A Maple Heights man was indicted on one count of attempting
to provide material support to al Qaeda.
Demetrius Nathaniel Pitts, aka Abdur Raheem Rafeeq, aka
Salah ad-Deen Osama Waleed, 49, has been in custody since July, when he was
arrested after allegedly planning a terrorist attack in Cleveland.
“Protecting our citizens and our nation remains the Justice
Department’s top priority,” U.S. Attorney Justin E. Herdman said. “This
defendant plotted and scouted locations in downtown Cleveland for an attack on
July 4th, when he knew it would be packed with people celebrating our nation’s
birthday. We will continue to do all we
can to identify, arrest and prosecute those threats while working to keep our
communities safe and secure.”
“Pitts, a U.S. citizen living in Ohio, pledged his
allegiance to al-Qaeda, a foreign terrorist organization, and was planning to
conduct an attack in Cleveland on Independence Day, the very day we celebrate
the freedoms we have in this country,” said FBI Acting Special Agent in Charge
Robert Hughes. “The FBI commends the
public for reporting individuals that espouse their radical beliefs and/or
engage in behavior that threaten the lives of our military personnel and
community.”
According to an affidavit filed in the case, between 2015
and 2017, Pitts expressed anti-American sentiments and expressed a desire to
recruit people to kill Americans. The
defendant expressed a desire to meet with an al Qaeda “brother” and in June he
was introduced to an FBI employee acting in an undercover capacity (UCE), who
Pitts believed was such a “brother.”
Pitts and the UCE met in Walton Hills, Ohio, where they
discussed launching an attack for al Qaeda during the July 4th holiday.
Pitts said: “I’m trying to figure out something that would
shake them up on the 4th of July.” He
later stated: “What would hit them at their core? Blow up in the, have a bomb blow up in the
4th of July parade.”
Pitts and the UCE searched Google for a map of downtown
Cleveland. After learning the fireworks
would be launched from Voinovich Park, Pitts said: “Oh there you go. Oh
yeah.” He was also pleased the park was
near the U.S. Coast Guard station, the Army Corps of Engineers, and the
Celebrezze Federal Building.
The meeting concluded with Pitts indicating to the UCE that
he would travel to downtown Cleveland soon to take photographs and videotape
footage as part of surveillance efforts of Voinovich Park and the U.S. Coast
Guard station. He also expressed a
desire to take a tour of the U.S. Coast Guard station to gain as much
information as he could about the layout of the facility.
The UCE texted Pitts later on June 22 and where he indicated
al Qaeda “brothers” would provide Pitts with a bus pass and cellular phone.
On June 25, Pitts met with an FBI confidential human source
(CHS) in Maple Heights, Ohio, who provided Pitts with a bus pass and a phone
Pitts could use to communicate with the UCE.
The bus pass was provided to Pitts, as he requested, so he could travel
to downtown Cleveland to conduct surveillance for the July 4th attack.
On June 26, Pitts contacted the UCE via text message and
relayed that he had completed the reconnaissance of the designated spots in
downtown Cleveland and that he desired to “destroy the government.”
Pitts also indicated he intended to travel to Philadelphia,
since Philadelphia is his hometown and he knows it best. Pitts indicated it was his “job” to “go look
at the base of the ground” and that it was up to other “brothers” to complete
other parts of the job.
On June 27, Pitts met with the CHS and turned over the phone
that contained the reconnaissance photos and videos, so they could be provided
to the al Qaeda brothers.
Later on June 27, Pitts and the UCE met in Maple Heights
then drove to downtown Cleveland, where they discussed the impending July 4th
bombing.
“And I’m gonna be downtown when the – when the thing go
off. I’m gonna be somewhere cuz I wanna
see it go off,” Pitts said.
A search of the phone that Pitts provided to the CHS
revealed that he made two videos in which he pledged allegiance. He stated, in part: “We serve Allah . . . We
fight our enemies. We destroy them and
destroy those who try to oppose…”
The phone also had four videos taken by Pitts that show him
walking down East 9th Street in Cleveland, pointing out potential targets such
as the federal building, the Coast Guard station and St. John’s Cathedral,
which he said could be taken “off the map.”
On July 1, Pitts met with the UCE in Garfield Heights, Ohio,
for Pitts to explain his plan for Philadelphia.
Pitts said he planned to travel there to conduct reconnaissance for a
future attack in Philadelphia. Pitts
stated a truck bomb packed with explosives, such as the one used in Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma, would be the best way to cause maximum damage.
Pitts was reminded by the UCE that people would die and body
parts would by flying around. Pitts
responded “I don’t care” and that he had “no regrets,” would be able to “go to
sleep” and “I don’t give a (expletive).”
If convicted, the defendant’s sentence will be determined by
the Court after review of factors unique to this case, including the
defendant’s prior criminal record, if any, the defendant’s role in the offense
and the characteristics of the violations.
In all cases, the sentence will not exceed the statutory maximum and, in
most cases, it will be less than the maximum.
This investigation is being conducted by the FBI-Cleveland
Division’s Joint Terrorism Task. The
case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michelle Baeppler and
Matthew Shepherd of the Northern District of Ohio, and Trial Attorney Paul
Casey of the National Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section.
An indictment is only a charge and is not evidence of
guilt. A defendant is entitled to a fair
trial in which it will be the government’s burden to prove guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt.
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