The U.S. Justice Department
released the below information:
A federal jury in Brooklyn,
New York, returned a guilty verdict today against Muhanad Mahmoud Al-Farekh on
nine counts, including conspiracy to murder U.S. nationals, conspiracy to use a
weapon of mass destruction, conspiracy to bomb a government facility and
conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists. Farekh faces up to life in prison when he is
sentenced by United States District Judge Brian M. Cogan.
The verdict was announced by
Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security Dana J. Boente, Acting
United States Attorney Bridget M. Rohde for the Eastern District of New York,
Assistant Director in Charge William F. Sweeney. Jr. of the FBI’s New York
Field Office and Commissioner James P. O’Neill of the NYPD.
“Muhanad Mahmoud Al Farekh is
an al Qaeda terrorist who conspired to kill Americans overseas. The trial evidence showed that he was
involved in a variety of terrorist activity, including a VBIED attack on a U.S.
military installation in Afghanistan in 2009.
With today’s guilty verdict, Farekh is being held accountable for his
crimes,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Boente. “Counterterrorism is the highest priority of
the National Security Division, and we will continue to use all tools available
across the globe to bring to justice those who seek to harm Americans,
including our brave servicemen and women who risk their lives in defense of our
nation.”
“Today, an American al-Qaeda member
was brought to justice in a U.S. courtroom,” said Acting United States Attorney
Rohde. “The jury’s verdict on all nine
counts of the indictment established Farekh’s responsibility for a violent
attack on members of our armed forces, his efforts to murder Americans and his
commitment to one of the world’s most infamous terrorist organizations. The defendant now faces the prospect of life
imprisonment for the commission of these serious federal crimes.”
“Today’s verdict is justice
for the harm and destruction Al Farekh intended to cause when he conspired with
others to bomb a U.S. military base in Afghanistan,” said Assistant Director
inCharge Sweeney. “The FBI stands
alongside our military and law enforcement partners to hold criminals
accountable for their actions no matter where they are in the world.”
“The defendant in this case
faces up to life in prison after being found guilty of conspiring to bomb a
government facility, use a weapon of mass destruction, murder U.S. nationals
and provide material support to terrorists,” said Commissioner O’Neill. “While Farekh’s crimes occurred in Pakistan
and Afghanistan, the defendant’s co-conspirator trained Najibullah Zazi and
others who also intended to attack New York City’s subway system. I want to thank
all involved in today’s verdict, from the investigators and prosecutors to the
jury and judge.”
At trial, the government
presented evidence that prior to traveling overseas to join al Qaeda, Farekh
was a student at the University of Manitoba in Canada. In 2007, Farekh and two
fellow students traveled to Pakistan with the intention of fighting against
American forces overseas. Farekh and his co-conspirators had become radicalized
watching video recordings encouraging violent jihad, listened to jihadist lectures,
including lectures by now-deceased al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula leader
Anwar al-Awlaki. They traveled to the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of
Pakistan, an area in the northern part of Pakistan that borders Afghanistan and
is home to al Qaeda’s base of operations, where they joined and received
training from al Qaeda.
One of Farekh’s
co-conspirators, Ferid Imam, provided weapons and military-type training at an
al Qaeda training camp in Pakistan in September 2008. Among Imam’s trainees were
Najibullah Zazi, Zarein Ahmedzay and Adis Medunjanin, of Queens, New York, who
intended to return to New York City to carry out a suicide attack in the subway
system. During the trial, Ahmedzay testified that Imam as his weapons trainer.
Zazi and Ahmedzay pleaded guilty pursuant to cooperation agreements and have
yet to be sentenced. Medunjanin was convicted after trial and sentenced to life
imprisonment. Imam has been indicted for his role in the plot.
The government proved
Farekh’s participation in the building of a vehicle-borne improvised explosive
device (VBIED) that was used in an attack against Forward Operating Base
Chapman (FOB Chapman) on Jan. 19, 2009 in Khost, Afghanistan. The evidence at trial showed that two
vehicles approached the fence line of FOB Chapman. The operator of the first
vehicle, a pickup-sized truck, detonated a VBIED at the gate. The second
vehicle, a truck carrying 7,500 pounds of explosives, became stuck in the blast
crater. The driver fled without detonating the second, more powerful VBIED, and
was shot and killed by local security personnel. Forensic technicians in Afghanistan recovered
18 fingerprints from the adhesive packing tape wrapped around the undetonated
bomb that were matched to the defendant. A hair follicle was also recovered and
analysis indicated that the follicle’s mitochondrial DNA was consistent with
that of the defendant.
Assistant United States
Attorneys Richard M. Tucker, Douglas M. Pravda and Saritha Komatireddy of the
Eastern District of New York, and Trial Attorney Alicia Cook of the National
Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section are prosecuting this case.
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