worked three jobs at Newark Airport as a security agent
and baggage handler with complete security clearance. |
Cops
found more than 250 blank credit cards, a coding machine, lists
of financial account information and a laptop in an upstairs room
that four of the defendants shared.
Abdifatah,
who has pleaded guilty to more than 500 counts of identity theft
and fraud, told cops he was recruited in England and promised
$5,000 to use the bogus cards. Investigators said the Tamil Tigers
target the U.S. because American credit cards don't have the extra
microchip security device that has helped curtail credit card
frauds in Britain.
Another Sri Lankan, Krishantha Rasanayagan, 19, quickly fingered
a cohort, Usman Mahmood, as the man who had organized the effort
in London.
"He showed us how to encode the cards. We all do the encoding,
and we each make withdrawals. Our goal was to reach $250,000,"
Rasanayagan said.
All
of the defendants, except Velayuthampillai, are being held without
bail. Bail was set for him at $2 million.
Lawyers
for the defendants deny their clients have terror ties. "I
don't think he was politically motivated," Abdifatah's lawyer
Adam Freedman said.
"This
is like tying a sidewalk crack dealer ... to the Medellin drug
cartel [in Colombia]," said Mahmood's lawyer Michael Dailey.
British
and Sri Lankan authorities say the proceeds from this kind of
international ATM fraud are routed back to the Tamil Tigers, Han
wrote.
This
summer, Jane's Intelligence Review said the Tamil Tigers raise
up to $300 million a year through international credit card fraud,
extortion and donations.
The
Tamil Tigers are one of the world's most ruthless and violent
nationalist organizations. Thirty-two countries, including the
U.S., have branded the Tigers a terrorist group.
Founded
three decades ago in Sri Lanka, the Tigers have indiscriminately
attacked civilians in order to create a separate Tamil state in
parts of Sri Lanka, formerly known as Ceylon.
Known
formally as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, the group pioneered
the use of suicide bombers, called the Black Tigers. Female suicide
bombers were employed in the assassination of former Indian President
Rajiv Gandhi and in an attempt on the life of Sri Lankan President
Chandrika Kumaranatunga.
Experts
have linked them to other terrorist organizations and note the
similarity between the Tigers' attack on Sri Lanka Navy ships
and the Al Qaeda attack on the U.S. destroyer Cole that killed
17 American sailors.
Their
sources of worldwide funding, in addition to credit card fraud,
include sea piracy, human smuggling and drug trafficking, the
experts say.
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