Spain busts gang led by financier of 9/11 attacks
MADRID: Spanish police said on Saturday they dismantled a gang that cloned credit cards led by an Algerian previously jailed for helping finance the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States.
Police said they had arrested 19 people in Madrid who specialised in making illegal credit cards by getting people’s data — such as pin numbers — in the darknet and transferring it to other cards.
They would then draw money out from cash points or buy items in stores, said the police statement.
The leader of the gang, a 49-year-old Algerian man whose name they would not reveal, had used the same process to help finance the Sept 11 attacks which killed nearly 3,000 people.
A police spokeswoman said the man had been tried and convicted in Spain, adding she did not know how long he had served time in jail before being released. This time, he was cloning credit cards for his own personal benefit, she said.
Spain was the scene of a high-security mass trial in 2005 of alleged Sept 11 plotters, with 24 Al Qaeda suspects taking the stand, 18 of whom were jailed.
It is unclear though whether the Algerian gang leader was among them, or was convicted separately.
Spain was also the scene of a key meeting in the northeastern city of Tarragona just months before the attacks, which Mohamed Atta, the pilot ringleader of the Sept 11 hijackers, attended.
Participants at that meeting are believed to have finalised preparations for the attacks, including deciding the date.
Published in Dawn, November 4th, 2018