| Published: | Jun 16, 2010 1:00 PM EDT |
| Updated: | Jun 16, 2010 10:01 AM EDT |
ISLAMABAD (AP) - An American construction worker detained in
Pakistan on what authorities said was an armed solo mission to kill
Osama bin Laden has been examined by a doctor, Pakistani officials
said Wednesday, after his relatives warned he had kidney problems
and needed dialysis.
Gary Brooks Faulkner was also being questioned by a team of
Pakistani investigators, two security officials said on condition
of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to media.
They did not give additional details, including what the doctor had
determined about the man's condition.
Catching the al-Qaida chief was 50-year-old Faulkner's passion,
his brother Scott Faulkner said Tuesday. A devout Christian with a
prison record, Faulkner has been to Pakistan at least six times,
learned some of the local language, and even grew a long beard to
blend in, relatives and acquaintances said.
"Our military has not been able to track Osama down yet. It's
been 10 years," Scott Faulkner told reporters in Denver. "It's
easier as a civilian, dressed in the local dress, to infiltrate the
inside, the local people, gain their confidence and get information
and intel that you couldn't get as an American soldier, Navy SEAL,
whoever you might be."
Gary Faulkner, of Greeley, Colorado, arrived June 3 in the town
of Bumburate. He was assigned a police guard, as is common for
foreigners visiting remote parts of Pakistan. When he checked out
of a hotel without informing the guard, officers began looking for
him, senior police official Mumtaz Ahmad Khan said.
Faulkner was found late Sunday in a forest.
"We initially laughed when he told us that he wanted to kill
Osama bin Laden," Khan said. But when officers found weapons,
including a 40-inch sword and a pistol as well as night-vision
equipment, "our suspicion grew."
He said Faulkner was trying to cross into the nearby Afghan
region of Nuristan, one of several rumored hiding places for bin
Laden along the rugged Afghan-Pakistan border.
Faulkner's sister, Deanna M. Faulkner of Grand Junction,
Colorado, said her brother suffers from kidney disease that has
left him with only 9 percent kidney function. "I'm worried about
him. I'm worried that in Pakistan they won't give him his dialysis
and if he doesn't get it, he's in serious trouble," she said.
U.S. Embassy spokesman Rick Snelsire said American officials
were seeking consular access to a U.S. citizen in Pakistani custody
and that once given, they could help arrange for medical care.
Gary Faulkner retained vivid memories of the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks and was serious but rational about his search,
his brother Scott said. When Scott Faulkner dropped his brother off
at Denver's airport May 30, the two discussed the possibility
Faulkner would not return alive.
"He's as normal as you and I," Scott Faulkner said. "He's
just very passionate."
Scott Faulkner said his brother sold all his tools to finance
his trip and was prepared to die in Pakistan. He said Faulkner had
a travel visa, obtained his weapons inside Pakistan and only took
with him a Bible and plastic handcuffs.
Gary Faulkner, who was being questioned in the main northwest
city of Peshawar, has not yet been charged with any crime in
Pakistan. Khan noted police confiscated a small amount of hashish,
enough for a single joint, from Faulkner.
The American was in and out of Colorado state prisons between
1981 and 1993, serving a total of about seven years in five
separate stints for burglary, larceny and parole violations, state
officials said.
Bin Laden, who is also reported to have kidney problems, has
evaded a massive manhunt since Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the
United States, which he is accused of masterminding along with
other attacks. The federal government has offered a bounty of $25
million for information leading to his capture.
Khan said when Faulkner was asked why he thought he could trace
bin Laden, he replied, "God is with me, and I am confident I will
be successful in killing him."
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