Tag Archives: Mohamed Mohamud

US jury convicts 4 Somali men of terrorist support

A federal jury in San Diego on Friday convicted four Somali immigrants — including an imam from a local mosque — of conspiring to funnel money to a terrorist group in their native country.

After a three-week trial and three days of deliberations, the jury convicted the four men of conspiring to raise and send money to Somalia‘s al-Shabaab. The men coordinated fundraising efforts and sent nearly $9,000 to al-Shabaab between 2007 and 2008, prosecutors said.

The U.S. Department of State designated al-Shabaab a terrorist group in 2008, saying it was responsible for targeted civilian assassinations and bombings in Somalia. Federal prosecutors have since cracked down on the group’s U.S. support with the arrests of some two dozen people.

Those convicted Friday include 40-year-old Mohamed Mohamed Mohamud, who prosecutors said used his connections as a popular imam at a mosque in San Diego‘s City Heights neighborhood to raise money for the group.

The other defendants were two San Diego taxi drivers, 36-year-old Basaaly Saeed Moalin and 56-year-old Issa Doreh, and 37-year-old Ahmed Nasir Taalil Mohamud of Anaheim, whose financial transfer business Shidaal Express was used to route the money, prosecutors said.

Government attorneys played tapes of telephone calls, many of them between Moalin and the late Aden Hashi Ayrow, who was among the top leaders of al-Shabaab until he was killed in missile strike in May 2008.

On the tapes, Ayrow can be heard telling Moalin it was “time to finance the jihad” and “you are running late with the stuff, send some and something will happen.”

Ayrow encouraged Moalin on the tapes to use the imam to help gather money.

Defense attorneys attacked both the editing and the translation of the tapes, saying overzealous prosecutors made money raised for humanitarian purposes appear sinister.

“They see al-Shabaab everywhere,” defense attorney Joshua Dratel said during closing arguments, according to the newspaper UT San Diego.

Moalin, Doreh and Mohamed Mohamud were convicted of providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization and several counts of conspiracy. Nasir Mohamud was convicted of conspiracy and money laundering.

Sentencing was scheduled for May 16.

…read more
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US jury in San Diego convicts 4 Somali men of terrorist support

A federal jury in San Diego has convicted four Somali immigrants — including an imam from a local mosque — of conspiring to funnel money to a terrorist group in their home country.

After a three-week trial and three days of deliberations, the jury convicted the four men Friday of conspiring to raise and send money to Somalia‘s al-Shabaab (AHL-shuh-BAHB’).

The U.S. State Department designated al-Shabaab a terrorist group in 2008, and federal prosecutors have since cracked down on the group’s U.S. support with the arrests of some two dozen people, mostly in Minnesota.

Those convicted include 40-year-old Mohamed Mohamud, an imam at a San Diego mosque, along with two taxi drivers and a man who operated a financial business that was used to move the money.

Sentencing is scheduled for May.

…read more
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Jury: Oregon car-bomb suspect guilty of terrorism

A jury has found an Oregon man guilty of federal terrorism charges.

Mohamed Mohamud was accused of leading a plot to detonate a bomb at Portland’s 2010 Christmas tree-lighting ceremony. The device he thought was a bomb was a fake, supplied by undercover FBI agents posing as members of al-Qaida.

Jurors rejected the 21-year-old Mohamud’s claim that he was entrapped or induced by a yearlong FBI sting that began to target him when he was a teenager.

Prosecutors argued that Mohamud was predisposed to terrorism as early as 15 years old.

Mohamud traded emails with an al-Qaida lieutenant later killed in a drone strike. He also told undercover agents he would pose as a college student while preparing for violent jihad.

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Oregon teen suspect predisposed to terror, US prosecutor tells jury

Prosecutors have made their last effort to convince a 16-person jury that a teenager was predisposed to terrorism when undercover FBI agents posing as members of Al Qaeda helped him devise a plot to detonate a bomb.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Ethan Knight said Wednesday in closing arguments that Mohamed Mohamud was predisposed to terrorism when he was 15 years old, the age he told undercover agents he began to think about committing violent jihad.

Knight says jurors may disagree with the FBI‘s methods in its undercover sting operation, but they cannot argue that Mohamud intended to kill thousands at Portland’s 2010 Christmas tree-lighting.

Mohamud’s trial on terrorism charges began Jan. 10.

