Four Southern California men have been
charged with plotting to kill Americans in the US and overseas by joining
al-Qaida and the Taliban in Afghanistan, federal officials said.
The defendants were arrested for plotting
to bomb government facilities and public places after federal authorities
uncovered their plans to engage in "violent jihad", the FBI spokeswoman
Laura Eimiller said.
According to a federal complaint unsealed
on Monday during their initial appearances, Sohiel Omar Kabir, 34, introduced
two other California men to the radical Islamist doctrine of Anwar al-Awlaki, a
deceased al-Qaida leader.
The two, Ralph Deleon, 23, and Miguel
Alejandro Santana Vidriales, 21, converted to Islam in 2010 and began engaging
with Kabir and others online in discussions about jihad, including posting
radical content on Facebook and expressing extremist views in comments.
In one online conversation, Santana told an
FBI undercover agent he wanted to commit jihad and expressed interest in a
jihadist training camp in Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
The complaint alleged the men went to a
shooting range several times, including a trip on 10 September 2012 when Deleon
told a confidential FBI source he wanted to be on the frontlines overseas and
use the explosive C-4 in an attack. Santana agreed.
"I wanna do C-4s if I could put one of
these trucks right here with my, with that. Just drive into, like, the baddest
military base," Santana said, according to the complaint, adding that he
wanted to use a large quantity of the explosive.
"If I'm gonna do that, I'm gonna take
out a whole base. Might as well make it, like, big, ya know," Santana
said.
At the shooting range that day, both
Santana and Deleon said they were excited about the rewards from becoming a
shaheed – Arabic for martyr – according to the complaint.
Authorities allege Kabir travelled to
Afghanistan and communicated with Santana and Deleon so he could arrange for
their travel to join him and meet with his contacts in terrorism organisations.
They later recruited 21-year-old Arifeen David Gojali.
If convicted, the defendants each face a
maximum penalty of 15 years in federal prison.
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