U.S. Hostage Johnson Beheaded
NewsMax Wires
Friday, June 18, 2004
An al-Qaida group said Friday it killed American hostage Paul M. Johnson Jr., posting three photos on the Internet showing his body and severed head.
The message, in the name of Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula,
appeared as a 72-hour deadline set by the group ended.
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Saudi security officials said Johnson's body was found in
al-Munisiyah district just outside the capital, Riyadh.
President Bush condemned the beheading and vowed that "America
will not be intimidated by these kinds of extremist thugs." And
Vice President Dick Cheney promised "America will hunt down the
killers, one by one, and destroy them."
A U.S. official in Washington said the main suspect in the
killing is Abdulaziz Issa Abdul-Mohsin al-Moqrin, the top al-Qaida
figure in Saudi Arabia. The official spoke on condition of
anonymity.
The al-Qaida statement posted on the Internet said, "In answer
to what we promised ... to kill the hostage Paul Marshall (Johnson)
after the period is over ... the infidel got his fair treatment."
"Let him taste something of what Muslims have long tasted from
Apache helicopter fire and missiles," the statement said.
Johnson, 49, who worked on Apache attack helicopter systems for
Lockheed Martin, was kidnapped last weekend by militants who
threatened to kill him by Friday if the kingdom did not release its
al-Qaida prisoners. The Saudi government rejected the demands.
He was the latest victim of an escalating campaign targeting
Westerners that Saudi and U.S. officials say aims to drive foreign
workers from the kingdom and undermine the ruling royal family,
hated by al-Qaida.
Al-Moqrin's group Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has claimed
responsibility for most anti-Westerner attacks in the past two
months.
"The inhumanity of the crime exceeds all boundaries of
civilized people," U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia James
Oberwetter said in a statement. "There is a tremendous sadness on
the part of the family, the U.S. Embassy, and the American
community at Paul's death."
The Saudi ambassador to Britain called the slaying "an evil act
by evil people."
"We will continue to use every effort to fight this murderous
cult in Saudi Arabia," Prince Turki al-Faisal said in London.
Earlier, as the deadline approached, Saudi security forces
launched an all-out search, going door-to-door in some Riyadh
neighborhoods, as Johnson's wife went on Arab television Friday
pleading for his release. But officials admitted they had few leads
on the group that abducted him or where he was being held.
After Johnson's death was reported, his family was in seclusion
at a town house in Galloway Township, N.J., where they have been
holding a vigil. A man in front of the house identified himself
only as "Bill" and said the family did not want to talk to
reporters.
One of the three photographs posted on the Web site showed a
man's head, face toward the camera, being held by a hand. The other
two showed a beheaded body lying prone on a mattress, with the
severed head placed in the small of his back, the clothes
underneath bloodied.
The face looked like Johnson's.
The beheaded body was dressed in a bright orange jumpsuit,
similar to one Johnson is seen wearing in earlier videos released
by the kidnappers.
"To the Americans and whoever is their ally in the infidel and
criminal world and their allies in the war against Islam, this
action is punishment to them and a lesson for them to know that
whoever steps foot in our country, this decisive action will be his
fate," the al-Qaida statement said.
Soon after the statement appeared, the Web site was
inaccessible, with a message saying it was closed for maintenance.
Johnson is the second American to be kidnapped and beheaded in
the Middle East in just over a month.
American businessman, Nicholas Berg, was beheaded by his captors
in Iraq, and his last moments later appeared on a videotape posted
on an al-Qaida-linked Web site. His body was found on May 12. U.S.
officials say al-Qaida-linked Muslim militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
may have been Berg's killer.
Johnson was seized on June 12, the same day that Islamic
militants shot and killed Kenneth Scroggs of Laconia, N.H., in his
garage in Riyadh.
Scroggs worked for Advanced Electronics Co., a Saudi firm whose
Web site lists Lockheed Martin among its customers. The office
number on Johnson's business card was for Advanced Electronics.
The same week as Scroggs' death, militants shot and killed
another American, Robert Jacobs, and an Irish citizen in Riyadh.
It appears that Jacobs was also decapitated after being shot to
death. Video shows his attackers bent over his body, making a
sawing motion near the head, though there was no confirmation.
A spokesman for Lockheed Martin Corp. said the company had "no
official notification on the status of Paul Johnson."
"But obviously we hope that the media reports people are seeing
are not true," spokesman Jeff Adams said from the Bethesda, Md.
headquarters.
A message posted on the defense contractor's Web site reads
"Our thoughts and prayers are with Paul M. Johnson Jr. and his
family," but a notation on the message refers to it as "Employee
Kidnapped."
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