Ex-US Army soldier asks for maximum 40 years in prison but gets a
14-year term for IS plot
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[October 12, 2024]
By LARRY NEUMEISTER
NEW YORK (AP) — A judge rejected a former U.S. Army soldier's surprise
sentencing-day request for a maximum 40-year prison term for trying to
help the Islamic State group kill American troops, giving him 14 years
behind bars instead.
Cole Bridges, 24, of Stow, Ohio, was sentenced Friday after a nearly
five-hour Manhattan federal court proceeding in which Bridges, a
prosecutor and two of his former commanders told Judge Lewis J. Liman he
should get the longest possible prison stint.
“Honestly, I do believe that I deserve the maximum sentence,” Bridges,
who joined the Army in September 2019, told Liman.
“I know what I did was wrong,” he said, adding he would carry “regret
for as long as I live.”
Liman cited numerous facts that he said demonstrated Bridges was “not a
hardened criminal” and said he had no actual communications with the
Islamic State organization.
Instead, he noted, Bridges communicated with an FBI agent posing as a
supporter of the terrorist organization before he was arrested in
January 2021 at Fort Stewart, Georgia, where his Army unit — the Third
Infantry Division — was assembling after a break from overseas training.
Liman said the sentence would deter other members of the armed forces
who might want to attack the military. He said Bridges had “shown signs
of remorse,” including expressing relief after his arrest that he had
been dealing with the FBI rather than terrorists.
Bridges, the judge added, also had not sought any materials from other
soldiers that might be useful to the Islamic State organization. He said
the “most chilling evidence” was Bridges' willingness to provide the
undercover agent with advice on how the terrorist group could minimize
casualties in an attack.
Still, Liman said, Bridges was not the same as Americans who have been
criminally charged after traveling to places where the Islamic State
group operates and actively assisting terrorists.
After the sentencing, U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a statement
that Bridges had used his U.S. Army training to pursue a “horrifying
goal: the murder of his fellow service members in a carefully plotted
ambush.”
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Bridges pleaded guilty last year to providing material support to the
Islamic State organization, and his attorney, Sabrina Shroff, asked
Friday that he be sentenced to the nearly four years he has already
served behind bars.
Shroff argued for leniency because Bridges was lured into the plot by
undercover U.S. law enforcement agents who posed as supporters of the
Islamic State group. She said Bridges was a vulnerable target who was
seeking a sense of community after becoming isolated from his family and
suffering from depression.
Master Sgt. Greg Fallen, in full military uniform, fought back tears as
he described how the arrest of Bridges had destroyed the winning culture
of his platoon, leaving everyone “with a sense of defeat.” He said
soldiers who had befriended Bridges needed psychological counseling to
cope.
“I still can't sleep some nights,” Fallen said. “We will suffer with
mental anguish for the rest of our lives.”
Capt. Scott Harper said he was one of three officers aware of the
investigation, leaving him to wonder each day if “today was the day he
was going to snap.”
“My platoon, which could do anything, was instantly destroyed,” he said
of the fallout after Bridges' arrest. “He betrayed everything he was
supposed to stand for.”
Assistant U.S. Attorney Sam Adelsberg told the judge that Bridges
“attempted to murder American soldiers.”
“Cole Bridges is a traitor,” he said.
Bridges was largely stoic throughout the sentencing until his father
spoke candidly about the “rocky relationship” he had with his son after
he got divorced.
“He felt abandoned by me,” Chris Bridges, a 25-year Army veteran, said
as he and his son wiped their tears.
The father said his “heart goes out” to all the soldiers in his son's
unit traumatized by what happened. But he pledged to be there when his
son walks out of prison.
“I love him dearly and I'll always be here for him,” he said.
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