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Christian Action Network
The National Terror Alert Response Center
released to the media, including PRB News, case information
Wednesday, Feb. 6, about Islamist Muslim students caught with
explosives near a U.S. military target in South Carolina.
The prosecutor’s arguments lashed out against defense claims Youssef
Samir Megahed and Ahmed Abdellatif Sherif Mohamed, Egyptian
students, had only some “harmless fireworks.”
Defense attorneys were arguing for bail release, to give the
Islamist Muslim students a second chance.
He cited an FBI report that characterized the
items found in the trunk of the car as a pyrotechnic mixture that
burned but didn’t explode when tested.
Federal prosecutor Jay Hoffer, in a motion filed Monday opposing
bond for Megahed, said defense attorney Adam Allen
“mischaracterized” the FBI report in describing the items in the
trunk as harmless.
Hoffer said the items — including PVC pipe containing a mixture of
sugar and potassium nitrate and capped with cat litter — meet the
federal legal definition of explosives.
FBI analysts determined that the mixture could explode if it was
packed more tightly in the pipe and capped, Hoffer wrote.
“Experts from the FBI Laboratory describe these items as dangerous;
the degree of their dangerousness is, according to them, dependent
both upon their use and their surroundings,” the motion said.
Allen said the mixture wouldn’t have been packed in the pipes and
capped off because Megahed’s co-defendant, Ahmed Abdellatif Sherif
Mohamed, has said he was building “sugar rockets,” which are
supposed to lift off the ground but not explode.
“It is indisputable that the FBI testing of replicas of these PVC
mixture pipes clearly illustrated that when ignited, they either
burned, smoked or did nothing at all, which I think is completely
relevant to my client’s detention,” Allen said Tuesday.
Megahed, 21, and Mohamed, 26, have been in jail since sheriff’s
deputies found what they called bomb-making materials in the trunk
of their car during an Aug. 4 traffic stop near Charleston, S.C.
They are charged with illegally transporting explosives.
Mohamed also faces a terrorism-related charge for allegedly making a
video demonstrating how to convert a remote-control toy into a
detonator for a bomb.
Allen said the two University of South Florida engineering students
were on an innocent road trip to see beaches when they were stopped
for speeding.
Allen also contends that Megahed didn’t know anything about the
contents of the trunk or the video that investigators found stored
on a laptop computer in the car.
They can go ahead and sell that bridge to us when they’ve wired it, ready to blow…
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