San Bernardino: Jewish Victim Threatened Day Before Terrorist Attack

One of the victims of the San Bernardino, California terrorist attack had received a threatening message the day before the December 2, 2015 attack.  The day before the terrorist attack, according to a report by the Philadelphia Inquirer, victim Nicholas Thalasinos reportedly “had posted about a threat he had received that included the words ‘you will die and never see Israel.’ ” Nicholas Thalasinos was a Messianic Jew.

Nicholas Thalasinos, Messianic Jew, was killed in San Bernardino terrorist attack - he received a threat the day before "you will die and never see Israel" - he objected to ISIS extremist views (Source: Facebook)
Nicholas Thalasinos, Messianic Jew, was killed in San Bernardino terrorist attack – he received a threat the day before “you will die and never see Israel” – he objected to ISIS extremist views (Source: Facebook)

In addition, TIME Magazine reports that Kuuleme Stephens said “he happened to call 52-year-old Nicholas Thalasinos while he was at work and having a discussion with Syed Farook.” TIME Magazine reports that “they had a heated conversation about Islam two weeks before the attack.”  TIME Magazine’s interview also added comments from Kuuleme Stephens that “[s]he added that Farook said Americans don’t understand Islam.”

Nicholas Thalasinos’ wife, Jennifer Thalasinos, lives in another part of the country and was contacted by the New York Times. According to the New York Times, “[i]n a phone interview, Jennifer Thalasinos said that her husband of nine years had been friendly with Mr. Farook, and that they were part of the same ‘little group’ of employees. ‘He had worked with him,’ Ms. Thalasinos said of her husband. ‘He had talked about him. Nothing negative.'” The New York Times added “‘My husband was very outspoken about ISIS and all of these radicalized Muslims,’ she said, adding, ‘If he would’ve thought that somebody in his office was like that, he would’ve said something.'”

Los Angeles News KTLA Channel 5 reported that Syed Farook “apparently was radicalized and in touch with people being investigated by the FBI for international terrorism, law enforcement officials said Thursday.”  CNN reported that “Farook himself had talked by phone and on social media with more than one person being investigated for terrorism, law enforcement officials said. The communications were ‘soft connections’ in that they weren’t frequent, one law enforcement official said. It had been a few months since Farook’s last back-and-forth with these people, who officials said were not considered high priority.”

Los Angeles CBS reported that Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik were reportedly viewing ISIS propaganda, stating that “[a] source also told CBS News that the pair were looking at ISIS propaganda online.”
CNN reported that the San Bernarino police chief addressed “the discovery of hundreds of rounds of ammunition in their rented black SUV as well as in their apartment. Authorities also found 12 pipe bombs there, as well as hundreds of tools that could be used to construct IEDs or pipe bombs,’ the chief said.”

Per the Clarion-Ledger, the San Bernardino police chief reported that “a search of the couple’s home turned up 2,000 9mm rounds, more than 2500 .223-caliber rounds and “several hundred” 22 long rifle ​rounds, as well as 12 pipe bombs and tools for making more explosive devices. He said the pair had rented their black SUV getaway car several days earlier and were supposed to return it on the day of the assault.”

The New York Times reports that “[i]nside the the small townhouse where the couple returned after the shooting, investigators found what they termed a fairly large “dedicated work space” and several tools that appeared to have been used to create pipe bombs, according to law enforcement officials. Along with the dozen devices that were in the home, the authorities found smokeless powder, the officials said. That substance is most often found in bullets but can also be used to set off pipe bombs. The Boston Marathon bombers used that type of substance to ignite their devices.”

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) stands in unified support for the Universal Human Rights of all of our fellow human beings of every identity group, with respect for their human rights, dignity, and security.  We will also defy those extremists ideologies that seek the destruction of such rights, dignity, and security, especially those who use cold-blooded tactics of murder and mayhem to enforce their political will.  We will always recognize such acts of violence as nothing other than Terrorism.

Minnesota Men Arrested in Link with Minneapolis Terrorist Attack

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune reports that police identified individuals arrested in connection with the terrorist attack on the Minneapolis protesters as:

• Nathan Gustavsson, 21, from Hermantown, MN (aka “ArcticFox”)
• Allen Lawrence “Lance” Scarsella, 23, from Lakeville, MN, lives in St. Paul, MN (aka “Black Powder Ranger”)
• Daniel Thomas Macey, 26, from Pine City, MN
• Joseph Martin Backman, 27, of Minneapolis

The announcement of the fourth arrest of Joseph Martin Backman came on Wednesday afternoon.  He has also been charged with assault.  FOX 9 news reports that “Police are working in conjunction with the FBI and are not seeking any more suspects.”

Allen Lawrence "Lance" Scarsella (LEFT) and Nathan Gustavsson (RIGHT) arrested in connection with Minneapolis Terrorist Attack (Source: Raw Story, Facebook)
Allen Lawrence “Lance” Scarsella (LEFT) and Nathan Gustavsson (RIGHT) arrested in connection with Minneapolis Terrorist Attack (Source: Raw Story, Facebook)

They remain jailed on probable cause for assault.  The current schedule for filing charges against them is on Monday, November 30 at 12 noon.

Raw Story reports that “[a]uthorities arrested 23-year-old Allen ‘Lance’ Scarsella following a brief SWAT standoff Tuesday afternoon in Bloomington (as shown in this video), and two other suspects, 21-year-old Nathan Gustavsson and 26-year-old Daniel Macey, later turned themselves in.”  Raw Story also provides the initial distribution of the photographs of Allen Lawrence “Lance” Scarsella and Nathan Gustavsson.

FOX 9 News also reports that “[w]hen raiding Scarsella’s residence, investigators looked for photos, phones, recording devices, weapons as well as “evidence of hate crimes or white supremacy paraphernalia.”  Allen Lawrence “Lance” Scarsella was also apparently a classmate with a Mankato police officer, Officer Levin, who Scarsella confessed his involvement in the terrorist attack.

SWAT Team Arrest of Lance Scarsella (Source: YouTube)
SWAT Team Arrest of Lance Scarsella (Source: YouTube)

Raw Story reports Nathan”Gustavsson’s Facebook profile picture shows him wearing a Belgian army jacket and holding a rifle, and Macey’s Facebook page has not been verified.  The Duluth News Tribune reports that Gustavsson has a criminal record.

But Allen ‘Lance’ Scarsella’s Facebook photo shows a mole above his eyebrow that suggests he is the passenger who calls himself Black Powder Ranger in the video.  Scarella’s cover photo shows ‘Bonnie Blue’ Confederate flag, captioned, ‘This isn’t the somalian flag, (by the way).’  He lists among his ‘like’ several gun shops and pro-gun groups associated with the III Percent militia movement, as well as the OAF Nation military veterans militia group.”

Based on our research, it appears that Daniel Macey, of Pine City, MN, attends Pine Technical and Community College. If we confirm this, we have additional information.

A number of the members appeared to have met on the 4chan board on the /k/ board, which is the “weapons” discussion group.

Hennepin County records show that Allen ‘Lance’ Scarsella (Booking Number 2015030565)  is currently being held without bail at Hennepin County jail on an assault charge.

Hennepin County records show that  Nathan Wayne Gustavsson (Booking Number 2015030563) is currently being held without bail at Hennepin County jail on an assault charge.

Hennepin County records show that Daniel Thomas Macey (Booking Number 2015030564) is currently being held without bail at Hennepin County jail on an assault charge.

Hennepin County records show that Joseph Martin Backman (Booking Number 2015030569) is currently being held without bail at Hennepin County jail on an assault charge.

Lance Scarsella and Bonny-Blue Confederate Flag (Source: Facebook)
Lance Scarsella and Bonny-Blue Confederate Flag (Source: Facebook)

As has been posted in a Twitter video, Nathan Gustavsson is seen shooting an automatic weapon in a video.

Nathan Gustavsson-Shooting an Automatic Weapon (Source: Twitter Video Screenshot)
Nathan Gustavsson-Shooting an Automatic Weapon (Source: Twitter Video Screenshot)

It appears a fourth man, also in the earlier videos reported, was released because of an alibi for his whereabouts at the time of the November 23, 2015 shooting.

In addition to the apparent support by arrested Allen Lawrence “Lance” Scarsella for racist Confederate symbols, the men have a strong association with U.S. military individuals, including individuals in the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, as well as officers in the U.S. Army and in the U.S. Marine Corps.  After his arrest, Mr. Scarsella’s U.S. military friends have not “unfriended” him on Facebook.

Nathan Gustavsson’s friends and associates also have a heavy involvement in the U.S. Military, gun enthusiasts posing for photographs with their guns, gun shops, as well as supporters of the Tea Party Patriots group.

It should be DEEPLY TROUBLING to Americans to see individuals associated with the military (see also the Star-Tribune report on released individual bearing similarity to “SaigaMarine” terror suspect) with GUNS to terrorize African-Americans.

R.E.A.L. passionately urges all those in the U.S. Military with connections to the men arrested for shooting African-Americans during their legal protest for public rights, to renounce such “friendships” as being unworthy of those who swore to defend the Constitution of the United States of America — as we have seen consistently from our U.S. Military.

Our Men and Women Who Fight for Freedom Stand For Freedom of Speech - August 14 (Source: Loaves of Bread)
Our Men and Women Who Fight for Freedom Stand For Freedom of Speech – August 14 (Source: Loaves of Bread)

=======================

As always, any individuals not convicted, but charged with crimes are always to be considered innocent until proven guilty.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) stands in support of our universal human rights for all, and we stand in defiance against those, including terrorist and hate groups, which seek to attack such universal human rights, dignity, and security for all.

Illinois – American ISIS American Recruits – Edmonds Cousins

On Wednesday, March 25, 2015, the FBI arrested two men involved as American recruits of the ISIS terrorist organization, from Aurora, Illinois.  The two ISIS American recruits arrested by the FBI were: Army  National Guard Specialist Hasan Edmonds, 22, a U.S. citizen, and his cousin Jonas Edmonds, 29, a U.S. citizen.   They were “arrested without incident at Chicago Midway International Airport by members of the Chicago FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) while attempting to fly to Cairo, Egypt.”  “Both defendants were charged in a criminal complaint filed yesterday in U.S. District Court of the Northern District of Illinois with one count of conspiring to provide material support and resources to a foreign terrorist organization.”

