F.B.I. Fed Up With Foxy "Informants"

Craig Monteilh in "Muslim-convert"
Most of us heard about "pretending" to be new "converts" to Islam, but actually trying to trap Muslim youths into saying something stupid - (and collect the reward money - while our innocent youths go to jail)
Craig Monteilh insists he was hot on the trail of terrorist plots at OC mosques.
Count the victims of his earlier con games among the skeptics.
If there’s a precise moment when the FBI first began to have a sinking feeling about Craig Monteilh, it likely occurred sometime in the spring of 2007.
When his hadlers read a small detail buried in one of his surveillance reports they became suspicious.
Monteilh had been spying on the Islamic Center of Irvine and other mosques for several months.
He’d earned the friendship and trust of a small group of Muslims, all of whom, he claims, were actually terrorists bent on carrying out violent attacks in Orange County, California.
"Their targets included shopping malls such as Fashion Island, South Coast Plaza and the Irvine Spectrum and, somewhat improbably, abandoned buildings in downtown Los Angeles."
According to his report, Monteilh was walking into a mosque in Tustin with a couple of the "terrorists" whose cell he’d infiltrated when he noticed a group of young Middle Eastern-looking men unloading several barrels from a van and hauling them into the mosque.
At the time, Monteilh insists, he didn’t really think too much about what he saw. He was too busy focusing on the terror plot that he and the terrorists planned to discuss at the mosque that day.
“I looked at them like this, really quick, ‘Salaam aleikum,’”
Monteilh recalls two years later in an interview at his house in Irvine, re-enacting the casual sideways glance and standard Islamic greeting — “Peace be to you”— he says he uttered that spring day.
“I kept walking because we had other business. But I put it in my report that I observed six to eight young Middle Eastern Muslims loading barrels in the back of the mosque.”
But when Monteilh’s FBI handlers read his report, he claims, they began arguing about whether or not he was a liar -
“They went, ‘What the hell is this?’” Monteilh recalls. “‘He’s lying.’”
FBI refuses to comment on anything Monteilh says.
Assuming any of this happened the way Monteilh says it did, you can easily imagine what went through his handlers’ minds when they read his report!
"Maybe it wasn’t such a great idea to hire a convicted felon and con artist to spy on Orange County’s Muslim community after all."
* * *
Craig Monteilh’s self-declared status as an FBI informant first became public three months ago, shortly after the bureau arrested a 34-year-old Afghan immigrant named Ahmadullah Sais Niazi, charging him with perjury and passport fraud for allegedly lying about previous trips to Pakistan and that his brother-in-law was a high-ranking member of a Taliban faction allied with al-Qaeda.
In his sworn affidavit against Niazi, Special Agent Thomas J. Ropel III stated, in a tape-recorded conversation, Niazi had referred to Osama bin Laden as “an angel.”
On Feb. 21, the day after Niazi’s arrest, Monteilh told the LA Times he was the informant who gave the FBI that tape and the FBI had paid him to spy on Orange County mosques.
Although the FBI never responded to the latter claim, a week after Niazi’s arrest, Ropel testified in Niazi’s bail hearing - Monteilh had in fact provided the FBI with the tape recording.
Ropel’s admission didn’t surprise the leadership of the Islamic Center of Irvine, of which Niazi had been a member.
Niazi and another mosque member had reported Monteilh to the FBI, claiming that Monteilh was espousing terrorist rhetoric and trying to draw them into a plot to blow up shopping malls and abandoned buildings.
When the FBI refused to investigate, the congregants suspected Monteilh might have been an agent provocateur; the Islamic Center sought and won a restraining order barring Monteilh from entering the mosque.
Ropel’s admission - the FBI had been working with Monteilh all along - led to a firestorm of controversy among Muslims in Orange County and beyond.
It flew in the face of a June 2006 promise by J. Stephen Tidwell, an assistant director with the FBI, in a speech before an angry crowd at the Islamic Center of Irvine, that, "The bureau would never spy on mosques."
That promise followed an Orange County Register story, quoting an FBI agent telling a group of Republicans in Newport Beach, "The bureau was monitoring 'extremists' affiliated with UC Irvine’s Muslim Student Union."
The only confirmed cases of Orange County residents joining al-Qaeda involve Khalil Deek, a Palestinian exile, and Adam “Yahiye” Gadahn, a Jewish American teenager, both of whom fled to Pakistan before 9/11.
Deek spent time in a Jordanian prison for his alleged role in a terrorist plot there but was freed months later.
He has since disappeared and is believed to be dead.
Gadahn, also known as "Azzam the American", has appeared in several al-Qaeda videos and is rumored to be hiding out near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
From the ocweekly.com

