FACING LIFE SENTENCE US-based Filipino Ralph de Leon has been convicted by a California court for supporting terrorists planning to kill members of the USmilitary. De Leon and another California man allegedly involved in the plot face life imprisonment.
An American and a Filipino face life in prison after they were found guilty on Thursday in
A jury convicted Sohiel Omar Kabir, 36, a naturalized US
citizen, and Filipino Ralph de Leon, 25, at the conclusion of a six-week trial
that comes as the United States leads air strikes in Syria and Iraq against
Islamic State militants.
The trial underlined the threat that homegrown extremists
pose to the United States .
Kabir and De Leon were each charged with five counts of
conspiracy for what prosecutors said was a plan to train overseas as terrorists
so they could target the US
military and allies.
Kabir was acquitted on one of five conspiracy counts, and
jurors were deadlocked on two of the five identical counts against De Leon .
De Leon
was specifically found guilty of conspiring to provide material support to
al-Qaida, to receive military-type training from the group and to commit
murder, kidnapping or maiming overseas.
“This case shows that the appeal of extremist ideologies can
reach from Afghanistan to America ,” said US Attorney Stephanie Yonekura
after the trial in Riverside County , east of Los
Angeles .
This demonstrated “the clear need for continued vigilance in
rooting out homegrown violent extremists who plot terrorist acts both here and
abroad.”
Radical Islamic teachings
Defense lawyers portrayed the two defendants as hapless pot
smokers who talked a big game but didn’t intend any harm.
De Leon and two other men were arrested two years ago before
embarking on a journey to meet Kabir in Afghanistan . Kabir was later caught
by US troops in Kabul .
Federal agents began tracking the group after one of the
men, Miguel Santana Vidriales, returned from visiting his mother in Mexico in 2012
with a copy of a jihadist magazine in his possession.
Prosecutors portrayed Kabir as the ringleader who met De
Leon and Santana at a hookah bar and introduced them to radical Islamic
teachings. Arifeen David Gojali was recruited later.
Target practice
Santana and Gojali previously pleaded guilty and cooperated
with prosecutors.
An FBI informant who infiltrated the group secretly recorded
many of their discussions about plans to train first with the Taliban and then
graduate to al-Qaida.
The men began hiking to prepare for the rugged terrain in Afghanistan ,
and they took target practice at shooting ranges and played paint ball to
simulate combat, authorities said.
Defense lawyers blamed informant Mohammad Hammad for
prodding the men along and paying some of their expenses.
Informant paid $380,000
Mohammad, who was once convicted of trafficking a key
ingredient of methamphetamine, was paid $380,000 by the United States
for his work.
Kabir and De Leon were convicted of conspiracy to provide
material support to terrorists and conspiracy to murder US officers or
employees overseas.
Kabir was acquitted on a count of conspiracy to murder,
kidnap or maim overseas.
Jurors were deadlocked on two conspiracy counts against De Leon :
conspiracy to receive military training from al-Qaida and conspiracy to provide
material support to a foreign terrorist organization.
Kabir faces sentencing on Feb. 23. De Leon is to
return to court on Oct. 20, when prosecutors will announce whether they’ll seek
a new trial on the deadlocked counts.
‘Violent jihad’
The trial heard evidence that Kabir traveled to Afghanistan
in 2012 and encouraged Santana and De Leon to come with him, saying they would
all join “the students”—Taliban militants—and “the professors” al-Qaida.
An undercover FBI agent contacted Santana and De Leon. The
latter said he wanted to go abroad to wage “violent jihad,” while Santana said
he wanted to be a sniper.
In September 2012, De Leon and Santana recruited Gojali to
accompany them to Afghanistan .
The three undertook preliminary training in southern California at firearms
and paint ball facilities.
The trio were arrested in November that year as they
prepared to drive south to Mexico ,
en route to Afghanistan .
‘Very real threat’
FBI Los Angeles agent Bill Lewis said: “The threat posed to America ’s security by individuals within the United States
who support terrorists is very real.
“This case demonstrates the process by which individuals
living in the United States
were groomed and radicalized toward an extremist ideology and, ultimately,
planned the murder of American and coalition forces.”
Kabir and De Leon, both of California , each face life sentences for the
convictions in the US District Court.
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/111737/filipino-convicted-in-us-of-plot-to-aid-jihadists
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