Army National Guard Specialist Hasan Edmonds also wrote about his desire to conduct a terrorist attack on the United States of America, similar to the attacks on Paris.

In the arrest complaint, Army  National Guard Specialist Hasan Edmonds planned to use his military training to use to fight on behalf of ISIS terrorist organization, and planned to travel “from Chicago and arrive in Cairo, Egypt, with layovers in Detroit and Amsterdam.”

In addition, they plotted a terrorist against the United States of America.  The FBI reports: “As alleged in the complaint, both defendants also planned for Jonas Edmonds to carry out an act of terrorism in the United States after Hasan Edmonds departed. In particular, both defendants met with an FBI undercover employee and presented a plan to carry out an armed attack against a U.S. military facility in northern Illinois, an installation where Hasan Edmonds had been training. Jonas Edmonds asked the FBI undercover employee to assist in the attack and explained that they would use Hasan Edmonds’ uniforms and the information he supplied about how to access the installation and target officers for attack.”

As the New Yorker also reported on their case, Jonas Edmonds wrote “about ‘bring[ing] the pain to them here,’ maximizing ‘damage and mayhem,’ and ‘something like the brother in Paris did.’ ”

The FBI reports that the two men were indicted on April 3, 2015: “Conspiring to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.”

On November 19, 2015, the Chicago Tribune reported that both men pled guilty. The Chicago Tribune reports: “Two Aurora cousins who had allegedly aligned themselves with the Islamic State terror organization intend to plead guilty next month to charges alleging they plotted to carry out an attack earlier this year on the Joliet Armory. In a brief court hearing Thursday, a lawyer for Jonas and Hasan Edmonds said both are finalizing written plea agreements with prosecutors. U.S. District Judge John Lee set separate hearings next month for the two to plead guilty. The indictment charges both with conspiring to provide material support and resources to Islamic State.”  “Federal agents had been tracking them since late last year when Hasan Edmonds exchanged Facebook messages about his desire to join Islamic State with an agent posing as a militant, according to the complaint.”

Hasan Edmonds (left), an Army National Guard specialist, and his cousin ,Jonas Edmonds (right), are charged with a conspiracy in which Hasan would travel overseas to join the ISIS terrorist group, while Jonas would coordinate an attack on the National Guard facility where Hasan had trained. (Source: CBS)
Hasan Edmonds (left), an Army National Guard specialist, and his cousin ,Jonas Edmonds (right), are charged with a conspiracy in which Hasan would travel overseas to join the ISIS terrorist group, while Jonas would coordinate an attack on the National Guard facility where Hasan had trained. (Source: CBS)

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) stands in support of our universal human rights for all, and we stand in defiance against those, including terrorist and hate groups, which seek to attack such universal human rights, dignity, and security for all.

ISIS – American Recruit Mohammed Hamzah Khan Guilty

On October 4, 2014, the FBI arrested American ISIS recruit Mohammed Hamzah Khan, a 19 year old man, in the Chicago, IL suburb of Bolingbrook, for allegedly attempting to travel overseas to join a foreign terrorist organization operating inside Iraq and Syria.

On January 8, 2015, a federal grand jury indicted  Mohammed Hamzah Khan, who was charged with attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in a single-count indictment.  The FBI reports: “According to the complaint affidavit, a roundtrip ticket was purchased for Khan on Sept. 26 to travel from Chicago to Istanbul, departing on Saturday, and returning later this week. Law enforcement agents observed Khan passing through the security screening checkpoint Saturday afternoon at O’Hare’s international terminal. Federal agents then executed a search warrant at Khan’s residence and recovered multiple handwritten documents that appeared to be drafted by Khan and/or others, which expressed support for ISIL, the affidavit alleges. Some of those documents, including travel plans and materials referencing ISIL and jihad, are described in the complaint affidavit. Khan was initially approached by U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers and was later interviewed later by FBI agents at the airport.”

On October 29, 2015 ,American ISIS recruit Mohammed Hamzah Khan pleaded guilty to one count of attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization.  The U.S. Department of Justice reported: “Beginning no later than approximately February 2014, Khan used the Internet to obtain introductions to ISIL members in Syria and to assist him with traveling there to join the terrorist group, according to the plea agreement. Khan spoke with ISIL members to coordinate the logistics of his admission into ISIL-controlled territory, the plea agreement states.  Khan admitted in the plea agreement that he knew ISIL had been designated by the United States as a foreign terrorist organization. Upon arriving in Syria, according to the plea agreement, Khan intended to work under the direction and control of ISIL, and be required to take any assignment ISIL gave him.”

The UK Guardian reports that: “His 17-year-old sister and 16-year-old brother were also arrested at O’Hare international airport as he tried to board a plane to Vienna en route to Istanbul, but were not charged.  Khan, who lived with his parents, was described by neighbors as a polite teenager. But he left a letter expressing disgust: ‘We are all witness that the western societies are getting more immoral day by day,’ he wrote. ‘I do not want my kids being exposed to filth like this.’ ”

A sentencing hearing has been scheduled for December 3, 2015.

American ISIS recruit Mohammed Hamzah Khan, Bolingbrook, IL (Source: Facebook)
American ISIS recruit Mohammed Hamzah Khan, Bolingbrook, IL (Source: Facebook)

 

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) stands in support of our universal human rights for all, and we stand in defiance against those, including terrorist and hate groups, which seek to attack such universal human rights, dignity, and security for all

Open Letter Calling for Fairfax Police Union to Respect Human Rights

The following is Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)’s letter to the Fairfax Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) Lodge 77’s president, Officer Bradley Carruthers, asking for him to apologize for his comments attacking Cox Farms, for its support that “Black Lives Matter.”

Jeffrey Imm, Founder, R.E.A.L.

IMG_7105-1024x764
R.E.A.L.’s Jeffrey Imm – Black Lives Matter

===================

October 15, 2015

Fairfax Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 77
10513 Judicial Drive, Suite 102
Fairfax, VA 22030
Officer Bradley Carruthers
president@fairfaxlodge77.org
571-259-4219

Subject: Open Letter Calling for Fairfax Police Union to Respect Human Rights

Mr. Carruthers –
My name is Jeffrey Imm, with the volunteer human rights organization, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.).

Jeffrey Imm, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
Jeffrey Imm, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)

I also have my own background working in law enforcement, and was a proud member of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), when I was younger. I have great respect for law enforcement and the Constitution of the United States of America, which is the basis for all of our American law, as well as our universal human rights which are the fundamental building blocks for all law in America and around the world.

Those who respect the law should inherently respect the human rights that are the basis for such law – including respect for the lives of people of all genders, nationalities, religions, identity groups, and of course, all races. Especially in the United States of America, and certainly in former slave states, such as Virginia, this would certainly demand that anyone credible in the justice community would have a special respect for the rights and lives of African-Americans as well, who have been specifically and historically wronged by this nation, and who patriots in America have sought to rectify those wrongs over the years.

I find it necessary to speak out to those who would abuse our law and the Constitution of the United States. I have seen too much of such abuse defended by misguided police union leaders, and unfortunately by too many members of the Fairfax, Virginia law enforcement community over the past several months. I am not going to write on the details of these unfortunate incidents, as they are publicly well documented, including the sad cases of John Geer, Natasha McKenna, and others who lost their lives at the hands of officers of the law in Fairfax County. It is disturbing, and I would hope that those who respect the law would share such concerns.

I have been in direct contact with the U.S. Department of Justice on their investigation of the death of Natasha McKenna, and I have been assured there will be a thorough investigation into her rights. I know there is an ongoing criminal investigation into the death of John Geer and FCPD Officer Adam Torres has been charged with second degree murder. However, it was just two months ago that Fairfax County Police Union leader of the Fairfax Coalition of Police, Local 5000, International Union of Police Associations’ President Sean Corcoran defended FCPD Officer Adam Torres, charged with murder of John Geer, and provided such a defense by saying to all of the FCPD that “we could all be Adam Torres.” Given that Mr. Torres was charged with murder, the American people certainly should hope not.

Especially in these times and under these circumstances, responsible members of the law enforcement community should know that now is the time for circumspect and measured public statements.

But Mr. Carruthers, instead of such circumspect and measured focus on important matters, it seems that you and too many other leaders of police unions would rather go out and try to pick a fight with the Washington DC metropolitan and the American people.

I don’t see the merit and value in this, especially in your own efforts this week, to use your authority and your position within law enforcement to target (of all things) a Northern Virginia pumpkin patch, because a private residence nearby has a sign reading “Black Lives Matter” in the window. I would think that you might have more important things to do than harass a pumpkin patch farm.

However, in the charged environment that our nation finds itself today, where in a dozen states we have seen law enforcement members being denied service or access even to restaurants, you have decided it should be the business of the Fairfax County police union to petition the public to boycott to Cox Farm pumpkin patch, because some people seek to respect the lives of historically persecuted racial minorities. You seem to think this position is beneficial to the public relationship with law enforcement in our communities.

I am writing to tell you that your position is misguided and counterproductive to law enforcement, its relationship with the public, and a consistent and productive stance on the law and our shared human rights. In our support for our shared universal human rights and respect for the law, we offer an outstretched hand to all, including those with whom we disagree, to promote and defend these rights and responsibilities.

But such responsibilities also include the obligation to challenge words and actions, which we believe will have the result in undermining and denying such freedom. We have read your response, as well as the comments by Cox Farms. What R.E.A.L. truly finds “disturbing and disappointing” is the ongoing abuse of authority, and the politicization of our law enforcement.

Our law enforcement is better than this, and our law enforcement is more important than this. The idea that you believe a police authority can and should be seeking to lead a boycott of a pumpkin farm, because there is a sign which recognizes that “Black Lives Matter,” is deeply offensive to our American values of justice and freedom. It is something that the American people should not expect to see from the law enforcement whose judgment they MUST TRUST.

