Colorado-Imprisoned 'Shoe-Bomber' Trusts God Will Set Him Free
Richard Reid Held At SuperMax In Florence
POSTED: 8:09 am MDT July 31, 2007
LONDON -- The man imprisoned in Colorado for trying to blow up an American passenger jet with explosives hidden in his shoes says he has no regrets and trusts that God will set him free, according to a British newspaper. "I had a couple of good dreams about my situation changing for the better ..." Richard Reid reportedly wrote from prison, the Daily Mirror said Monday. Reid is serving a life sentence at the SuperMax federal prison in Florence, Colo. after a 2001 attempt to blow up a Paris-Miami flight. He was subdued by passengers and crew as he attempted to ignite the explosive in his sneakers.
The Mirror did not say when the letters were written or to whom they were sent, although Reid addresses his father, Robin, in some passages. He asks his father whether he has been praying five times a day, and says his aunt could not have reached heaven if she died while believing in Christianity. "What you wrote about Aunt Lynn being in a better place, you should know that while Allah is merciful and forgiving, this applies only to those who upheld His rights, at least at a basic level," the newspaper quotes him as writing. The Mirror did not disclose how it obtained the letters, which came with an undated photograph of Reid sitting on a cot in a white prison uniform.After Reid's arrest, Homeland Security officials in the U.S. required all passengers to have their shoes checked for explosives.
Copyright 2007 by TheDenverChannel.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.





