Hezbollah terrorist scouted NYC-area locations: feds

The Bobster

Senior News Editor since 2004
https://nypost.com/2019/09/19/hezbollah-terrorist-scouted-nyc-area-locations-feds/

Hezbollah terrorist scouted NYC-area locations: feds
By Ben Cohn, Emily Saul, Larry Celona and Laura Italiano
September 19, 2019 | 3:54pm | Updated

A New Jersey man has spent the past 22 years training with and scouting terror-attack locations for Hezbollah — and provided the group with intelligence on the Port Authority, Grand Central Terminal, the New York Stock Exchange and the city’s two airports, according to a new federal indictment against him.

Alexei Saab, 42, of Morristown — also known as Ali Hassan Saab, Alex Saab, or “Rachid” — was charged Thursday in a nine-count indictment for allegedly providing material support to the deadly organization.

Saab was arrested in July, and remains in federal custody, officials said.

As far back as in 2003, he gave Hezbollah photos and other detailed intel on New York City landmarks and transportation hubs.

Saab surveilled dozens of locations in New York City—including the United Nations headquarters, the Statue of Liberty, Rockefeller Center, Times Square, the Empire State Building, the federal offices at 26 Federal Plaza, and local airports, tunnels, and bridges, including the George Washington Bridge.

The detailed information recovered from his computers included photographs and details on the structural weaknesses — or “soft spots” — of these locations, officials alleged.

He has also surveilled sites in cities around the US — including the Washington Monument and Boston’s Fenway Park, The Post has learned.

The charges do not allege that Saab conducted any recent surveillance.

“According to the allegations, while living in the United States, Saab served as an operative of Hezbollah and conducted surveillance of possible target locations in order to help the foreign terrorist organization prepare for potential future attacks against the United States,” said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John C. Demers said in a press statement.

“Such covert activities conducted on U.S. soil are a clear threat to our national security and I applaud the agents, analysts, and prosecutors who are responsible for this investigation and prosecution.”

Saab joined Hezbollah in 1996, and his earliest activities with the group include spying in Lebanon on the movements of Israeli and Southern Lebanese Army soldiers, and intelligence-gathering in Istanbul, the indictment alleges.

He trained in the use of firearms, including AK-47s, and in 2000 he received extensive training in military tactics, including how to construct bombs and other explosive devices, the indictment alleges.

In 2005, Saab attempted to murder a suspected Israeli spy, pointing a firearm at close range and twice pulling the trigger, only to have the gun malfunction both times, officials said.

In 2004 and 2005, Saab attended explosives training in Lebanon during which he received detailed instruction in, among other things, triggering mechanisms, explosive substances, detonators and the assembly of circuits, the indictment alleges.

In 2000, Saab lawfully entered the United States using a Lebanese passport, and he became a naturalized US citizen in 2008, the indictment alleges.

His former neighbors in Jersey City were stunned by the news.

“He was a nice guy, but quiet, private,” said a neighbor who lives across from Saab’s former rental apartment on the top floor of a two-story house. She asked not to be identified by name.

“He said hi to me and my baby.”
 
https://nypost.com/2019/09/21/alexe...-disturbing-pattern-of-dubious-hires-at-cuny/

Alexei Saab allegations highlight disturbing pattern of dubious hires at CUNY
By Sara Dorn and Melissa Klein
September 21, 2019 | 6:03pm | Updated

Another CUNY educator has joined the university system’s band of crazies.

The New Jersey man accused of helping Hezbollah plot terror attacks on major New York City landmarks is a former Baruch College lecturer, a spokesman for the publicly funded school confirmed.

Alexei Saab, 42, of Morristown, graduated in 2012 with a master’s degree in business administration and received his master of science information systems from the college in 2015.

He later became an adjunct lecturer at Baruch’s Zicklin School of Business, where he taught graduate courses in IT strategy, computer information systems and business data modeling. Students rated him a talented lecturer but a tough grader.

One anonymous poster to ratemyprofessors.com wrote: “He tries to catch you off guard in his exams/hw and gives you trick questions … which is incredibly frustrating.”

Payroll records show the college paid Saab $7,517 last year, $11,174 in 2017 and $5,836 in 2016.

When Saab wasn’t shaping young minds, federal prosecutors say, he spent his time surveying dozens of sites in New York City on behalf of Lebanese extremists.

Originally from Lebanon, Saab was inducted into the gang in 1996 as a spy and later received “extensive” training in weapons and explosives, according to the criminal complaint.

After he moved to the US in 2000, Saab began scouting locations, some around the corner from Baruch’s Midtown campus.

Authorities say he provided the group “detailed” photographs and descriptions of structural “soft spots” at the UN headquarters, the Statue of Liberty, Rockefeller Center, Times Square, the Empire State Building and airports, tunnels and bridges.

Saab has been in custody since his July arrest. He was charged Thursday with nine offenses related to his involvement in Hezbollah and a separate marriage-fraud allegation.
see also
Hezbollah terrorist scouted NYC-area locations: feds

A Baruch College spokeswoman said he no longer works there.

The disturbing allegations against Saab are part of a pattern of questionable hires at CUNY, whose board is mostly appointed by the governor.

Among the army of allegedly misbehaving professors are former John Jay department chairs Barry Spunt, Ric Curtis and Anthony Marcus. They were accused last year by two former students of running an on-campus sex and drug den, allegations first revealed by The Post.

At Hunter College, star professor Jeffrey Parsons recently quit after a school probe found he used and supplied cocaine at university-sponsored events and violated CUNY’s misconduct policy.

And at Baruch, former adjunct Eric Linsker was arrested in 2014 for throwing a trash can at cops.

Baruch adjunct Juan Lazaro, was outed as a Russian spy in 2010.

Lecturers have told The Post that CUNY’s hiring process for adjuncts like Saab is overly lax.

“You’ll look in your pile of résumés that you have in your desk, or you’ll call some friends,” one Brooklyn College professor said as he described the vetting process.

A CUNY spokesman did not respond to The Post’s question about what it’s doing to prevent more bad hires from happening.
 
Back
Top