We don’t give the law enforcement authority to the brave men and women in our justice system to represent OUR SHARED LAW because we are weak, because we are cowards, or because we don’t care about justice. In fact, it is completely the opposite. It is because we care so passionately about all of these that we have sought to have mature, sober, responsible, and professional individuals in our justice system, who we give badges and authority to represent the American people to responsibly enforce our shared law and protect our shared rights.

Furthermore, in the Washington DC metropolitan area, we have one of the most unique bodies of constituents in America, with likely the single largest concentration of those who have sworn to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States of America from all enemies foreign and domestic. Those who have sworn such a sacred oath are a very large portion of the constituency that the FCPD represents in Fairfax County in terms of law enforcement. Speaking as one who swore this oath myself, while employed with the F.B.I., I can tell you there are no caveats to this oath, and we don’t seek to defend the Constitution just for people of some races, some identity groups, and only in some circumstance. That is NOT what we swore to, Mr. Carruthers, and I urge you, the Fairfax County FOP, and the FCPD and law enforcement community to recognize exactly who you are dealing with here.

Let me perfectly clear and candid, sir. The people in Fairfax County and the Washington D.C. metropolitan area who swore to defend the Constitution of the United States of America have absolutely no intention of surrendering on that solemn vow to those who believe they can misuse their authority to bully and harass people in our community on issues of our shared rights and freedoms.

Of all the places in this great nation, the one place you don’t want to pick a fight against the rights and freedoms of the people is in the metropolitan area of our Nation’s Capital.

Our law and our Constitution are shared with the people in Fairfax County and the American people. It does not belong to simply one or two of us, and it certainly is not owned by the Fairfax County Police or their police union. If you want to pick a fight with Cox Farms’ pumpkin patch over the rights of African-Americans lives to have an equal measure with all other Americans, believe me, your fight is not with Cox Farms, your fight is not with African-Americans, and your fight is not with people in Fairfax County. If you want to fight with people on this issue, you need to understand you are picking a fight not just with them, but with the AMERICAN PEOPLE, including all of us who swore that OATH to defend the Constitution.

Those who want to attack those who seek equal justice and respect for the lives of African-Americans are not simply seeking a quarrel with certain groups, but are actually seeking to challenge all those who are RESPONSIBLE for equality and liberty.

Including me.

I don’t know what country you think you live in, Mr. Carruthers. But in case you have forgotten, let me remind you. This is not some totalitarian or fascist police state, where those in “authority” can use power like a whip to force their views on others and deny their fellow citizens’ fundamental freedoms.

You are in the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, sir. In this great nation, when someone seeks to bully and attack the rights of equality for some, they attack the rights of equality for all. Because in this great nation, we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men and women are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

That, Mr. Carruthers, is why Black Lives Matter.

If you don’t understand those truths that we hold self-evident, sir, then you don’t understand the basis for this great nation, and I am sorry, you don’t understand the basis for OUR LAW. If you cannot understand our law, then sir, I am sorry, but you really do not belong in a position in LAW ENFORCEMENT.

I would urge you to reconsider your position on attacking Cox Farms, not simply to delete your inflammatory Twitter message seeking to abuse and politicize your authority within law enforcement to attack their business because someone there has the conscience of the truths we hold self-evident as a nation.

I am asking you to publicly retract and apologize regarding your statement on Cox Farms, and I am asking you to make peace with the community on this issue. We don’t want a fight with leaders in our law enforcement community. Trust me, sir, the leaders in our local law enforcement community don’t want a fight with those who have sworn an oath to defend the freedoms and laws of the United States of America.

Especially in the Washington DC metropolitan area, where so many have committed their lives to the freedoms our nation is based on, we take our vows to defend those freedoms and the LAW on which it is based very seriously and very personally. It is not simply some political idea or theory to many of us here; it is a fundamental definition as to who we are. The millions here who this is a core part of our identity are as unyielding on this, as the marble towers of the Lincoln Memorial overlooking the great statue of the defender of our Union, President Abraham Lincoln, and the marble statue of the defender of nation’s Conscience, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

We are a solid ROCK on this issue, and we will not be moved.

Under the circumstances, Mr. Carruthers, it would be in the best interests of the FCPD and your union to clarify your position on this matter expeditiously.

Now would be a good time. It is always a good day to be responsible for equality and liberty.

Sincerely, with Fidelity – Bravery – Integrity
to our Nation, Law, and Shared Human Rights,

 

Jeffrey Imm
Founder, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
usa@realcourage.org
301-613-8789

=============================

Fairfax Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 77
Officer Bradley Carruthers, President
Comments Regarding “Black Lives Matter” Sign Near Cox Farms

 

Fairfax FOP Lodge 77 Twitter Message Attacking Cox Farms for "Black Lives Matters" (Source: Twitter)
Fairfax FOP Lodge 77 Twitter Message Attacking Cox Farms for “Black Lives Matters” (Source: Twitter)

ISIS American Recruits and Foreign Fighters – in Numerous States

On September 29, 2015, the U.S. House of Representatives Homeland Security Committee released a bi-partisan “Final Report of the Task Force on Combating Terrorist and Foreign Fighter Travel.”  This report includes a list of American “foreign fighter aspirants and recruits,” in Appendix II of the report, on pages 58-59.  Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) has excepted the original alphabetically sorted list from the original Adobe Acrobat PDF format file, into Microsoft Excel, and sorted the list of 58 names by state.

We have provided the results of these American recruits (in this report) and listed them by state.  We do not believe this is the entire listing of all ISIS recruits, but is a subset of ISIS American recruits whose cases are so well-publicized that the U.S. House of Representatives Homeland Security Committee felt it was appropriate to list their names in this public listing.  We are confident the actual listing is significantly larger and widespread than this listing.  However, in this list of 58 American foreign fighter recruits, which includes ISIS recruits as well as recruits to other organizations.

It does show that foreign fighter recruits in 19 states, ages from 15 to 44 years old, the majority male (49) but also including females (9), and the largest concentrations in California (6) and Minnesota (15).  States represented in this listing of American foreign fighter recruits include: Alabama (1), Arizona (1), California (6),  Colorado (4), Florida (1), Georgia (1), Illinois (3), Massachusetts (1), Michigan (1), Minnesota (15), Missouri (1), Mississippi (2), North Carolina (3), New Jersey (3), New York (4),  Ohio (2), Pennsylvania (2), Texas (4), Wisconsin (1).

From the individuals in this table, it shows 58 Americans, and of those 50 are ISIS-related, and the remaining eight are Al-Qaeda affiliates.  Of the 58, nine are women, and of those nine, eight are ISIS-related.  So the overwhelming majority are related to ISIS.  From the individuals listed in this table, it shows ISIS in Alabama, California,  Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, New Jersey, New York,  Pennsylvania, Texas, Wisconsin.

This short list is simply one of accused “foreign fighters,” but does not include many others.  For example, R.E.A.L. is well aware of other high-profile cases which inexplicably are not on this list (perhaps because they weren’t considered enough of a “foreign fighter), whose goal is primarily to conduct ISIS terrorist attacks WITHIN the United States, such as our report on Cincinnati, Ohio American ISIS terrorist Christopher Cornell, who plotted a mass murder attack on the U.S. Capitol and also confessed to a plot against the Israeli Embassy.

American-ISIS-Cornell-Not-on-List

The challenge remains that the American people need a CENTRAL REPOSITORY or report of the threat of ISIS terrorists to and from the U.S. homeland, which provides updates on the status of this struggle.  But this does not seem to be a political priority for too many in the U.S. Government.  The American people should expect more than individually hunting down random news reports to understand the status and progress of our national and homeland security, whether it is politically convenient for some leaders or not.  We urge responsible leaders to take this to heart.

Furthermore, the September 29, 2015 Homeland Security Committee indicates that the relatively few American ISIS that are arrested represent just a small fraction of American ISIS who successfully reach the Middle East for training and/or terrorist activity.  The report also states that “Intelligence officials estimate more than 250 Americans have tried or succeeded in getting to Syria and Iraq to fight with militant groups. This includes individuals who were stopped before traveling, who made it to the conflict zone and are still there, who were killed, and others who have come back. Some have been arrested on terror charges, though most have not. Americans are being recruited in growing numbers and continue to attempt to migrate to jihadist battlefields in Syria and beyond, posing a serious counterterrorism challenge for the United States.” (page 15).  The report also states “The majority of aspiring foreign fighters have managed to make it out of the United States without being stopped. Of the 250-plus Americans who have joined or tried to join extremists in Syria and Iraq, we were able to identify only 28 cases in which U.S. authorities apprehended suspects before they departed for the Middle East.”‘

So when you look at the numbers, essentially, almost 90 percent of Americans are making it to the Middle East to join ISIS or other terrorist organizations.

Of the 58 representative recent “foreign fighters,” in the U.S. Congressional report, R.E.A.L. has taken this report and added additional information on Affiliation, Status, and Link (hyperlink for more information.)  This custom version of this report was generated by R.E.A.L. in Microsoft Excel, and is available for distribution in MS Excel format (email us at usa@realcourage.org).

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) provides more on ISIS recruits in America on our “American ISIS” series of reports.  (UPDATE Note: on December 1, 2015 – the George Washington University Program on Extremism issued a report “ISIS in America” which supports many of these points and provides other information.)

