Soldier4Christ
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« Reply #4 on: August 11, 2006, 12:37:17 AM » |
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Missing Egyptian Student Arrested At O'Hare
Chicago police on Thursday morning arrested one of the 11 Egyptian students who were wanted for failing to show up for an exchange program in Montana.
As CBS 2’s Derrick Blakley reports, it all started with some heated words at a ticket counter.
At 8 a.m., about four hours after heightened security restrictions went into effect following a foiled terror plot in Britain, a man at the Delta terminal at O’Hare International Airport tried to use a ticket to go to Bozeman, Montana, but his ticket was out of New York rather than Chicago, police Supt. Philip Cline said at a news conference.
A disturbance then ensued. “He was raising his voice for the level for the counter agent to call for the police officer to come over,” Cline said.
The man, Ahmed Mohamed Mohamed Abou El Ela, 22, was found to be one of the missing Egyptian students, Cline said.
”He was acting in a strange, erratic behavior, and the Delta supervisor and they went a little farther in their investigation with the ticket, and they discovered that he was one of the missing students that they were looking for,” said Chicago police officer Tim Bolger, who arrived at the scene.
“We get disturbances occasionally, but it’s not unusual for people to be a little irate at the ticket counter,” added Bolger.
The Delta supervisor contacted the university, who in turn told her to call the Chicago Police Department and the FBI, Bolger said.
“They say he was kind of fidgety, moving around and kind of talking in a loud voice, which caused for a little bit of alarm,” Bolger said.
El Ela was calm when Bolgar arrived. He was taken into custody and turned over to federal authorities, Bolgar said.
Mayor Daley said Bolger “did a tremendous job” checking out the disturbance.
“All of a sudden a name comes up and a person of interest,” Daley said.
Authorities began searching for the 11 Egyptian students after they arrived in the United States last month, but failed to show up for an exchange program at Montana State University.
“For 11 individuals to completely, basically, fall of the radar in the United States, that’s a concern,” said Former Special FBI Agent George Bauries.
Two other students were arrested Thursday in suburban Baltimore. Three more were arrested on Wednesday -- one in Minnesota and two in New Jersey. The other six arrived as planned at the Montana school.
The Egyptian men were among a group of 17 students who arrived in New York from Cairo on July 29 with valid visas, according to U.S. authorities and university officials.
Since 9/11, immigration authorities have been monitoring the whereabouts of foreign students much more carefully.
“Intelligence and counter intelligence is extremely important in order to protect us from attack,” Daley said.
So far, the students haven't explained why they didn't show up in Montana.
Neither federal nor local authorizes are suggesting they have any ties with the British bombing plot or any terror activities.
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