CBS/AP/ May 5, 2010, 12:48 AM

53 Hours from Times Square Smoking SUV to Arrest

The license plate had been switched and the vehicle identification number stripped from the dashboard of the 1993 Nissan Pathfinder holding a crude bomb in Times Square. Smoke from the faulty firecracker detonators might have ruined evidence.

Then investigators managed to recover the VIN, hidden on the sport utility vehicle's engine block - and thus began a chase that led to the arrest of the would-be bomber 53 hours and 20 minutes after the smoking vehicle was spotted on one of the busiest streets in America.

A Pakistani-born U.S. citizen, Faisal Shahzad, was hauled off a flight to Dubai and arrested late Monday; federal authorities say he has admitted to plotting the attack. He was charged Tuesday with terrorism and attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction.

Special Section: Terrorism in the U.S.
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Terrorism, WMD Charges for Faisal Shahzad

"Jack Bauer might have caught him in '24'," said Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, referring to Fox's popular TV show "24." "But in the real world, 53's not bad."

Court documents unsealed Tuesday show investigators have collected considerable evidence linking Shahzad to the attempted bombing, reports CBS News national security correspondent Bob Orr.

The investigation's clock started ticking at 6:28 p.m. Saturday when a security camera captured images of the dark-colored Pathfinder with tinted windows parked on West 45th Street, in an area lined with Broadway theaters and restaurants.

Six minutes later, a street vendor pointed out the SUV, which had started belching white smoke and making "popping noises," to a police officer on horseback. The officer, Wayne Rhatigan, called in a report of a car fire, flagged down other officers and started evacuating the area.

At 6:40 p.m., firefighters were on the scene. After breaking the car's side and back windows to try to put out the fire, they discovered its sinister contents: three propane tanks, two gallons of gasoline and a load of fertilizer, with fireworks and some cheap alarm clocks as a trigger.

The New York Police Department bomb squad was called in and went to work dismantling the device, defusing it by 11:30 p.m. Times Square, clogged with tourists on a warm evening, would be shut down for 10 hours.

Meanwhile, the NYPD and FBI were pursuing the license plate attached to the back of the SUV. Investigators tracked it to a used auto parts shop in Stratford, Connecticut, waking the owner at 3 a.m. Sunday and discovering the plate was connected to a different vehicle.

Investigators also spoke to the owner of an auto shop in nearby Bridgeport because a sticker on the Pathfinder had indicated the SUV was sold by his dealership. That also led nowhere.

Then at 7:30 a.m. Sunday, Detective John Wright slid underneath the SUV at a Queens lab and discovered the clue that would crack the case - a VIN number stamped on the bottom of the engine block.

That led authorities to a Bridgeport, Connecticut, man and his 19-year-old daughter, Peggy Colas, who had posted ads on eBay and other websites to sell a 1993 Nissan Pathfinder, court papers said.

During questioning on Sunday morning and again Monday, the teenager told investigators she met the man who bought her car at a supermarket parking lot on April 24 and he took the vehicle for a test drive. She was asking $1,800; he offered $500 less. She agreed and he paid her in cash - with 13 crisp $100 bills.

No bill of sale was necessary, she said the buyer told her, and he already had plates. She did not know his name - but she did have a cell number.

That led to a prepaid cell phone activated on April 16 and used to call Colas several times, investigators said. A check of phone records showed it was also used to contact a Pennsylvania fireworks shop.

By 11 a.m. Monday, investigators knew the suspect's name.

Agents later showed Colas a photo array with six photos, including one of Shahzad. Authorities say she picked Shahzad.

Meanwhile, there was more evidence.

A set of keys left in the Pathfinder's ignition turned out to belong to a white Isuzu Trooper that Shazhad left parked at New York's Kennedy airport Monday night, as well as to his apartment in Bridgeport, Connecticut. At a garage at the residence, investigators recovered fireworks and fertilizer, court papers said.

Shahzad was spotted at around 3 p.m. Monday coming out of a store near his home and was tailed by investigators. He was also placed on a no-fly list.

Read criminal complaint against Faisal Shahzad

Authorities planned to arrest him at his apartment that evening, but Shahzad may have gotten spooked by news reports that investigators were seeking a Pakistani suspect in Connecticut, two people familiar with the probe said.

He managed to slip federal surveillance, according to those sources and a law enforcement official. All spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the case.

Did Faisal Shahzad Nearly Get Away?

Shahzad headed for Kennedy airport, calling in a reservation for an Emirates flight to Dubai by cell phone while en route, and paying for the ticket in cash before boarding the plane, authorities said.

Emirates officials were unaware he was on the no-fly list because they did not check a Web forum where the latest updates are posted. So it was only when a customs agent assigned to the case spotted Shahzad's name on the flight manifest 30 minutes before takeoff that authorities knew he was on board.

He was belted in to his seat when FBI investigators and NYPD officers entered the jetliner and took him into custody.

The time was 11:45 p.m. - 53 hours and 20 minutes after the Times Square scare began.

NYC Bomb Investigation Focus
Bomb Suspect: How Was He Caught?
New York: A Terrorist Target
Photo Essay: Times Square Car Bomb Plot
Times Square Plot: Emirates Airlines Plays Key Role
Obama on Failed Attack: "We Will Not Be Terrorized"
Shahzad Mirandized After Initial Questioning
Pakistan Detains Several in Times Square Plot
Gun Found in Bomb Suspect's Car, Sources Say
Shahzad Appeared to be Family Man, Neighbors Say
Times Square Link could Force Pakistan's Hand
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
4 Comments Add a Comment
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notparicular says:
We worry about illegals getting employment when their employers do not check their background. This guy got an MBA and was making a good living as a financial analyst. Perhaps it is illegal for our employer to ask a couple of probing questions and check the background when the job applicant has a Muslim name with Pakistani connection. But would it not make sense? No, can't do that. We have a constitution to protect. Our police just has to bring it down from 53 hours to 35.
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OldProfessor replies:
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Do you feel better now that you have vented your complaints. If not, you might try looking at things from a positive perspective. The culprit was caught with out a shoot out. He is spilling his guts and his handlers are being exposed. That is GOOD news. I feel better myself.
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marcm1 says:
If that car bomb had gone off, there would have been little if any way to track this terrorist down. He would have been long gone. It was pure luck that it did not go off and authorities were able to track the sale of the vehicle.. It was because of the heightened alert that it was noticed that he was on that plane. If he left the day before he would have gotten away. How did he even get on the plane being on the no fly list. And what good is this list if the ones on it walk right onto a plane. And if they are a danger to air travel,why would they not be a danger altogether? There is a lot of hand shaking going on when instead we should be looking hard at how this happened and the failings that almost let him slip away
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wdh3007 says:
To much information for those that practice the so called religion of peace now the next car bomb suspect will now know to get the vin number off the engine block and immediately leave the country once a vehicle is placed for detonation.
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