Name
Age
Gender
State
Affiliation
Status
Link
Hoda Muthana
20
F
AL
ISIS
20 yo Woman Went to Syria to Join ISIS Terror Group
http://bit.ly/fto-034
Eric Harroun
30
M
AZ
AQ
Died of Drug Overdose
http://bit.ly/fto-026
Adam Dandach
20
M
CA
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-010A
Douglas McArthur McCain
33
M
CA
ISIS
Reported Dead
http://bit.ly/fto-025
Mohamad Saeed Kodaimati
24
M
CA
ISIS
Pleaded Guilty to Terrorism
http://bit.ly/fto-039
Muhanad Badawi
24
M
CA
ISIS
In Custody Indicted for Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-045
Nader Elhuzayel
24
M
CA
ISIS
In Custody Indicted for Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-045
Nicholas Teausant
20
M
CA
ISIS
Pleaded Guilty to Terrorism
http://bit.ly/fto-047
Sinh Vinh Ngo Nguyen
24
M
CA
AQ
Sentenced to 13 Years Prison for Terrorist Crimes aka Hasan Abu Omar Ghannoum
http://bit.ly/fto-054
Colorado Teenager #1
15
F
CO
ISIS
Questioned and Released
http://bit.ly/fto-021
Colorado Teenager #2
15
F
CO
ISIS
Questioned and Released
http://bit.ly/fto-021
Colorado Teenager #3
17
F
CO
ISIS
Questioned and Released
http://bit.ly/fto-021
Shannon Maureen Conley
19
F
CO
ISIS
Sentenced to 4 Years Prison for Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-053
Moner Abu-Salha
22
M
FL
AQ-Al-Nusrah Front
Died in Suicide Bombing Terrorist Attack May 2014
http://bit.ly/fto-043
Leon Nathan Davis
37
M
GA
ISIS
Sentenced to 15 Years Prison for Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-037A
Abdella Ahmad Tounisi
21
M
IL
AQ – Jabhat al-Nusra
Pleaded Guilty to Terrorism
http://bit.ly/fto-001  
Hasan Edmonds
22
M
IL
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes – Plot Crimes Attack to Paris
http://bit.ly/fto-033
Mohammad Hamzah Khan
19
M
IL
ISIS
Pleaded Guilty to Terrorism
http://bit.ly/fto-041
Ahmad Abousamra
32
M
MA
ISIS
Reported Dead – Last Seen in Syria on FBI Most Wanted List
http://bit.ly/fto-012
Nicole Lynn Mansfield
33
F
MI
AQ
Reportedly died in fighting in Syria
http://bit.ly/fto-048
“H.M.”
M
MN
ISIS
At Large – Believed in Syria
http://bit.ly/fto-028
Abdi Nur
20
M
MN
ISIS
Reported Dead
http://bit.ly/fto-002
Abdirahmaan Muhumed
29
M
MN
ISIS
Reported Dead
http://bit.ly/fto-004
Abdirahman Yasin Daud
21
M
MN
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-005
Abdullahi Yusuf
18
M
MN
ISIS
In Custody Awaiting Sentence for Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-008
Adnan Abdihamid Farah
19
M
MN
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-011 
Guled Ali Omar
20
M
MN
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-027
Hamza Naj Ahmed
19
M
MN
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-029
Hanad Abdullahi Mohallim
18
M
MN
ISIS
Reported Dead
http://bit.ly/fto-030A
Hanad Mustafe Musse
19
M
MN
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-032
Mohamed Abdihamid Farah
21
M
MN
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-040
Mohamud Mohamed Mohamud
20
M
MN
ISIS
Reported Dead
http://bit.ly/fto-042
Yusra Ismail
20
F
MN
ISIS
At Large – Believed in Syria
http://bit.ly/fto-056
Yusuf Jama
21
M
MN
ISIS
Reported Dead
http://bit.ly/fto-057
Zacharia Yusuf Abdurahman
19
M
MN
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-058
Abdullah Ramo Pazara
M
MO
ISIS
Assumed Killed in Syria – Bosnian Native refugee to USA
http://bit.ly/fto-006
Jaelyn Delshaun Young
20
F
MS
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes – Plot to Join ISIS
http://bit.ly/fto-035
Muhammad Oda Dakhlalla
22
M
MS
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-044
Akba Jihad Jordan
22
M
NC
ISIS
Pleaded Guilty to Terrorism
http://bit.ly/fto-013
Avin Marsalis Brown
21
M
NC
ISIS
In Custody Indicted for Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-018
Basit Javed Sheikh
29
M
NC
AQ-Al-Nusrah Front
In Custody Indicted for Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-019
Donald Ray Morgan
44
M
NC
ISIS
Sentenced to 20 Years Prison for Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-024
Nader Saadeh
20
M
NJ
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-046
Samuel Rahamin Topaz
21
M
NJ
ISIS
Pleaded Guilty to Terrorism
http://bit.ly/fto-051
Tairod Nathan Webster Pugh
47
M
NJ
ISIS
In Custody Indicted for Terrorist Crimes – USAF Veteran
http://bit.ly/fto-055
Abdurasul Juraboev
23
M
NY
ISIS
In Custody – Pled Guilty to Terror Plot – Resident from Uzbekistan planned Coney Island Plot
http://bit.ly/fto-010 
Akhror Saidakhmetov
19
M
NY
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-014
Arafat Nagi
44
M
NY
ISIS
In Custody Indicted for Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-016
Nihad Rosic
26
M
NY
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes aka Yahya AbuAyesha Mudzahid
http://bit.ly/fto-049
Abdifatah Aden
M
OH
AQ-Al-Nusrah Front
Reported Dead
http://bit.ly/fto-003
Abdirahman Sheik Mohamud
23
M
OH
AQ-Al-Nusrah Front
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes – Plot Against US Base
http://bit.ly/fto-004A
Amir Farouk Ibrahim
32
M
PA
ISIS
Pittsburgh Man Reported Dead in Syria
http://bit.ly/fto-015
Keonna Thomas
30
F
PA
ISIS
In Custody Indicted for Terrorist Crimes – aka Fatayat Al Khilafah
http://bit.ly/fto-037
“S.R.G.”
M
TX
ISIS
Reportedly working with ISIS in Syria
http://bit.ly/fto-050
Asher Abid Khan
20
M
TX
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-017
Bilal Abood
37
M
TX
ISIS
Pleaded Guilty to Terrorism
http://bit.ly/fto-020
Michael Wolfe
23
M
TX
ISIS
Sentenced to 7 Years Prison for Terrorist Crimes
http://bit.ly/fto-038
Joshua Van Haften
34
M
WI
ISIS
In Custody Charged with Terrorist Crimes – Plot to Join ISIS
http://bit.ly/fto-036

As always, any individuals not convicted, but charged with crimes are always to be considered innocent until proven guilty.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) believes that our commitment for human rights must also include a commitment to the halt of anti-human rights terrorist organizations, with a goal to undermine human rights, spread hatred and intolerance, and to promote violence and death.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) stands in support of our universal human rights for all, and we stand in defiance against those, including terrorist and hate groups, which seek to attack such universal human rights, dignity, and security for all.

=================

List Alphabetically and in Image format

ISIS-USA-Foreign-Fighters-V2_Page_1

ISIS-USA-Foreign-Fighters-V2_Page_2

ISIS-USA-Foreign-Fighters-V2_Page_3

American ISIS – 15 of 58 American ISIS Recruits from Minnesota

Minnesota has been the source for 15 of the 58 American ISIS recruits, according to a report by the U.S. House Committee on Homeland Security, referenced by the news media.  In September 2015, the Committee released a bi-partisan “Final Report of the Task Force on Combating Terrorist and Foreign Fighter Travel,” which provided a list of ISIS American (and some other groups) “foreign fighter aspirants and recruits,” in Appendix II of the report, on pages 58-59. [See also Star-Tribune: “From the Heartland to Jihad”, and MPRNews: “Called to fight: Minnesota’s ISIS recruits” ]

In this listing, of those 58 “foreign fighter aspirants and recruits,” 15 are identified as Minnesotans: Abdi Nur, Abdirahmaan Muhumed, Abdirahman Yasin Daud, Abdullahi Yusuf, “H.M.”, Hanad Abdullahi Mohallim, Adnan Abdihamid Farah, Guled Ali Omar, Hamza Naj Ahmed, Hanad Mustafe Musse, Mohamed Abdihamid Farah, Mohamud Mohamed Mohamud, Yusra Ismail, Yusuf Jama, Zacharia Yusuf Abdurahman.

Abdi Nur

Abdi Nur
Abdi Nur

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. Abdi Nur, 20 — At Large Reported Dead
MPRNews Report
— “From Minneapolis to ISIS: An American’s Path to Jihad” – March 21, 2015 – New York Times
November 24, 2014 – FBI reports: “Assistant Attorney General for National Security John P. Carlin and United States Attorney for the District of Minnesota Andrew M. Luger today announced a criminal complaint charging Abdi Nur, 20 with conspiracy to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization, namely, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). Nur is additionally charged with providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization.” “According to the criminal complaint and documents filed in court, Abdi Nur departed from the Minneapolis/Saint Paul airport for Istanbul, Turkey on May 29, 2014. Prior to his departure, on April 24, 2014, Nur obtained an expedited U.S. passport. On May 24, 2014, Nur made an ATM deposit of $1,540 in cash to his checking account. On May 27, 2014, Nur purchased an airline ticket for $1,619.30, using a debit card associated with the same checking account. Like Yusuf, Nur was unemployed when he purchased his airline ticket. Nur successfully boarded a flight for Turkey on May 29, 2014. He was scheduled to return to the United States on June 16, 2014, but did not.  According to the criminal complaint and documents filed in court, Nur had become ‘much more religious,’ in the two months preceding his departure, including talking about how his family needed to pray more and wear more traditional clothing. Nur began to talk about jihad during this time period. According to the criminal complaint and documents filed in court, Nur has communicated via Facebook with an individual in the United States after his departure for Turkey. During those communications, Nur stated that he has gone ‘to the brothers,’ and that we ‘will see each other in the afterlife inshallah,’ and ‘im not coming back’ (sic). Nur has also communicated with a separately charged defendant, Mohamed Abdullahi Hassan, aka “Miski.’  According to the criminal complaint and documents filed in court, after asking Nur if he knew ‘Duale’ (a U.S. citizen known to have traveled to Syria), Miski advised Nur ‘…Being connected in Jihad make you stronger and you can all help each other by fulfilling theduties that Allah swt (sic) put over you…Like us in Somalia the brothers from mpls are well connected so try to do the same….It is something we have learned after six years in Jihad.'”