His defense attorneys will make closing arguments Wednesday afternoon. They contend he was entrapped by the FBI.

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Psychologist: FBI sting shows manipulation of teen

A psychologist testified that the FBI used advanced psychological techniques to lure a teenage terrorism suspect into agreeing to a plan that would have killed thousands.

Elizabeth Cauffman, a defense witness in the trial of Mohamed Mohamud, testified Tuesday that undercover FBI agents rewarded risky behavior and used social pressure to convince Mohamud to attempt to detonate a weapon of mass destruction at Portland’s 2010 Christmas tree-lighting.

The bomb was a fake supplied by the FBI.

Cauffman says recordings of the agents telling Mohmaud he had a choice of whether to detonate the bomb were actually psychologically-coded messages daring him to back out.

Testimony from Cauffman and a previous psychologist witness are part of the defense’s efforts to portray the FBI sting as a complicated manipulation of a teenager.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Father of terror suspect: 'FBI brainwashed my son'

The father of an Oregon terrorism suspect says his then-teenage son was suffering an identity crisis and enduring a troubled home life when the FBI “brainwashed” him.

Osman Barre (OHS’-man BAR‘-ee), the father of Somali-American terrorism suspect Mohamed Mohamud, testified Monday that he was concerned for his son’s safety when he contacted the FBI in 2009.

Barre says Mohamud told him he was planning to fly to Yemen to learn Arabic.

Barre says contemporary news accounts of Somali-American teenagers joining the mujahedeen in Somalia persuaded him to contact the FBI and say he feared his son was being brainwashed by al-Qaida recruiters.

But Barre said Monday he now thinks it was an elaborate FBI sting that brainwashed his son.

Prosecutors rested their case Monday. Barre was the first defense witness.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Oregon terror suspect was happy student, classmates say

College classmates say that an Oregon terrorism suspect was a happy-go-lucky college student who enjoyed drinking and football.

The image described by classmates Friday in the terrorism trial of Mohamed Mohamud is a strong contrast to the man depicted in previous testimony as a hardened, teenage jihadi intent on killing thousands.

Mohamud has been charged with attempting to detonate a bomb at a Christmas tree-lighting ceremony in Portland in 2010. The bomb was a fake supplied by undercover FBI agents.

Elyssa Ridinger was a freshman in Mohamud’s class at Oregon State University in 2009.

She testified that on the morning of the tree lighting, she, Mohamud and their friends went Black Friday shopping and that he was in good spirits.

She says he showed no signs of anti-Western sentiment.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Classmates: Ore. terror suspect was happy student

College classmates say that an Oregon terrorism suspect was a happy-go-lucky college student who enjoyed drinking and football.

The image described by classmates Friday in the terrorism trial of Mohamed Mohamud is a strong contrast to the man depicted in previous testimony as a hardened, teenage jihadi intent on killing thousands.

Mohamud has been charged with attempting to detonate a bomb at a Christmas tree-lighting ceremony in Portland in 2010. The bomb was a fake supplied by undercover FBI agents.

Elyssa Ridinger was a freshman in Mohamud’s class at Oregon State University in 2009.

She testified that on the morning of the tree lighting, she, Mohamud and their friends went Black Friday shopping and that he was in good spirits.

She says he showed no signs of anti-Western sentiment.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Oregon bomb plot suspect's writing for jihadi magazine read out loud

In a slow, dispassionate monotone, an FBI agent on Thursday read selections from an Oregon terrorism suspect’s contributions to a jihadi magazine as prosecutors attempted to establish Mohamed Mohamud‘s mindset in the year before his arrest.

Mohamud’s federal terrorism trial is in its third week, and prosecutors have tried to show Mohamud was predisposed to committing terrorism before a monthslong sting operation culminated with his November 2010 arrest.

As a teenager in 2009, Mohamud contributed to the online, English-language jihadi magazine “Jihad Recollections.”

His contributions to the publication varied in focus and appeared alongside articles written by Usama bin Laden and other Al Qaeda higher-ups.

While bin Laden wrote a piece called “Four practical steps to expand global jihad,” Mohamud’s contributions were more innocuous and included a workout advice column to jihadis fighting in war zones. That column earned Mohamud the nickname “Usama Gym Laden” from a British tabloid.

In opening statements, one of Mohamud’s defense attorneys described the workout advice from Mohamud as being akin to “high school gym class.”

