| |
Suspected Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) operative David Coleman Headley's father was an important Pakistani diplomat, says a media report. The report also says that his mother belonged to Philadelphia. Born Daood Gilani, Headley changed his name in 2006 taking on the surname of his mother Serrill Headley.
Serrill Headley, who grew up in Bryn Mawr, split with her husband, and lost custody of her children in Pakistani courts. After 10 years in Pakistan, Serrill Headley moved to Philadelphia, bought a 100-year-old tavern in 1973, and turned it into a bustling nightspot, reports The Philadelphia Inquirer.
In an interview in 1974, she said, "In Pakistan, men own the children. There are no rights for women."
In Philadelphia, however, he suffered from culture shock. Raised as a Muslim, he was having trouble adjusting to the idea that his mother ran a bar, the Inquirer said.
At the time, the Khyber was a slice of exotica on the Philadelphia bar scene, with Pakistani wedding tents and 180 brands of beer.
"His mother owned it and gave it to him around 1985," said Stephen Simons, current owner of the bar, now called the Khyber.
David Headley studied accounting, possibly at a community college in the Philadelphia region. With his mother, he operated a video store, FliksVideo, in Center City.
In 1997, Headley, under his birth name of Gilani, was convicted on federal charges in Brooklyn of smuggling heroin into the country. He was sentenced to 15 months in prison.
Headley had been living in the north side of Chicago, authorities said, in an apartment under the name of a dead man. Although he has claimed to be a consultant in an immigration business, federal agents who have had him under surveillance found no evidence that was true.
They said he travelled extensively since 2006, including trips to Pakistan, India, and Denmark.
Sometimes he travelled to Pakistan for months at a time.
Today, Headley sits in a federal prison in Chicago, charged by the FBI with planning terrorist attacks overseas - including an alleged plot to target the Danish newspaper that in 2005 angered Muslims with a cartoon of the prophet Muhammad.
In his luggage, he had a copy of the Danish newspaper's front page and a memory stick that included videos of the paper's front entrance.
Headley was being held without bail on charges of conspiracy and providing material support to terrorists, pending a hearing.
According to the charging documents, federal authorities tracked his meetings, e-mail, and phone conversations.
Indian authorities also suspect Headley, a US citizen, may have scouted targets in Mumbai before the attacks last year that killed 165 people, according to a report in the Washington Post.
In phone calls, Headley and the other conspirators called it the "Mickey Mouse project" or the "northern project."
"It has made me very sad," Headley said, as FBI agents listened.
"Buddy, if this is true, then I will say 100 prayers, 100 prayers," Headley said.








