Terrorists May Have More Targets in U.S.

ByABC News
August 30, 2004, 2:38 PM

W A S H I N G T O N, Aug. 3, 2004 -- The FBI is racing to find out exactly who conducted the surveillance at major U.S. financial centers, thinking they may be plotting against 10 more targets, ABC News has learned.

U.S. officials are extremely concerned that the operatives who conducted the surveillance are still in the country.

"I think around the country, we just assume that there are operatives here," Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge told a news conference today. "Obviously, the law enforcement community has their eyes on people they believe are connected or sympathetic to the cause."

In the computer files recovered after the arrest of a Pakistani computer engineer last month, the U.S. government has found in addition to surveillance materials relating to the apparent U.S. targets specific leads on who conducted the surveillance.

Investigators have been combing through the files, which were obtained after the arrest of engineer Mohammed Khan, who officials say is a member of al Qaeda.

"Any record that appears to be a telephone number, bank account number, credit card number, prepaid phone card number, anything that you can work with that's what you're looking for," said former FBI counterterrorism agent Jack Cloonan, an ABC News consultant.

There may be more targets in al Qaeda's sights than was first reported earlier this week.

More Possible Terror Targets

Law enforcement officials said the bulk of the extensive surveillance was conducted on the Citigroup Center in Manhattan, the International Monetary Fund and World Bank buildings in Washington, and Prudential Financial Inc.'s headquarters in Newark, N.J. Federal officials publicly identified those targets this week, along with the New York Stock Exchange.

But ABC News has learned there were references in the computer files to 10 other potential targets: seven additional targets in New York, one in Washington, another in New Jersey, and the Bank of America building in San Francisco.