Adel Daoud, 25, of the Chicago suburb of Hillside, pleaded
guilty in November while maintaining his innocence under the
terms of an "Alford plea" to one count of attempting use of a
weapon of mass destruction and one count of attempting to
destroy a building by means of an explosive, court documents
showed.
U.S. District Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman sentenced Daoud to 16
years in federal prison, to be followed by 45 years of
supervised release, two years after he was ruled mentally
incompetent to stand trial and ordered to undergo psychiatric
treatment. He pleaded guilty after receiving treatment.
In 2011, Daoud began using email accounts and internet forums to
research and discuss "violent jihad and the killing of
Americans," court documents said.
Two undercover FBI employees began corresponding with Daoud in
May 2012. Three months later, Daoud showed an undercover agent a
list of 29 possible targets including military recruiting
centers, bars, malls and other Chicago-area tourist attractions,
the documents showed.
During later meetings, Daoud and the agent planned the attack
that would involve a Jeep Cherokee and explosives that,
unbeknownst to him, were inert.
On Sept. 14, 2012, Daoud met with the undercover agent in a
Chicago suburb, and he led a prayer that the attack would
succeed in killing many people as they drove the agent’s vehicle
to downtown Chicago, according to court documents.
In downtown Chicago, Daoud picked up the Jeep that contained the
purported explosives and drove it to the targeted bar. Daoud
then walked to an alley about a block from the bar and tried to
set off the device in the agent’s presence before FBI agents
arrested him, the court documents said.
"Prior to the evening of the planned attack, Daoud had been
preaching for violent jihad and expressed an interest in working
with operational terrorists," the U.S Attorney's Office for the
Northern District of Illinois said in a statement.
In two other cases against Daoud, he was accused of a
murder-for-hire plot against an FBI agent in 2012 and attacking
a fellow jail inmate in 2015, court papers showed. They were
combined with the bomb plot case.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Peter
Cooney)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|