October-November 1999: Muslim convert James Ujaama of Seattle travels to a Bly, Ore., ranch to establish a jihad training camp. In a fax to radical London cleric Abu Hamza, now facing U.S. terrorism charges, Ujaama touts the site as a training camp and a place to hide people and weapons.
November 1999: Haroon Aswat, described in news reports as a suspect in the recent London bombings, travels from London to check out the proposed camp in Bly. He is accompanied by a Swedish man, Oussama Kassir, who allegedly described himself as a "hit man for Osama bin Laden." In Oregon, Aswat and Kassir meet potential candidates to join in jihad, shoot guns, establish security routines and watch a video on "improvised poisons," according to government documents.
December 2000: Aswat lives at the Dar-us-Salaam mosque in Seattle's Central District.
November 2002: Videos from Abu Hamza's north London mosque come to light. They show Ujaama with Abu Hamza urging followers to go to Afghanistan and attend jihad training camps.
April 14, 2003: Ujaama pleads guilty to one count of conspiring to provide cash, computers and fighters to the Taliban. Other charges are dropped, including one of plotting to set up the Bly camp. He is sentenced to two years in prison and agrees to testify for the government.
April 19, 2004: Ujaama is released with credit for good behavior and for time served before his conviction.
July 7, 2005: Four suicide bombers in London kill 56 and wound hundreds more.
Mid-July: British authorities search for Aswat after he reportedly is linked to numerous cellphone calls to the four suicide bombers.
Yesterday: Times of London reports that authorities in Pakistan have arrested Aswat, who was carrying guns, thousands in cash and a false ID.