New York teen accused of supporting
Islamic State to be tried as adult
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[November 21, 2015]
By Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York teenager
charged with conspiring to support Islamic State should be tried as an
adult, despite having been only 17 at the time he allegedly committed
the crime, a federal judge ruled.
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The teenager, who remains unidentified in court papers, is among a
half dozen men in New York and New Jersey whom authorities have
arrested since June as part of a broader investigation into a
purported conspiracy to aid the militant group.
U.S. authorities have pursued a number of “lone wolf” plotters who
were apparently inspired by Islamic State’s propaganda, including
investigations in all 50 states.
Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, claimed responsibility
for last week’s attacks in Paris that killed 130 people. The group
also claimed responsibility for downing a Russian airliner in Egypt
last month, killing 224.
Federal authorities said the teenager, who is now 18, was friends
with Munther Omar Saleh, a college student in the New York City
borough of Queens.
Saleh and the unnamed man discussed plans to assemble an explosive
device to set off in the New York metropolitan area, according to
prosecutors. On June 19, federal agents were following the two men
in a surveillance vehicle when the men got out of their car and ran
at the agents, prompting their arrest at gunpoint.
The Justice Department had filed a sealed motion to try the teenager
as an adult, citing the seriousness of the charged crime and the
fact that he was just shy of 18 at the time of his arrest.
In an opinion made public this week, U.S. District Judge Margo
Brodie in Brooklyn agreed with the government’s argument.
“Although their ultimate goals were never accomplished, this fact
does not undermine the serious nature of their alleged conspiracy,”
she wrote.
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The teenager’s court-appointed lawyer declined to comment.
Two of the other men charged in the conspiracy, Samuel Topaz and
Alaa Saadeh, have pleaded guilty in New Jersey. They admitted in
court that they discussed plans to travel overseas to join Islamic
State with Saleh and Saadeh’s brother, Nader Saadeh, who has also
been charged.
Fareed Mumuni, a New York man, was arrested in June after
authorities said he tried to stab a federal agent executing a search
warrant at his home.
Mumuni had discussed attacking law enforcement with a bomb with
Sadeh, according to prosecutors.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Tom Brown)
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