On Thursday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Pam Holsinger pointed out a photo above the story, which included masked men holding guns.

“Does this look like high school gym class?” she asked FBI agent Ryan Dwyer.

Dwyer replied, “It does not.”

Establishing Mohamud‘s state of mind before the FBI targeted him in a terrorism sting operation is key to the prosecution’s assertion that it did not entrap a then-teenager, as his defense claims.

Mohamud’s pseudonymous contributions to “Jihad Recollections” were made public soon after his indictment on charges that he attempted to detonate a bomb at Portland’s 2010 Christmas-tree lighting ceremony. The bomb was a fake supplied by undercover FBI agents.

Jurors heard at least one straight hour of content from the magazine, read by Dwyer. The articles, written by a variety of authors other than Mohamud, were aimed at radicalizing Muslims in the U.S. and included advice on bringing recent Muslim converts into a war against the West.

The issue was a significant one at the time Mohamud was writing — more than a dozen Somali teenagers left Minneapolis in 2009, apparently en route to join a global jihad. The magazine also tracked with terror cases in the U.S., praising both the massacre at Fort Hood, outside Killeen, Texas, and an attempted bombing in Times Square.

Mohamud’s defense team showed dozens of text messages intercepted by the FBI during his first year at Oregon State University. They showed a teenager preoccupied with partying, drinking and using marijuana.

By his sophomore year, after he’d began working with undercover FBI agents to plot an attack, Mohamud began telling friends that he was trying to give up drinking and partying. But the messages were interspersed with others asking for marijuana or talking about a night of partying.

Interactions with Mohamud’s parents indicated they were having marital problems. In September, Mohamud’s father texted, “Also, I need ur help. I’m thinking of bringing back your mom…”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Ore. suspect's jihadi magazine writing highlighted

Prosecutors in an Oregon bomb-plot trial highlighted the defendant’s contributions to a jihadi magazine as evidence he was predisposed to terrorism.

An FBI agent on Thursday read selections from articles written by suspect Mohamed Mohamud alongside those written in the same publication by Osama bin Laden and other al-Qaida higher-ups.

Mohamud has been accused of attempting to detonate a bomb at Portland’s Christmas-tree lighting in November 2010. The plot was an elaborate FBI sting, and the bomb was a fake.

Mohamud’s contributions to the magazine “Jihad Recollections” varied in focus.

A workout advice column to jihadis fighting in war zones earned him the nickname “Osama Gym Laden” by a British tabloid.

Prosecutors want to show Mohamud was predisposed to terrorism before the sting. Mohamud’s defense attorneys say he was entrapped.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Bomb-plot defense questions FBI report's accuracy

An attorney for an Oregon terrorism suspect on Wednesday tried to draw into question the accuracy and selectiveness of the written records made by an FBI agent who headed up the undercover investigation into her client.

The records are crucial to establishing the initial face-to-face contact between the suspect, Mohamed Mohamud, and an undercover agent posing as a jihadi.

That meeting would help establish Mohamud’s mindset before an FBI sting operation targeting him swung into high gear and culminated with his arrest. Mohamud is accused of attempting to detonate a bomb at a Portland Christmas tree-lighting ceremony in November 2010.

His attorneys are trying to show he was not predisposed to terrorism before he met two men — actually undercover agents — who promised him the chance to work for al-Qaida and carry out an act of terrorism in the U.S.

The FBI has said the undercover agent attempted to tape-record the original face-to-face meeting with Mohamud on July 30, 2010, but the battery in his recording device failed.

After the meeting, the undercover agent’s FBI handler, Elvis Chan, took notes and wrote a summary about it. The FBI learned on Aug. 2, 2010, that the recorder did not function, but Chan said he wasn’t told about it.

He destroyed his notes on Aug. 3, 2010, leaving only his written summary.

During Mohamud‘s terrorism trial on Wednesday, defense attorney Lisa Hay questioned why Chan chose not to record the agent telling Mohamud that he was in competition with five other men to help carry out a purported al-Qaida plot, a fact that Hay asserted in previous questioning could coerce a naive 18-year-old into getting involved with the plot.

Hay said Chan neglected to include facts from other calls and meetings that would be helpful to Mohamud’s defense, including Mohamud expressing a desire to go overseas instead of carrying out the plot, and another occasion when he wanted to “back out.”

Chan did note the small talk between Mohamud and the undercover agent, including details on where Mohamud went to school and what he was studying.

