He was locked up for supporting Islamist terrorism before turning his life around
Ashley Powers, The Washington Post
Feb. 9, 2021
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2of6Mohammed Khalid s Koran.Photo for The Washington Post by Andre ChungShow MoreShow Less
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4of6Mohammed Khalid is pictured in Ellicott City, Md., near where he grew up.Photo for The Washington Post by Andre ChungShow MoreShow Less
5of6Mohammed Khalid.Photo for The Washington Post by Andre ChungShow MoreShow Less
6of6 Terrorist. That s what the boys whispered after he stood up and introduced himself to his ninth-grade class. Terrorist. Soft enough that the teacher couldn t hear, loud enough to sting. The boys smirked, turned back to whatever was happening in English class. Mohammed Khalid didn t respond. He simmered inside. Mohammed was 13 and had arrived in suburban Baltimore from Pakistan just a few weeks before. He was a wisp of a kid in a collared shirt, with neatly trimmed black hair and oval-shaped glasses that
minutes later, shows tsarnaev casual strolling into a grocery store and buying milk. rehema ellis joins us from outside the courthouse in boston. tell us more about the secret twitter account apparently kept by tsarnaev. reporter: good morning. we learned about this twitter account from an fbi agent, steven kimball who returned to the stand today for cross examination by the defense. there were two twitter accounts, one of a religious nation and one in a secret name of ghuraba. it says it means stranger out in the west we should stand out among the nonbelievers as one body. on cross examination, the defense tried to show many tweets according to them were taken out of context, could be misleading. should tell you also on the