 

Abdirahmaan Muhumed

Abdirahmaan Muhumed
Abdirahmaan Muhumed

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. Abdirahmaan Muhumed, 29 — Believed Dead – aka Abdifatah Ahmed

MPRNews Report – also linked with Douglas McAuthur McCain – “Abdirahmaan Muhumed was one of the first Minneapolis men to enlist with ISIS. He was in his late 20s when he left toward the end of 2013.:

 

Abdirahman Yasin Daud

Abdirahman-Yasin-Daud

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3. Abdirahman Yasin Daud, 21 – In custody; charged with conspiracy and attempt to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization
MPRNews Report
— Scheduled for Trial in February 2016
October 2015 – charged with a new count of conspiracy to commit murder outside the United States
May 2015 – Seven Minnesota Men Indicted For Conspiracy To Provide Material Support To The Islamic State Of Iraq And The Levant:
Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), 1 count; Attempting to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, 1 count

 

Abdullahi Yusuf

 

Abdullahi Yusuf
Abdullahi Yusuf

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4. Abdullahi Yusuf, 18 — Terror Suspect Released To Halfway House Kept Box Cutter Under Bed
— Intercepted by federal agents at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport; in custody, cooperating with the government, and awaiting sentencing on a terror-conspiracy charge
November 2014 – FBI Report: “Two Minnesotans Charged with Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant “
MPRNews Report

 

 

“H.M.”

5. “H.M.” —  At Large in Syria

NBC: Prosecutors say Yusuf, a Somali American, obtained a passport and then bought a $1,417.05 airline ticket from Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport, intending to travel to Istanbul, Turkey, on May 28. He was arrested at the airport shortly before his flight.  Investigators say Yusuf is associated with another Minnesota man who’s now believed to be fighting in Syria. He is referred to in court documents only as “H.M.”

 

Hanad Abdullahi Mohallim

Hanad Abdullahi Mohallim

Hanad Abdullahi Mohallim

6. Hanad Abdullahi Mohallim, 18 –– “From MN suburbs, they set out to join ISIS” – Hanad Abdullahi Mohallim is believed to be dead ”
MPRNews report

 

Adnan Abdihamid Farah

This photo provided April 21, 2015 by the Sherburne County, Minnesota, Sheriff’s Office shows Adnan Abdihamid Farah, 19. Farah is among six Minnesota men of Somali descent that have been charged in a criminal complaint with traveling or attempting to travel to Syria to join the Islamic State group, which has carried out a host of attacks including beheading Americans. (Sherburne County Sheriff’s Office via AP)

Adnan Abdihamid Farah, (Sherburne County Sheriff’s Office )

7. Adnan Abdihamid Farah, 19 — In custody; charged with conspiring to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization
Minnesota mother shocked that 2 sons face terror charges
MPRNews Report
— Scheduled for Trial in February 2016
October 2015 – charged with a new count of conspiracy to commit murder outside the United States
May 2015 – Seven Minnesota Men Indicted For Conspiracy To Provide Material Support To The Islamic State Of Iraq And The Levant:
Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), 1 count

 

Guled Ali Omar

Guled Omar, (Sherburne County Sheriff’s Office )

Guled Omar, (Sherburne County Sheriff’s Office )

8. Guled Ali Omar, 20 – In custody; charged with conspiracy and attempt to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization
MPRNews Report
— Scheduled for Trial in February 2016
October 2015 – charged with a new count of conspiracy to commit murder outside the United States
May 2015 – Seven Minnesota Men Indicted For Conspiracy To Provide Material Support To The Islamic State Of Iraq And The Levant: Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), 1 count; Attempting to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, 1 count

 

Hamza Naj Ahmed

Hamza Naj Ahmed
Hamza Naj Ahmed

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

9. Hamza Naj Ahmed, 19 — In custody; intercepted by federal agents at John F. Kennedy International Airport; charged with conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist group and attempting to provide support to ISIS
MPRNews Report
— Scheduled for Trial in February 2016
October 2015 – charged with a new count of conspiracy to commit murder outside the United States
May 2015 – Seven Minnesota Men Indicted For Conspiracy To Provide Material Support To The Islamic State Of Iraq And The Levant: Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), 1 count; Attempting to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, 1 count;  False statement, 1 count; Financial aid fraud, 1 count

 

Hanad Mustafe Musse

Hanad Mustafe Musse
Hanad Mustafe Musse

 

 

10. Hanad Mustafe Musse, 19 — In custody; charged with conspiracy and attempt to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization
— Hanad Musse pleaded guilty
MPR News Report
May 2015 – Seven Minnesota Men Indicted For Conspiracy To Provide Material Support To The Islamic State Of Iraq And The Levant: Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), 1 count; Attempting to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, 1 count;  Financial aid fraud, 1 count

 

Mohamed Abdihamid Farah

Mohamed Abdihamid Farah

Mohamed Abdihamid Farah

11. Mohamed Abdihamid Farah, 21 — In custody; charged with conspiracy and attempt to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization
MPR News Report
— Minnesota mother shocked that 2 sons face terror charges
— Scheduled for Trial in February 2016
October 2015 – charged with a new count of conspiracy to commit murder outside the United States
May 2015 – Seven Minnesota Men Indicted For Conspiracy To Provide Material Support To The Islamic State Of Iraq And The Levant:  Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), 1 count;  Attempting to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, 2 countsFalse statement, 1 count

 

Mohamud Mohamed

Mohamud Mohamed Mohamud

Mohamud Mohamed Mohamud

12Mohamud Mohamed Mohamud, 20
— Believed Dead – September 2014
— “Mohamud’s father in Minneapolis told the Voice of America’s Somali service that his son disappeared without warning after saying he was going to a mosque for Friday prayers.”
MPR News Report

 

Yusra Ismail

Yusra Ismail (Source: High School Class Photo, Flickr)

Yusra Ismail (Source: High School Class Photo, Flickr)

13. Yusra Ismail, 20 — At large; charged with stealing and misusing a passport
Criminal ComplaintStar-Tribune: “St. Paul woman charged with stealing passport to travel to Syria”
“Gone to Syria: Family fears woman latest Minnesotan drawn to war-torn region”
MPR News Report
— December 20, 2014 – Minnesota Woman Charged with Stealing Passport to Travel to Syria (FBI).  Yusra Ismail is not a U.S. Citizen, but lived as a resident in Minnesota.  The FBI reports: “According to the complaint and documents filed in court, on August 18, 2014, Yusra Ismail visited a friend and asked to see her passport. Before leaving her home on that day, Yusra Ismail surreptitiously took the passport and subsequently left her friend’s home. According to the complaint and documents filed in court, three days later, Yusra Ismail asked a different friend to drive her to Minneapolis/Saint Paul airport, from which she departed on a flight bound for Amsterdam, the Netherlands. She later traveled from Amsterdam to Oslo, Norway. According to the complaint and documents filed in court, Yusra Ismail contacted members of her family on August 24, 2014, and told one or more of them that she was in “Sham,” which is a term commonly used to describe the area within Syria and Iraq where the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) is attempting to establish a caliphate. There is no record that Yusra Ismail, who is not a United States citizen, has lawfully returned to the United States. Yusra Ismail is charged with stealing and misusing a passport. Ismail departed the United States on a stolen passport and told her parents she was in ‘Sham,’ a term used to describe the area within Syria and Iraq where the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) is attempting to establish a caliphate.”

Yusuf Jama

Yusuf Jama (Source: Star-Tribune)
Yusuf Jama (Source: Star-Tribune)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

14. Yusuf Jama, 21 – At Large – Believed dead
MPRNews Report
— Reported dead in Somalia (Star-Tribune: “From the Heartland to Jihad” – “Another One Gone”) – in June 2014 “he bought a round-trip airline ticket from JFK airport to Istanbul. After taking a Greyhound bus to New York, he was gone. A little more than a week after he disappeared, Jama called home. He was using the same Turkish telephone number Nur had used. ‘He called me, but he didn’t tell me where is he,’ his mother, Alia Salim, tearfully recounted. ‘I don’t know if it’s Syria, I don’t know if it was somewhere else, but he called me. He said, ‘Mom, I left the country and I don’t want to come back.’  Months later, she got a call from her other son living in Somalia. Jama was dead, he told her.’ ”

Zacharia Yusuf Abdurahman

 

Zacharia Yusuf Abdurahman
Zacharia Yusuf Abdurahman

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

15. Zacharia Yusuf Abdurahman, 19 – Pleaded guilty, In custody; charged with conspiracy and attempt to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization
MPRNews Report
— Zacharia Abdurahman pleaded guilty
May 2015 – Seven Minnesota Men Indicted For Conspiracy To Provide Material Support To The Islamic State Of Iraq And The Levant: Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), 1 count; Attempting to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, 1 count
—“Abdurahman’s [guilty] plea is particularly interesting because, in recordings gathered by an FBI informant, he allegedly said efforts to de-radicalize this group of ISIS recruits are ‘hopeless.’ ‘With me, all of us, we’re hopeless, we’re not gonna be in a program, bro,’ Abdurahman told another recruit. ‘We will straight up serve time. They know they cannot change you. Because you’re an adult, you know.'”

============================

Surely American children deserve more attention and concern then such half-hearted treatment by the major mainstream media?

ISIS America - ISIS Recruits from Minnesota
ISIS America – ISIS Recruits from Minnesota

============================

 

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) notes that all those accused of crimes are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) stands in support of our universal human rights for all, and we stand in defiance against those, including terrorist and hate groups, which seek to attack such universal human rights, dignity, and security for all.

ISIS American Recruiter Rahatul Khan Sentenced to 10 Years in Prison

ISIS American recruiter, Rahatul Ashikim Khan, 23, of Round Rock, Texas was arrested at his home and charged with “conspiring to provide material support to terrorists.”

On June 20, 2014, the FBI reported: Rahatul Khan “(a.k.a. ‘Rahat Khan,’ ‘AuthenticTauheed19,’ and ‘AT19’), age 23 of Round Rock, Texas, is charged with conspiring to provide material support to terrorists in violation of Title 18 USC Section 2339A. From March 2011 to January 2012, Khan allegedly conspired with others to recruit persons to travel overseas to support terrorist activities, including committing violent jihad.”

A complaint said Khan “conspired with others to recruit persons to travel overseas to support terrorist activities including committing violent jihad” during a period from early 2011 to January 2012.

