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Salt Lake City Police: Self-Described ‘Next Osama’ Made More Than 100 Threats via 9-1-1

External News Source March 11, 2013 Industry

Bob Mims, The Salt Lake Tribune

Salt Lake City police say a 27-year-old man from Somalia apparently just doesn’t like them.

There’s no crime in that. There is, however, in purportedly making more than 100 calls — over just two days — to the 9-1-1 emergency number to threaten officers’ lives.

Salt Lake City police Det. Veronica Montoya said the threats were made to police officers in general, not specific individuals. Still, authorities concerned about the volume and nature of the calls decided enough was enough.

“We were able to get a warrant based on the number he was calling from and officers went to his home and arrested him,” Montoya said Friday.

The man, identified as Mohamud M. Ismail, was tracked down via telephone records to a residence near 700 South and 300 East and, after initially refusing to answer the door, was taken into custody just before 5 a.m. Friday.

According to a probable cause statement, Ismail made a total of 106 calls to 9-1-1 between Wednesday and Thursday night. Police say he called himself the “second Osama bin Laden,” and claimed to be manufacturing explosives.

Court records indicate Ismail has previously made verbal threats via 9-1-1, and at one point was ordered by the court to undergo a psychiatric evaluation. In May 2012, he was sentenced to a year’s probation after a “no contest” plea to a class A misdemeanor count of attempted threat of terrorism.

That charge stemmed from a February 2011 threat to a 9-1-1 dispatcher to “bomb and kill all Americans,” 3rd District Court documents state.

This time, Ismail was booked into Salt Lake County Jail on suspicion of second-degree felony threats to life and property; third-degree felony obstruction of justice; and a class B misdemeanor count of emergency telephone abuse.

Copyright © 2013 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved. 

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