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Imprisoned shoe bomber says attack on US plane permissible under Islamic law

The attempted attack in December 2001 came as Americans were on heightened alert following the September 11, 2001, attacks on US targets, and prompted federal officials to institute stricter security rules for travelers requiring airline passengers to run their shoes through a screening device.

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The shoes used in the failed attempt to blow up an airplane by shoe bomber Richard Reid (R) are displayed alongside an FBI model of the shoe filled with explosives, as part of a new exhibit marking the tenth annivesary of the September 11, 2001 attacks, at the Newseum in Washington, DC, as seen August 31, 2011. The exhibit, "War on Terror: The FBI's New Focus,"
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More than 13 years after his failed attempt to blow up a passenger plane with explosives hidden in his shoes, Richard Reid told US researchers he believes his actions were permissible under Islamic law, according to correspondence released on Tuesday.

Reid, who is serving a life sentence in a federal prison in Colorado because of the attack, was foiled in his 2001 bid to blow up an American Airlines flight from Paris to Miami when passengers and crew overpowered him as he tried to ignite explosives in his shoes.

The attempted attack in December 2001 came as Americans were on heightened alert following the September 11, 2001, attacks on US targets, and prompted federal officials to institute stricter security rules for travelers requiring airline passengers to run their shoes through a screening device.

"I do believe my actions to have been permissible in Islamic law, although I admit that many people would dispute that and disagree with me on that point," Reid wrote in one of a series of letters with researchers from the Virginia-based Justitia Institute who reached out to him last June.

"However, at the same time I also believe that it wasn't supposed to happen, not because it was displeasing to God and rather because (a) it was not either my time to die nor that of those on the plane with me and (b) He had other plans for me which include my staying in prison," he wrote in a letter signed with the name Abdur-Raheem.

Reid, a British citizen who is now 41, pleaded guilty in 2002 to multiple charges including attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction and attempted murder.

Kim Mehlman-Orozco, a researcher and board member at the Justitia Institute, which researches criminal and social justice issues, said her team was not surprised Reid had maintained his militant views after over a decade behind bars.

"It speaks to the level of motivation, because it defies time, it defies rationality, it supersedes his will to live, his will for freedom," she said in a phone interview.

Saif Inam, policy analyst at the Muslim Public Affairs Council in Washington, D.C., said Reid's contention that his attempted attack was allowed by Islamic law was "100 percent, unequivocally, theologically untenable."

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