The U.S. Department of Justice reported that:

“On July 2, 2014, Khan pleaded guilty to conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists. The conspiracy occurred between March 2011 and January 2012. During this time frame, Khan identified an individual in an Internet chatroom and began assessing that individual for overseas violent jihadist travel. That individual was actually an FBI confidential source. After Khan screened the confidential source, he made arrangements to insert him into an al-Shabaab pipeline controlled by Gufran Ahmed Kauser Mohammed and Mohamed Hussen Said. Mohammed and Said both pleaded guilty to material support offenses in the Southern District of Florida and have been sentenced to terms of 180 months’ imprisonment respectively.”

“According to court records, Khan also led a group of individuals in the Austin area who pledged loyalty to the now-deceased Taliban and terrorist leader, Mullah Omar. Michael Todd Wolfe, 24, was a part of Khan’s group. Wolfe was arrested by FBI agents on June 17, 2014, in Houston, as he was about to board a plane as a first step towards his goal of joining and fighting with the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). Wolfe was sentenced to 82 months in prison for attempting to provide material support to ISIL.”

” ‘Rahatul Khan conspired to provide material support to terrorists by screening and recruiting potential foreign fighters located in the United States to wage violent jihad in various locations overseas, including Somalia,’ said Assistant Attorney General Carlin. ‘The National Security Division’s highest priority is counterterrorism and we will continue to pursue justice against those who seek to provide material support to designated foreign terrorist organizations.’ ”

ISIS American terrorist recruiter Rahatul Ashikim Khan was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

On September 25, 2015, the U.S. Department of Justice reported: “In Austin this afternoon, 24-year-old self-proclaimed ‘jihadi’ Rahatul Ashikim Khan (a.k.a. ‘Rahat Khan,’ ‘Authentic Tauheed 19,’ and ‘AT19’) was sentenced to ten years in federal prison followed by ten years of supervised release for attempting to provide material support and resources to terrorists, announced John Carlin, Assistant Attorney General for National Security, Richard L. Durbin, Jr., United States Attorney for the Western District of Texas, and Christopher Combs, Federal Bureau of Investigation Special Agent in Charge of the San Antonio Division.”

ISIS American terrorist recruiter Rahatul Ashikim Khan (Source: Daily Star)
ISIS American terrorist recruiter Rahatul Ashikim Khan (Source: Daily Star)

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) stands in support of our universal human rights for all, and we stand in defiance against those, including terrorist and hate groups, which seek to attack such universal human rights, dignity, and security for all

Minnesota Star-Tribune article: “From the Heartland to Jihad”

Star-Tribune article: “From the Heartland to Jihad”.

R.E.A.L. is quoting this article, as we believe this provides valuable information on ISIS processes of recruitment, and our experience is that after time some news media get tired maintaining archives of such articles.  For best formatting see the original article.

==============================

How a group of young men from Minnesota were drawn into ISIL’s campaign of terror

The FBI finally came for Guled Omar on a Sunday morning.

A squad of agents crashed through the front door of the house on Columbus Avenue in south Minneapolis, raced up the stairs and burst into the room where the 20-year-old Omar slept. Guns drawn, they screamed for his phone, demanding that he give it up before he could alert his friends.

Similar, carefully choreographed arrests played out across the Twin Cities and in San Diego that day in April. By day’s end, Omar and five other young Somali-American men from the Twin Cities were in jail, and Minnesota and its Somali community once again found themselves in the international terrorism spotlight.

No state in the country has provided more fresh young recruits to violent jihadist groups like Al-Shabab and, more recently, the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). Over the last decade, dozens of mostly young men have abandoned the relative comfort and security of life in the Twin Cities to fight and, in many instances, die, in faraway lands.

While the April arrests marked a major victory in federal efforts to slow the exodus of local men abroad, its impact on the families and the Twin Cities Somali-American community — the largest in the U.S. — has been profound. The FBI tried for years to convince some of the men to become government informants, and agents often followed them to and from work and school.

That sense of living under constant suspicion and surveillance can be corrosive, said Sadik Warfa, a community activist who has worked closely with the families of the defendants.

“It scared the community,” Warfa said. “It is in our best interests to work with law enforcement and to build that trust, and all the trust we have been building over the years was shattered.”

The case, with hours of secretly recorded transcripts and, now, heartfelt courtroom confessions, exposes how powerful the draw of jihad remains for a generation that has spent most, if not all, of its life in the United States. And it shows how difficult it is to stop.

Even as agents began tracking the activities of Omar and his friends, at least three of them slipped out of the country and made their way to Syria. Two are now reported to be dead.

Omar might have made it, too, but he and the others placed their trust in a charismatic friend from California who — in order to save himself — chose to betray them. Paid tens of thousands of dollars by the FBI, Abdirahman Bashiir would become a key witness in the case against them.

They called him “Cali.”

ABOUT THIS STORY

This report is based on dozens of interviews in the Twin Cities and San Diego with the defendants’ families, law enforcement, imams and community leaders and a review of court documents.

HOOPS CONNECTION: Minneapolis’ Van Cleve Park, left, and Heritage Academy of Science & Technology were places that the group of young Somali-American friends could hang out or play hoops. Some of them attended school at Heritage.

Circle of friends

Cali was 17 and had just finished his junior year of high school when, in 2012, his father picked up the family and moved from San Diego to the Twin Cities.

Parents of his friends recall him as a polite and respectful young man who would, after playing basketball, change into the flowing, calf-length robes that devout Islamic men often wore to mosque.

Around his friends, the devoted Boston Celtics fan sported hoodies and baseball caps, shot videos of himself lip-syncing to hip-hop, and talked trash when playing video games.

Cali was a rail at 5 feet, 10 inches, 135 pounds.

On the basketball courts of Van Cleve Park and, later, at Heritage Academy of Science & Technology, Cali fell in with a group of young men who’d known each other much of their lives.

Omar, one of 13 siblings, had a keen interest in social issues, human rights, police brutality and religion. Friends said he became involved in community efforts to stem violence after a friend was gunned down in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood several years ago. An admirer of Malcolm X, Omar would tweet his disillusionment with white privilege.

He had other role models. His brother left in 2007 to fight for Al-Shabab, one of about two dozen Twin Cities recruits.

Omar was tight with two brothers, Mohamed and Adnan Farah, whom he met in elementary school on Minneapolis’ North Side. Adnan, taller and younger, is friendly and gregarious, while the elder Mohamed, shorter and stockier, is more reserved and shy. The brothers were close, playing organized basketball and soccer through Somali youth leagues. They posed with wide smiles, their arms around one another, at Adnan’s 2014 graduation from South High.

Mohamed, the oldest, took his six siblings to school, tutored them and did the family’s shopping. He frequently asked his mother, Ayan, for a special prayer that he would become a schoolteacher.

Zacharia Abdurahman, a bookworm who loved geography, worked nights as a security guard at a battered women’s shelter. After graduating from Heritage, he studied computer science at Minneapolis Community Technical College and landed a coveted programming internship at a hospital. His mother, a school bus driver, and father, an interpreter, are Sufis, a mystical branch of Islam that has been persecuted and suppressed across the Muslim world.

Hanad Musse described himself on social media as a “Servant of Allah.” But his posts alternated between religious imagery and those of a typical young adult, sharing photos of a fresh new haircut or mugging for the camera with friends. Layla Ali, his mother, described how her son, raised in the United States, spent time living with her in Kenya, only to ask to return home to the Twin Cities.

“He said ‘Mommy, I have to go back,’ ” she said in a recent interview. “I said why, and he said, ‘Mommy, if I don’t go back, I won’t get a high school diploma. I have to go back.’ ”

Abdirahman Daud was the third-youngest of 12 children. Born at a refugee camp in Kenya, he arrived in the U.S. when he was 9. He didn’t know the whereabouts of some of his siblings and was raised by his 34-year-old stepsister.

Jean Emmons, a youth program manager for Eastside Neighborhood Services, hired Daud as a teenage intern. For three years she watched him work in programs for Somali-American children. “He understood the value of education,” she testified in court this summer. “He was a gifted athlete and in basketball games he walked away from conflict.”

It wasn’t long before these six young men adopted the new arrival, Cali, as one of their own. “Shout to my bro,” Omar wrote in a tweet to Cali. “My long-lost twin.”

Between two worlds

The children often found themselves straddling two worlds — mainstream American society and their insular Muslim households. They didn’t always feel welcome in either one.

When fights broke out between Somali and African-American students at Minneapolis’ South High School in February 2013, Omar pleaded the case of Somali students before the assembled media.

“We’re the minority here,” he said. “Why are we being attacked?”

Abdurahman’s father, Yusuf, recalled an incident from a year ago, when his son and his friends were spit on at a McDonald’s in suburban Lakeville.

“They are angry and it grows on them, the way they feel they are treated,” the father said. “People ask why these kids would think [of] what they’re accused of. They are very angry from things like this.”

For some, late-night basketball games were followed by trips to Denny’s for suhoor, the traditional predawn meal eaten before fasting during the month of Ramadan.

At home, they spoke Somali and helped care for younger siblings; with friends they quoted rap lyrics, played video games and basketball, and offered up fervent musings on politics, Somalia and Islam.

Musse posted on his Facebook page several photos of lions — a symbol of jihad. When three Muslims were shot dead at the University of North Carolina in February 2014, Omar took to Twitter: “Can someone define the word Terrorism for me please. #MuslimLivesMatter.”

And several of them knew someone who’d heeded the call to jihad.

Along with Omar’s brother, Abdurahman’s cousin was also recruited to Al-Shabab. Both are on the FBI’s list of most wanted terrorists from Minnesota. Cali’s family was connected to a controversial mosque in San Diego ­— its imam was convicted of sending money to Al-Shabab and sentenced to 13 years in prison ­— and his father was the target of an FBI criminal investigation that landed him briefly on the no-fly list.

Under pressure

It’s unclear just how long and how closely the FBI was watching them.

Omar was in high school in 2012 when he was stopped at the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport as he tried to board a flight to Kenya. He checked no baggage and had only a carry-on gym bag packed with an iPad, a few shirts and extra shoes. He told authorities he was going to his uncle’s wedding. Later, the then-17-year-old told FBI agents he was going to his own wedding arranged by two uncles.

Daud was interviewed by the FBI in January 2013 and again that December, the same day he answered questions before a federal grand jury.

In 2013, the U.S. attorney subpoenaed his Yahoo e-mail account. The next year, a relative’s T-Mobile account was also subpoenaed.

