LONDON, Aug. 23, 2006

Brits Release 2 Terror Plot Suspects

9 Others Still Held In Alleged Trans-Atlantic Flight Bombing Plan

  • Video 11 Charged In Terror Plot

    Police have searched nearly 70 homes, businesses and cars in the investigation of the foiled trans-Atlantic terror plot. Sheila MacVicar reports.

    • The people accused in the alleged terror plot, from top left, Cossar Ali, Mehran Hussain, Ibrahim Savant, Wheed Zaman; middle row, Arafat Waheed Khan, Umar Islam, Ahmed Abdullah Ali; bottom row, Tanvir Hussain, Adam Khatib and Assad Ali Sarwar. Photo

      The people accused in the alleged terror plot, from top left, Cossar Ali, Mehran Hussain, Ibrahim Savant, Wheed Zaman; middle row, Arafat Waheed Khan, Umar Islam, Ahmed Abdullah Ali; bottom row, Tanvir Hussain, Adam Khatib and Assad Ali Sarwar.  (AP Photo)

    • One of four police prison vans transporting 11 terror suspects arrives at Horseferry Court in central London, Aug. 22, 2006. Photo

      One of four police prison vans transporting 11 terror suspects arrives at Horseferry Court in central London, Aug. 22, 2006.  (Getty Images/Bruno Vincent)

    • A van, right, believed to be transporting some of the suspects accused in the alleged plot to blow up U.S.-bound airliners, arrives in a police convoy at the City of Westminster Magistrates Court in London, Aug. 22, 2006. Photo

      A van, right, believed to be transporting some of the suspects accused in the alleged plot to blow up U.S.-bound airliners, arrives in a police convoy at the City of Westminster Magistrates Court in London, Aug. 22, 2006.  (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

    • Metropolitan Police Deputy Assistant Commissioner Peter Clarke, Aug. 21, 2006. Photo

      Metropolitan Police Deputy Assistant Commissioner Peter Clarke, Aug. 21, 2006.  (AP)

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  • Interactive Trans-Atlantic Terror Plot

    Scheme to blow up U.S.-bound aircraft is foiled in U.K.; aviation security ratcheted up.

  • Interactive Bin Laden & Al Qaeda

    Where al Qaeda operates, who's been caught, how they're financed and a timeline of attacks on Americans.

(CBS/AP)  Two suspects in the alleged plot to blow up as many as 10 trans-Atlantic airliners were released without charge Wednesday, Scotland Yard said.

Britain's Press Association reported that the first man released was Tayib Rauf. An official with Britain's anti-terrorist unit confirmed that Rauf, who was videotaped at a grocery story in Birmingham just hours before he was arrested Aug. 10, was released.

The official talked to the AP on condition of anonymity because he is not allowed to talk to the media.

The identity of the second person released was not disclosed.

Meanwhile, detectives will again ask a British judge Thursday for more time to question one remaining suspect being held in the alleged plot to blow up as many as 10 trans-Atlantic airliners.

The suspect, Umair Hussain, is part of a group of nine people who are still being questioned in the plot that British officials said was thwarted earlier this month. He could be further detained, be charged or released.

Hussain made a similar appearance Wednesday, and his custody was extended by just 24 hours.

His lawyer, Timur Rustem, told The AP that he believed Hussain could be released, but said it would be the judge's decision.

"I think I may be able to see him face to face on Thursday night," he said.

On Wednesday, a British court extended the time the nine suspects can be held without charges being filed.

Mohammed Nazam, the owner of the grocery store where Tayib Rauf was taped and a friend of the Rauf family, also told The Associated Press that Tayib had been released. It wasn't known where Tayib was Wednesday night.

Scotland Yard said it would not comment and a call to prosecutors was not immediately returned.

Tayib's brother, Rashid Rauf, is being interrogated by law enforcement authorities in a town near the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, over his alleged key role in the plot, officials said.

Pakistani officials have linked people arrested there in the alleged conspiracy to al Qaeda militants.

Investigators have not revealed if the alleged airline plot suspects were linked to al Qaeda.

In the days immediately after the Rauf brothers' arrests, a swirl of attention focused on their role in the plot.

Their father, Abdul Rauf, immigrated to Britain from the Mirpur district of Pakistan several decades ago, and his five children were born in Britain.

Rashid was arrested in early August along the Pakistan-Afghan border, and Pakistani officials dubbed him a "key person."

