https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/2021/05/conned-khan-raymond-ibrahim/
The degree to which Muslim terrorists can feign remorse for their crimes and convincingly pretend to have reformed—while secretly despising and plotting to murder non-Muslims—was on recent display.
After his prison evaluators had determined that Usman Khan, who was serving time for terrorist-related activities, had reformed and repented of his ways, they freed him early, in December 2018. Less than a year later, however, he murdered two people, a man and woman, and injured three others at Fishmongers Hall near London Bridge.
During a recent inquest, the Rev Paul Foster, a prison chaplain, admitted that he was one of those to have been “conned” by the falsely “remorseful” Khan.
Foster said that “Khan had engaged positively with programmes looking at his offending and the impact of his crimes.” Khan, moreover, “had conversations with me about wanting to change and make a fresh start—to pay more attention to the ripple effect of his actions.”
The April 24, 2021 report continues:
Mr Foster also said Khan had spoken “openly and emotionally” during a discussion session with a victim of crime.
He added: “We were being presented with a lot of positive things about his behavior—even some of the prisoners were telling me… in one instance a chap lost his son to a murder and Usman was the person at his door offering his condolences and asking if he could help.”
The chaplain described one session with Khan in which he professed “some shame” about the impact his crime had on the Muslim community.
“He appeared to show remorse for what he had done,” Mr Foster said.
In the end, it was all a charade. During the inquest, Foster expressed shock on learning that, during the same time period that Khan was feigning repentance, so too was he the “main inmate for radicalising others and had been involved in ‘forced conversations.’”