Accused teen 'jihadist' ordered held
without bond in Arizona
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[July 21, 2016]
By David Schwartz
PHOENIX (Reuters) - An Arizona teenager who
the FBI said has professed to be an "American jihadist" was ordered to
remain held without bond on Wednesday on charges of plotting to stage an
attack with bombs and other weapons on a Phoenix-area state motor
vehicle office.
The suspect, Mahin Khan, 18, of Tucson, was charged in a three-count
indictment earlier this month with terrorism, conspiracy to commit
terrorism and conspiracy to commit misconduct involving weapons.
Jailed since his arrest on July 1, Khan faces a maximum penalty of life
in prison if convicted. He pleaded not guilty at his arraignment last
week.
Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Sam Myers declared Khan ineligible
for bond at the end of a hearing in Phoenix on Wednesday, finding the
defendant posed a "substantial danger to the community" if he were
released.
The ruling capped two days of testimony by FBI special agent Ben
Trentlage, who said Khan first came to the agency's attention when he
was 15. At that time, Trentlage said, FBI agents contacted the boy and
his family and ended up recommending they seek mental health treatment
for him.
Trentlage said the current case stemmed from months of communications
between Khan with undercover FBI operatives in which he expressed a
desire to carry out "lone jihadist" attacks that would kill hundreds of
people in Arizona.
Among potential targets Khan mentioned, Trentlage said, were a Jewish
community center and an Air Force recruitment office in Tucson, as well
as a pizza parlor.
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Khan ultimately decided the Division of Motor Vehicles office was a
preferred "soft target," reasoning that relatively light security
and crowded conditions there offered the best chance of inflicting
high casualties, prosecutors said in court.
Prosecutors previously said Khan sought to obtain weapons such as
pipe bombs or pressure cooker bombs for the planned DMV attack in
communications with an individual he believed was an Islamic State
fighter.
In a probable cause statement filed earlier this month, the FBI said
Khan had described himself in an email as an "American jihadist" who
supports Islamic State, the militant group that has seized parts of
Syria and Iraq and claimed responsibility for deadly bomb and gun
attacks in France, Belgium and Bangladesh.
On Wednesday, Trentlage said a search of Khan’s home in Tucson
uncovered hand-written attack plans, three pressure cookers and what
may have been a crude Molotov cocktail.
(Editing by Steve Gorman and Andrew Hay)
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