“Throughout 2013 and 2014, the FBI showed a photo of Abdirahman Daud to numerous individuals in the Somali community who were interviewed by the FBI,” a recent court filing by his attorney said.

Families said the FBI has long been pressuring their children to become confidential informants.

Daud’s stepsister said the FBI approached her and her brother two years ago, asking them to cooperate as informants. They declined. “Our religion does not allow us to harm anyone,” Farhiyo Mohamed recalled. She said she told agents, “If there’s any concern that you have about us, tell us.”

Ayan Farah said that after agents failed to recruit her son Mohamed as an informant, her family felt harassed. For months, agents followed her sons, parking outside their Minneapolis home, following them to school, she said.

Omar’s family also felt the pressure. Hodan Omar listened through the thin walls of her mother’s bedroom as federal agents alternated between pressure and promises to her younger brother.

She said it was one of several times the FBI tried to persuade him to become a confidential informant. They wanted information, she said, and were willing to pay for it in cars, cash and financial stability.

“They offered them all of these things that were like, unimaginable; tell them that their families would live a good life only if they worked for them,” Hodan Omar said. “My brother was denying that he knew anything about it. … I guess that’s when they decided that they would just follow him.”

The FBI was scrambling, setting up surveillance operations across the metro area. At least a dozen of the agents involved in “Operation Rhino” — the office’s counterterrorism efforts against Al-Shabab — now found themselves investigating this new group of men seemingly bent on getting to Syria.

Expectations were high. The Minneapolis office is in daily contact with FBI headquarters and high-level officials in the U.S. Department of Justice who track terror investigations.

Local FBI agents knew that if they had any hopes of disrupting a Minnesota-Syria pipeline, they needed to penetrate an already-wary Somali community. They needed an inside man, but this group of friends was tight.

Meeting, planning

Guled Omar was deeply affected by the conflict in Syria, often posting on Facebook about the atrocities committed by the forces of Syrian President Bashar Assad. In December 2013, Omar posted a photo of a young boy lying in the road, a rock as his pillow. “May Allah show mercy to the people of [Syria], and the rest of the [Muslim community]. I can care less about anyone else my own people are in such distress.”

Months later, Omar and his friends decided it was time to act.

In the spring of 2014, they began meeting to discuss how to leave the country unnoticed, and how to pay for their travel. They pumped themselves up by watching violent jihadi videos and ISIL propaganda and followed known ISIL fighters on Twitter.

The meetings included Abdullahi Yusuf, a skilled basketball player known as “Bones.” There was also Abdi Nur, Musse’s cousin, whom they called “Curry.”

Omar introduced Hamza Ahmed to the group and told them to make him feel welcome. Daud told the guys to download a messaging app that “the Feds don’t know about.”

Also at the meetings was Cali’s cousin Hanad Mohallim, another San Diego transplant. He was the first to go.

Mohallim was soft-spoken and thoughtful and appeared to be on the right path until he moved to Minneapolis, family friends said. In videos posted on social media, he joked about “life in the projects” of Apple Valley.

“Just another day in the life of a gangsta in the hood for me …” Mohallim says to the camera.

In March 2014, Cali drove his cousin to the Twin Cities airport, where he boarded a flight for Turkey. From there, he made his way to Syria, along with three of his cousins from Edmonton, Alberta.

The FBI didn’t know it, but another plot was unfolding.

A lucky break

The following month, Yusuf applied for an expedited passport in Minneapolis. He said he was going to visit a friend in Istanbul whom he met on Facebook. He avoided eye contact and was clearly nervous, and he aroused a clerk’s suspicion by what he couldn’t say.

He didn’t know where he would be staying. He couldn’t give a name or address of his new friend.

After Yusuf left, the clerk called the FBI. Soon, surveillance teams began tracking him. They looked on as he picked up his new passport. A month later, he deposited $1,500 into his bank account. The next day he bought a plane ticket to Istanbul with the money. The source of the cash remains unknown.

On May 28, Yusuf’s father dropped him off at Heritage, but he left the school an hour later and walked to a nearby mosque. A blue Jetta picked him up and dropped him at a light-rail station less than 5 miles from the airport. He took the train the rest of the way.

Agents stopped him after he passed through security. They asked whom he planned to visit.

Nobody, he replied. But, according to court documents, he carried phone numbers for contacting members of ISIL once in Syria. The agents let him go, and he went home.

Agents began tracking the blue Jetta that had dropped off Yusuf at the station. They learned that, a week earlier, the car had been involved in an accident. The driver was Nur. But by the time agents knew his name, it was too late. A day after Yusuf was stopped, Nur boarded a flight for Istanbul.

“I Thank Allah For Everything No Matter What!” he posted to his Twitter account the day he left.

A week later, he called family to say he had reached his destination and would no longer be in touch. It was a Turkish phone number. He later texted his sister through Kik, an online messaging app. “You can’t come looking for me its too late for that. we will see other in afterlife inshallah.”

The sister, Ifrah Mohamed Nur, walked into the Fifth Precinct police station to report her brother missing, then later went to see the Farah brothers. They couldn’t tell her what happened to her brother or they would all face harm, they said. The tickets just show up, and nobody knew when.

Once overseas, Nur rallied his friends to join the cause, even offering to provide contacts for fake passports.

Another gone

That same month, Omar, Cali and another friend, Yusuf Jama, planned their own route to Syria. They would travel to San Diego before heading south to Mexico and on to the Mideast. At least four men from the Twin Cities had used Mexico as their jumping-off point to Somalia in 2009. To pay for his trip, Omar took $5,000 out of his federal student loan account.

In late May, Omar loaded his gear into Jama’s car for the drive to San Diego, but he was stopped by his family. The three men abandoned the plan and Omar redeposited the cash and returned to his job as a security guard.

Two weeks later, Jama — whose cousin had left the Twin Cities to fight in Somalia in 2012 — tried again, this time on his own. In early June he bought a round-trip airline ticket from JFK airport to Istanbul. After taking a Greyhound bus to New York, he was gone.

A little more than a week after he disappeared, Jama called home. He was using the same Turkish telephone number Nur had used.

“He called me, but he didn’t tell me where is he,” his mother, Alia Salim, tearfully recounted. “I don’t know if it’s Syria, I don’t know if it was somewhere else, but he called me. He said, ‘Mom, I left the country and I don’t want to come back.’ ”

Months later, she got a call from her other son living in Somalia. Jama was dead, he told her.

From late May through mid-June, five men from the Twin Cities had tried to escape the country. Nur and Jama made it out. Omar and Cali were at a standstill and Yusuf was in law-enforcement limbo.

 

Getting ready

By the fall of 2014, Yusuf worried that he would soon be arrested. He and his friends accelerated attempts to leave.

They practiced warfare at a paintball park south of the Twin Cities.

Witnesses say some young men would speak of martyrs or scream “Allahu akbar” — Arabic for “God is Great” — as they fired at one another on the course.

Omar, later discussing the outings in a recorded conversation, said, “We was literally treating it like it was real war, bro.”

After an Oct. 16 incident, in which paintball ammunition had gone missing, Musse and Abdurahman agreed to stay away from the park.

On Nov. 6, Abdurahman, Musse, Ahmed and Mohamed Farah hopped on a Greyhound bus to New York, ready to follow the route that had worked for Jama.

That same day, Omar tried to fly to San Diego, but the FBI stopped him at the airport. He again had no checked luggage and carried only his passport. He took to Twitter to vent.

“I committed no crime but I was denied my flight to California today this is because I am young Somali Muslim male!” he wrote. “I promise to take this to court!”

Privately, though, he urged Musse and the others to abort their plans to avoid getting caught.

“I said ‘Hanad, please don’t go. Please don’t do this right now, don’t do this …’ ” Omar would later recount in a recorded conversation. “He’s like, ‘Yo what the hell’s your problem bro, you a punk man!’ ”

Once in New York, the other four booked flights for Nov. 8.

“Nobody is stopping me from that border, any [one] tries to touch me, bro, I swear it’s a fight. … I’m going to shoot them.”

Guled Omar

“If our backs are against the wall, I’m gonna go kill the one who punks me.”

Mohamed Farah

“I’m going to spit on America at the border crossing.”

Abdirahman Daud

Farah and Ahmed planned to fly to Istanbul, with Farah going on to Bulgaria and Ahmed backtracking to Madrid. Abdurahman and Musse were bound for Athens, through Moscow. Ahmed was on the plane when authorities pulled him off just before takeoff.

“The truth is I really didn’t know these people,” Ahmed later told agents. But video from the bus station in Minneapolis showed Ahmed and Farah arriving in the same car. Records showed that the men exchanged hundreds of text messages and calls.

The four men were given letters from the U.S. attorney’s office informing them that they were targets of a federal criminal investigation into terrorism offenses.

Later that month, Yusuf was arrested. Charges detailed how the FBI had been watching him since the passport application. But his friends remained determined to get away.

Betrayal

That fall Cali received word that his cousin Mohallim, whom he had driven to the airport, and three Canadian cousins were killed fighting in Syria.

One of those cousins was reportedly friends with Douglas McCain, a 33-year-old New Hope man who in August 2014 became the first American killed while fighting for ISIL in Syria. Records would later show that Cali had planned to ask McCain for help making his way into Syria.

It’s not clear when Cali found himself jammed up by FBI agents and prosecutors, but at some point he lied to agents, then lied again to a federal grand jury.

By January of this year, Cali faced a choice: risk prison for lying and committing perjury, or cooperate with agents. He chose the latter. He was given a code name, “Rover.” He was put on the FBI’s payroll and agreed to wear a wire just as his friends were starting to worry about others turning them in. But they didn’t suspect Cali.

In February, Ahmed was arrested and charged with lying to agents after the canceled JFK flights. The same month, Yusuf pleaded guilty.

Omar worried what Yusuf might say. Yusuf “told them there are meetings,” Omar said. “That’s the worst thing. I was mad as hell.”

Musse worried about Ahmed: “If he gives a deal right now, we can get locked up the next day.”

Still, they planned. “Nobody is stopping me from that border,” Omar said. “Any [one] tries to touch me, bro, I swear it’s a fight. … I’m going to shoot them.”

