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Motorhead Roadie Played Role in London Bombings By Newsferatu, Writer Sunday, June 25, 2006 @ 5:08 AM
A man who used his computer skills to help encrypt e-mails and produce anti-Western DVDs for radical Muslims said he tried to warn British police about two of the men responsible for the July terrorist attacks
in London, a newspaper reported Saturday.
Martin Gilbertson said he met Mohammed Sidique Khan and Shehzad Tanweer in Beeston, West Yorkshire, which is about 195 miles (310 kilometers) north of London. He told The Guardian newspaper he was introduced to them at a party held to celebrate the September 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.
Gilbertson, who the newspaper said was a former Hell's Angel and roadie for the band Motorhead, said he was working as a computer technician for people who were involved in a local Islamic bookshop and youth center.
"I was alarmed and disgusted by what I heard, but I kept my views to myself
and they were friendly," Gilbertson, 45, said. "They needed my skills, and I
was perceived to be anti-government."
By October 2003, he said the material alarmed him to the extent he went to a
local police station and asked to deliver it to anti-terrorist officers.
Gilbertson said he took the work to supplement his meager wages. "I'm good at
what I do, and I've got kids to feed. And after a while, I became so alarmed
by what was going on around me, I went to the police."
Police told him to mail them the material, which Gilbertson said he did, also
enclosing a list of names, including those of Khan and Tanweer. They were
later identified as two of the men who attacked London's transportation system
during the busy morning rush hour July 7. Four suicide bombers killed 52
commuters in the attacks.
A West Yorkshire spokesman told The Guardian that it was impossible to
determine what happened to the package Gilbertson said he sent police.
On Saturday, West Yorkshire police said they had no comment and referred
calls on Gilbertson's allegations to London's Metropolitan police, the lead
investigators in the attacks. London police referred calls to West Yorkshire police.
Gilbertson said he heard nothing from police until after the attacks, the
Guardian reported. He spoke three times with Metropolitan Police officers after
contacting them.
A parliamentary report released last month said British intelligence agencies
had been aware of two of the bombers -- suspected ringleader Khan and Tanweer
-- before the attacks. It was decided not to closely watch them because their
identities were not clear and agents were busy examining other unspecified
plans to attack Britain.
In editions available late Saturday, the Sunday Times reported than an
electronic tracking device was recovered from Khan's car after the July bombings,
indicating he had been under closer scrutiny in the runup to the attacks than
previously acknowledged.
The newspaper said the bug had been placed inside the vehicle by detectives
in a surveillance operation aimed at extremists in West Yorkshire, citing
unidentified security sources.
London's Metropolitan Police said it would not comment on the allegation. "It
is policy not to comment on matters of intelligence," said a police
spokeswoman, on customary condition of anonymity.
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