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		 Arizona 
		man found guilty in 'Draw Mohammed' event shooting 
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		[March 18, 2016] 
		By David Schwartz
 PHOENIX (Reuters) - An Arizona man was 
		found guilty on Thursday of plotting with others to attack a "Draw 
		Mohammed" cartoon contest in Texas last year and providing material 
		support to the Islamic State group, prosecutors said.
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			 Abdul Malik Abdul Kareem, 44, was convicted on all five charges 
			against him by a federal jury in U.S. District Court in Phoenix 
			stemming from the May 3 attack in the Dallas suburb of Garland that 
			left his two alleged associates dead in a shoot-out with police. 
 The case against Kareem, also known as Decarus Thomas, was the first 
			Islamic State-related prosecution to reach trial of the dozens 
			brought by the federal government across the nation. It is the 
			second jury verdict in such a case, as U.S. Air Force veteran Tairod 
			Pugh was convicted earlier this month in New York.
 
 "This verdict sends a strong message to those who support 
			terrorists," acting special agent in charge of the FBI's Phoenix 
			division, Justin Tolomeo, said in a statement.
 
 
			 
			Kareem maintained his innocence and denied involvement in the 
			attacks when he took the stand for two days in the federal trial. 
			His attorney, Daniel Maynard, said he was very disappointed with the 
			verdict.
 
 "I obviously didn't do my job since I believe the jury convicted 
			someone who is innocent," Maynard said in an emailed statement to 
			Reuters.
 
 Kareem's roommates, Elton Simpson and Nadir Soofi, of Phoenix were 
			killed by Garland police after they opened fire with assault rifles 
			outside the May 3 cartoon drawing event.
 
 The contest was intended to satirize Islam's Prophet Mohammed. It 
			came months after gunmen killed 12 people in the Paris offices of 
			French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in what was said to be 
			revenge for its cartoons depicting Mohammed.
 
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			Such portrayals are considered offensive by Muslims. None of the 
			approximately 150 people attending the event in Garland in May were 
			hurt.
 The original indictment said Kareem supplied the two gunmen with 
			arms and helped them prepare for the attack. He was later charged 
			with showing support for the Islamic State militant group in social 
			media posts, researching travel to the Middle East to train with 
			terrorists and seeking to make explosives that could be used during 
			last year's Super Bowl in Arizona, the most-watched U.S. sporting 
			event annually.
 
 Prosecutors said Kareem could face a potential sentence of at least 
			45 years in prison.
 
 (Reporting by David Schwartz in Phoenix; Editing by Curtis Skinner 
			and Sandra Maler)
 
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