In a separate conversation, Mohamed Farah told Cali he was prepared to kill an FBI agent.

“If our backs are against the wall, I’m gonna go kill the one who punks me,” Farah said.

When Cali said he could get fake passports for the group, Daud gave him a photograph and a down payment. Daud would drive them to San Diego, where he’d sell his car.

As the plans to travel to Mexico via California firmed up, Daud’s hopes were buoyed. “This is the perfect time … this shows Allah I’m not about this life,” he told Cali. “We just need to execute.”

Abdurahman exuded equal confidence in a March phone call to Nur, their friend who made it to Syria. “We’re not too far bro, we gonna be with you, bro. Soon.”

But as the time to leave approached, Abdurahman backed out, asking for his passport photo back. Musse did, too, after his father learned of his plans.

Three would go to San Diego: Daud, Mohamed Farah and Cali.

In the hours before they left, Daud spoke with an ISIL member in Syria who gave him detailed instructions on how to sneak into the country once they made it to Turkey. They left Minneapolis the evening of April 17.

“I’m going to spit on America at the border crossing,” Daud said.

“Even if I’m caught, I’m done with America,” Farah said. “Burn my I.D.”

They talked about what they’d do when they made it to Syria, even naming two FBI agents in the investigation. Farah said he would send the agents a Twitter message asking, “What up suckas?”

Within two days, they picked up their fake passports in San Diego and were arrested.

Soon after, agents in Minneapolis splintered the door at Omar’s home.

Friends don’t call

After a summer of pleading innocence, some of the men are starting to turn. Musse and Abdurahman changed their pleas to guilty this month. They face up to 15 years in prison and have named their friends in court as co-conspirators.

On Thursday, Yusuf Abdurahman looked on as his son, dressed in a navy jail jumpsuit and sneakers, spent nearly an hour entering a guilty plea before U.S. District Judge Michael Davis. Tears welled in Yusuf’s eyes as his son described how he began reading the Qur’an with his father as a boy, and that devout Muslim faith drove his longing to fight alongside ISIL terrorists. As court adjourned, both father and son stood up. Zacharia looked over his shoulder at his family, nodded and gave a slight smile.

Others are refusing to negotiate and a February trial is scheduled. Defendants and their attorneys declined to comment.

Abdullahi Yusuf, who has been cooperating with authorities, was allowed to live in a halfway house and undergo deradicalization in lieu of prison time, but has since returned to jail for violating his probation after a boxcutter was found in his room.

Cali remains under FBI protection. He’s been paid more than $41,000 to date. His family declined to comment.

He was seen around San Diego in the past few months, attending Ramadan prayers at a mosque in the City Heights neighborhood, an ethnically diverse enclave that is home to many of the city’s 10,000 Somali immigrants. Residents there say his family was forced to temporarily move back to San Diego to escape the cold stares from former friends and even relatives who accused him of betraying his community.

Ikraan Abdurahman, Zacharia’s 17-year-old sister, has a difficult time reconciling the brother depicted in court documents with the one she knows: a peaceful, quiet, hardworking young man who, in many ways, had a typical American upbringing. There was summer camp in Maple Plain. Camping and horseback riding in state parks.

“He’s as ‘American’ as it gets,” she said. Her family and the others have felt isolated since the arrests, she said. “Somali people are afraid. They don’t call us as much as they used to. There is a fear that the FBI will be listening to the call.”

Throughout the summer, Andrew Luger, the U.S. attorney for Minnesota, tried to explain to the Somali community that none of the defendants were entrapped by the informant in the course of the 10-month investigation. “This was their choice,” he said.

The same day that Musse pleaded guilty this month, Luger announced nearly $1 million in public and private funding for programs to help counter extremism in the Somali community. Some local Somali leaders reacted with suspicion, saying the programs are just another way for the government to spy on their people.

And despite bringing down this conspiracy, federal authorities acknowledge that terror groups are still actively recruiting in the Twin Cities. Community leaders say federal authorities have told them at least 100 local young men are in the extremist recruiting pipeline, a figure Luger denies.

Abdisalam Adam, a local imam who sits on the task force working with Luger on the new programs, acknowledged that with each arrest, pain and surprise continue to reverberate through the Twin Cities Somali community. People worry at times whether they, too, will be labeled as terrorists. But he, like others, is pragmatic.

“My sense is this is something the government has to do.”

At midday last week, the shades were drawn in the living room of the Farah home in north Minneapolis. The parents, Abdi and Ayan, thought aloud about the fate of their eldest sons, while two of their youngest boys eavesdropped. They said Adnan and Mohamed were offered deals by the government — plead guilty in exchange for up to 15 years in prison for Adnan, perhaps longer for Mohamed.

Abdi took off his glasses and rubbed his eyes. It was too much time behind bars, and they were far too young. So far, they were rejecting any offers, he said.

“We’re taking it to trial for both of them.”

New York: KKK Terrorist Convicted of Terrorist Plot Against Muslims, Governor’s Mansion

Ku Klux Klan (KKK) terrorist plotter Glendon Scott Crawford of Galway, New York was convicted on August 21, 2015, for terrorist activity in a Ku Klux Klan plot to kill Muslim-Americans in the Albany, New York area.   The KKK terrorist also plotted to attack the New York governor’s mansion.  The anti-Muslim terrorist Glendon Scott Crawford sought to modify an industrial-grade radiation device intended to be used to kill Muslims in the Albany area. He was convicted of  attempting to acquire and use a radiological dispersal device (count 1), conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction (count 2), and distributing information relating to weapons of mass destruction (count 3).  The KKK terrorist Glendon Scott Crawford plotted to use “the device against Muslims, and he scouted mosques in Albany and Schenectady and an Islamic community center and school in Schenectady as possible targets. Crawford also suggested the Governor’s Mansion as a potential target.”

Glendon-Scott-Crawford

As reported by the FBI:

ALBANY, NY—A jury convicted Glendon Scott Crawford, 51, of Galway, New York, today after a 5-day trial on all charges relating to his efforts to acquire a weapon of mass destruction, announced United States Attorney Richard S. Hartunian of the Northern District of New York, Assistant Attorney General for National Security John P. Carlin, and Special Agent in Charge Andrew W. Vale of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Albany Division.

Crawford was convicted of attempting to acquire and use a radiological dispersal device (count 1), conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction (count 2), and distributing information relating to weapons of mass destruction (count 3). He faces at least 25 years of imprisonment on count 1, up to life on counts 1 and 2, and up to 20 years of imprisonment on count 3. He also faces a $2 million fine on count 1 and a fine of $250,000 on both counts 2 and 3.

Crawford is scheduled to be sentenced on December 15 at 9 a.m. by the Honorable Gary L. Sharpe, Chief United States District Judge for the Northern District of New York.

Crawford is the first person to be found guilty of attempting to acquire a radiological dispersal device, a statute Congress passed in 2004.

“Glendon Scott Crawford is a terrorist who would have used a weapon of mass destruction to kill innocent members of our Muslim community were it not for the good judgment of citizens who quickly alerted law enforcement to his diabolical plan and the outstanding work of the Albany FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force,” said United States Attorney Richard S. Hartunian. “This case illustrates how vigilance, the shared values of Americans of all faiths, and vigorous investigation can defeat dehumanizing bigotry and hatred.”

“Glendon Scott Crawford, a self-professed member of the Ku Klux Klan, was convicted of offenses relating to his deadly plan to use a radiological dispersal device to target unsuspecting Muslim Americans with lethal doses of radiation,” said Assistant Attorney General Carlin. “The National Security Division’s highest priority is counterterrorism, and we will continue to pursue justice against those who seek to perpetrate attacks on American soil.”

“Today’s verdict is a testament to the tremendous efforts of our Joint Terrorism Task Force in uncovering Crawford’s plot and the dedication of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in bringing justice to an individual who sought to inflict terror and harm on our innocent citizens,” said Special Agent in Charge Andrew W. Vale. “This verdict is a victory for us all, but we must continue to remain observant; it is only with the assistance of our community members and law enforcement partners that we can be successful in thwarting these violent plots.”

In April 2012, the FBI received information that Crawford, who was employed as an industrial mechanic with General Electric in Schenectady, New York, had approached local Jewish organizations seeking people who might help him acquire a radiation-emitting device to be used against people whom he perceived to be enemies of Israel. During a 14-month investigation, the Albany FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force learned that Crawford was attempting to solicit funds to purchase, and then weaponize, a commercially-available industrial-grade X-ray device so that it could be used to injure or kill others by exposing them to lethal doses of radiation.

During the investigation, Crawford, with help from accomplice Eric J. Feight, took steps to design, acquire the parts for, build and test a remote initiation device that could have activated the radiation machine, and acquired (from an undercover FBI Agent) the X-ray device that he planned to modify into a weapon of mass destruction. The X-ray device that he planned to use had been modified so that Crawford could not have used it to hurt anyone.

Feight pleaded guilty on January 22, 2014 to providing material support to terrorists. He is scheduled to be sentenced on September 17, 2015 by Chief Judge Sharpe, and faces up to 15 years of imprisonment.

Crawford, a self-professed member of the Ku Klux Klan, wanted to use the device against Muslims, and he scouted mosques in Albany and Schenectady and an Islamic community center and school in Schenectady as possible targets. Crawford also suggested the Governor’s Mansion as a potential target.

With undercover agents, Crawford discussed placing the radiological device within a van or truck, parking the vehicle near the entrance to the target location, and then remotely activating the device so that it would direct lethal doses of radiation at people coming in and out of the target location.

A central feature of Crawford’s completed X-ray device was that its targets would be exposed to dangerous and lethal doses of X-ray radiation without being aware of the exposure, the harmful effects of which would likely not be immediately apparent.

This case was investigated by the Albany FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force, which includes FBI Special Agents as well as members of the New York State Police, U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Albany Police Department, Troy Police Department, and New York City Police Department.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Stephen Green and Richard Belliss of the Northern District of New York, who represented the United States during the trial, and Counterterrorism Section Trial Attorney Joseph Kaster with support from the National Security Division and Criminal Division at the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington.