A Brooklyn man who tried to join the Islamic State and later told an informer that the group wanted to stage an attack in Times Square similar to the one that killed 86 people in Nice, France, last summer was arrested in New York on Monday, the authorities said.
The man, Mohamed Rafik Naji, 37, who is facing charges of trying to provide material support to terrorists, began expressing support for the Islamic State, also known as ISIS and ISIL, on social media in December 2014 and traveled overseas to try to join the group three months later, according to a criminal complaint. He first went to Turkey, then to Yemen, according to the complaint.
He appeared in federal court in Brooklyn on Monday night and remained in custody, said Nellin N. McIntosh, a spokesman for the United States attorney’s office for the Eastern District of New York. He said no bail was set.
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A Brooklyn man who tried to join the Islamic State and later told an informer that the group wanted to stage an attack in Times Square similar to the one that killed 86 people in Nice, France, last summer was arrested in New York on Monday, the authorities said.
The man, Mohamed Rafik Naji, 37, who is facing charges of trying to provide material support to terrorists, began expressing support for the Islamic State, also known as ISIS and ISIL, on social media in December 2014 and traveled overseas to try to join the group three months later, according to a criminal complaint. He first went to Turkey, then to Yemen, according to the complaint.
He appeared in federal court in Brooklyn on Monday night and remained in custody, said Nellin N. McIntosh, a spokesman for the United States attorney’s office for the Eastern District of New York. He said no bail was set.
“As alleged, the defendant was persistent in his efforts to join ISIL and support its terrorist objectives,” Robert L. Capers, the United States attorney, said in a statement. Prosecutors presented no evidence that an attack in Times Square was actually planned.
Mr. Naji’s lawyer, Susan G. Kellman, said in an email that she was “not sure what can be said” about the case.
“My client has not been formally charged,” she said. “Not much else to say at this stage of the proceedings.”
Prosecutors based their allegations against Mr. Naji in part on a series of recorded conversations he had both in Yemen and in the United States with an F.B.I. informer.
Read the whole story from the New York Times.
Featured image courtesy of the New York Times.
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