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During a hearing Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Oregon, Joseph Mahmoud Dibee said he had agreed to plead guilty to decades-old federal charges. Dibee, 54, faces charges in Oregon, Washington and California. The U.S. Department of Justice said he helped burn down a slaughterhouse for horses in Redmond, Ore. in 1997. ....
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Former fugitive accused in 2001 eco-terror case pleads not guilty in Sacramento court Sacramento Bee 5/6/2021 Sam Stanton, The Sacramento Bee May 5 Twenty years after suspected eco-terrorists set fire to a horse corral at a federal facility near Susanville, a one-time international fugitive charged in a case alleging numerous arson attacks nationwide pleaded not guilty Wednesday in Sacramento federal court. Joseph Mahmoud Dibee, 53, who was apprehended in 2018 in Havana as he prepared to board a flight to Russia, entered the plea during a Zoom appearance in court on a 2006 federal grand jury indictment charging him with arson and conspiracy to commit arson in the corral fire. ....
Joe Dibee is portrayed while sitting on steps leading to his family s home on Wednesday, February 17, 2021, in Seattle. Credit: KUOW Photo/Megan Farmer The many lives of Joseph Dibee, codename Seattle By The former international fugitive, a graduate of Garfield High School, is stuck in Seattle. In the 1990s, some knew Joseph Mahmoud Dibee as âSeattle.â It was his codename, according to his FBI wanted poster. Today, the former international fugitive is stuck in Seattle, confined by a house-arrest order and awaiting trial on federal charges, including allegations he participated in an arson at a Central Oregon slaughterhouse in 1997. At times, the federal government has portrayed fringe actors in the environmental and animal rights movement as among the most significant terrorist threats facing the United States. ....
En route to Havana, Cuba, on May 21, 2018, a man identifying himself as “Yousef Deba” was stopped by El Salvadorian authorities after he showed his passport and travel documents. He was photographed, his eye was scanned, he was twice fingerprinted and his electronics were searched. His biometric data matched information on an outstanding warrant from Oregon for a Joseph Dibee. He was allowed to board a plane to Havana, where he was arrested by Cuban agents, who contacted the U.S. and agreed to turn him over to federal authorities. The U.S. had finally captured one of the last remaining fugitives from the Northwest ecowars of the late 1990s, an outbreak of fires and other sabotage that gripped the region’s attention. In previous years 15 other people surrendered or were caught by federal agents who branded the young activists as “terrorists,” though they never injured or killed anyone. ....