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From SMH http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/lodhi-guilty-of-terror-plot/2006/06/19/1150569264287.html#Lodhi guilty of terror plot
Natasha Wallace
June 19, 2006 - 2:12PM
A man accused of planning to blow up the national electricity grid or a Sydney defence site has been found guilty of serious terror offences.
Faheem Khalid Lodhi, 36, is the first person in the country to be convicted of planning a terrorist act and faces a maximum penalty of life in jail.
Before he was arrested, Lodhi had gathered maps, chemicals and recipes for poisons and homemade bombs to carry out his plan.
Before delivering its verdict just after 2pm today, the NSW Supreme Court jury of six men and six women had deliberated for five days.
The jury had previously indicated it could not reach a verdict after the seven-week trial, but was ordered to push on.
As evidence Lodhi was planning the attack, the prosecution relied on several documents seized during ASIO raids in October, 2003, at the Lakemba home where Lodhi lived with his wife, Aysha Hamedd, and from his desk at his workplace in the city.
They included a so-called "terror manual", a 15-page, handwritten document in Lodhi's native Urdu language with numerous recipes for explosives and poisons that he had obtained from the internet. Lodhi said he was just curious and had paid little attention to it.
The prosecution also produced a list of chemical prices Lodhi had sought, maps of the national electricity grid he had bought and aerial photographs he downloaded from the internet of three Sydney defence sites, Holsworthy Army Base, Victoria Barracks and HMAS Penguin at Mosman.
Police also seized DVDs and CDs of jihadist doctrine and terror training.
The prosecution also alleged that Lodhi was in close contact with French terror suspect Willy Brigitte while the latter was in Sydney and had used a false name to open a mobile phone account to call Brigitte.
Lodhi had offered various explanations for the documents - the chemical list was for an export company he was planning, the maps a marketing tool for another planned venture to send generators to Pakistan and the aerial photographs were for his resume as he had worked on each of the defence sites in the past.
He also gave false personal details for the chemical and map inquiries but said it was a mistake.
Lodhi was found guilty of three terror-related charges, one of which carries life and two a maximum of 15 years' jail.
These charges were that he collected maps of the Australian electricity supply system in preparation of a terrorist act (15 years), that he sought information on chemical prices for the use of explosives for a terrorist act (life), and that he possessed a document with information on the manufacture of poisons and bombs in preparation for a terrorist act (15 years).
He was found not guilty of one charge of downloading aerial photographs of Sydney defence sites in preparation of a terror act (15 years).
He still faces five charges of making a false or misleading statement to ASIO.
The devout Sunni Muslim, who emigrated from Pakistan in 1998 for a better life, repeatedly denied being a terrorist, saying that killing innocent people was not part of Islam.
"This country is my country. These people are my people," he told the court.
Justice Anthony Whealy remanded Lodhi in custody to face sentencing submissions on June 29
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