British authorities released precious little information about the brothers, or the course of their investigation into the alleged terror plot in general.

Police said eight suspects who have not been charged could be kept in custody until Aug. 30, giving police more time to quiz them about the plot they have said involved liquid-based explosives.

The 11 were among about two dozen people arrested Aug. 10 in police raids in London, Birmingham and High Wycombe, about 30 miles northwest of the capital. The others arrested have either been charged or released.

Wednesday's court action represented the first time that police have used new anti-terrorism laws to hold suspects for more than 14 days without charge, Britain's Home Office said. The law lets officers make applications to hold terrorism suspects for a maximum of 28 days before filing charges.

Eleven others charged in the alleged terror plot appeared before a court for the first time on Tuesday.

Eight of the men charged were accused of offenses of conspiracy to murder and preparing to commit terrorism. Three others — including the mother of an 8-month-old — are charged with lesser offenses, including failing to disclose information.

British detectives are attempting to stitch together thousands of pieces of information to demonstrate that they thwarted a major terror plot.

Meanwhile, experts tell CBS News correspondent Sheila MacVicar that the bombs the suspects were allegedly trying to make might not have worked.

Sources close to the investigation tell MacVicar they believe the suspects were trying to make acetone peroxide. But this chemical has a strong smell and is very unstable — sensitive to even small rises in temperature. Would-be bombers may not have been able to keep the solution cool enough, experts say.

Officers on Wednesday began searching for evidence in an area of woodland in High Wycombe, a police spokeswoman said.

Months of surveillance had produced "significant video and audio recordings" regarding the alleged plot, London's anti-terrorism police chief Peter Clarke said Monday.

He said investigators had found bombing-making chemicals, including hydrogen peroxide, as well as electrical components.

More than 8,000 items of data storage, such as compact discs, DVDs and memory sticks, were found. Maps of Afghanistan, suicide notes and books on explosives also were seized, officials said.

Investigators said the evidence was still being examined, including fingerprints, DNA samples and handwriting.

British officials also confirmed that the plot involved the manufacture of liquid explosives, which would then be assembled and detonated on board airliners.

©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Add a Comment
by pegasusdba August 21, 2006 4:31 PM PDT
I can understand that it takes time to gather evidence, discover the real plotters, to follow the money trail and to analyze the motives and benefits sought by the terrorists ... but after 5 years, we all deserve some sensible (not necessarily easy) answers to who destroyed the WTC and killed thousands.
A few men hiding out in the caves of Afghanistan had the motive but did not have the means or capability to perform those acts. I don't think Bush did it - not with that deer-in-the-headlights look on his face. But an investigation should be reopened by a non-partisan, public, no-holds-barred committee. Don't you agree?

http://RobustLiberty.blogspot.com
Reply to this comment
by ronniehm August 21, 2006 5:48 PM PDT
Al Qaeda is made up of a few guys hiding in caves? Wow, talk about a deer in headlights, you should see the expression of everyone who just read that.
Reply to this comment
by ronniehm August 21, 2006 6:07 PM PDT
According to peg's little blog, Flight 93 is a scam as well. Bodies and luggage "don't just disintigrate," he says. Well, take it from someone who was one of the first on the scene of a USAir flight that crashed on approach to Pittsburgh International, you won't find anything bigger than a fingernail and you may as well burn your clothes because you'll never get rid of the skin and bone fragments. Sorry if that's disgusting, but it's to illustrate how people with a certain view or party affiliation frequently throw out "facts" that the average person could not possibly dispute. I mean how many people have walked through airline wreckage? The point is this: Be skeptical when an argument includes something like Bush's facial expression as proof of something. The rest of the argument is almost certainly even less valid.
Reply to this comment
by ronniehm August 21, 2006 6:25 PM PDT
http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/defense/1227842.html
Reply to this comment
by jms_cheung August 21, 2006 8:33 PM PDT
Credit must be given to the Intelligence & Police depts for doing a good job in blasting the evil terrrorist plot to blow commercial airliners over the Atlantic Ocean...killing innocent people. However, it must not forget that this is just the BEGINNING that the Islamist terrorists are planning worldwide....eating away our freedom and joy like the hidden white-ants in our society. AS the world join hands with US & Bush in their fierce battle against global Islamist terrorism, only then can we expect to see some light for a better tomorrow!
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