“I summarized what I believed to be the highlights of the meeting,” Chan said.

“And the highlights for you were the small talk,” Hay replied.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Jury hears Ore. terror suspect's dramatic takedown

At a darkened train station, the teenager and the purported jihadi pulled into a quiet lot where months of planning were to culminate in this: a plot to kill thousands at a Portland Christmas tree-lighting ceremony.

“You know what to do,” the man said to the teenager, breathing heavily. “O Lord, O Lord, O Lord.”

“Ready,” the teenager said. “Alhamdulillah.” Praise be to God.

They were 14 blocks northeast of this city’s busy tree-lighting ceremony two years ago on Nov. 26, 2010. On Friday, they found themselves across a federal courtroom from each other where the man — who Mohamed Mohamud would learn was an undercover FBI agent — testified against the now 21-year-old and a jury listened to a recording of the moments leading up to his arrest.

The recording crackles as the FBI agent reads out numbers and the teenager punches them into his black disposable Nokia cellphone. He then apparently encounters an error.

“Dial it again,” the man said, words that were in fact the cue for his fellow agents. Mohamud dialed again and waited for the explosion.

Instead: “FBI, FBI, FBI! Get down!”

The agent, whose cover name was “Hussein,” had told Mohamud the number he dialed was connected to a cell phone that would set off six 55-gallon drums filled with diesel fuel in a van parked next to the tree-lighting. The explosion, “Hussein” told him, would destroy two blocks in any direction.

Mohamud’s defense team doesn’t dispute the sequence of events, nor that their client intended to kill thousands of people at the tree-lighting ceremony.

But the path by which he reached that point is the substance of the defense’s claim that Mohamud was entrapped. The entrapment defense has been launched, unsuccessfully, in several post-9/11 terrorism sting operations like the one that targeted Mohamud.

He came to the FBI‘s attention, agents testified, when he kept up email contact with a Saudi Arabian man suspected by Interpol of terrorism.

Without the bureau’s intervention, prosecutors say, the already-radicalized Mohamud would almost certainly have found a way to reach al-Qaida or one of its affiliates and commit an act of terror in the U.S.

Nonsense, Mohamud’s attorneys said in opening statements and cross-examinations of prosecution witnesses. He was a 17-year-old when his emails were identified by the FBI, a teenager with grand but muddled ambitions of achieving some sort of fame in the Islamic world.

If anyone radicalized him, his attorneys attest, it was the undercover FBI agents who convinced him they were members of al-Qaida that had chosen him as a promising recruit.

Jurors had by Friday heard the details of the undercover sting operation and testimony from the men who led it. “Youssef,” another undercover agent testifying under a pseudonym, said he encountered an angry young man at the outset of the sting on July 30, 2010.

But “Youssef” said he didn’t believe Mohamud was truly capable of violence. Not yet. It wasn’t until an August 2010 meeting in which Mohamud picked the tree-lighting ceremony as a target that “Youssef” became concerned that he was dealing with a potentially dangerous person.

After that meeting on Aug. 19, 2010, at least one agent or handler left his or her recorder running. The agents were heard saying it was “fantastic” that Mohamud had identified a “sexy” terrorist target, according to transcripts of the meeting quoted by Mohamud’s defense team.

That plays in direct contrast to the FBI agents’ assertions that they kept hoping Mohamud would turn his back to violence and instead choose a different option offered by the agents: Pray five times daily, get an engineering degree, fundraise for al-Qaida.

Instead, they say, he insisted on becoming “operational,” at first even asking to be a martyr before the agents talked him out of it. It was a theme that they said continued throughout the sting: Agents offered peaceful options, Mohamud repeatedly chose violence.

Even in the final minute of the final hour of the final day, parked in the train station lot, “Hussein” said Mohamud could have walked away.

“Was there any hesitation on his part?” asked prosecutor Pam Holsinger on Friday.

“None,” Hussein said.

Holsinger paused.

“If he saw (the bomb) and said he didn’t want to…” Holsinger said.

“If he did not dial the number,” the agent said, “the directive was for us to drive him home.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Defense: Would terror suspect act without FBI?

A veteran federal public defender grilled an undercover FBI agent on his motives when he posed as a member of al-Qaida and presented an Oregon teenager with options to serve as a good Muslim.

None of those options included walking away from an alleged car-bomb plot, which culminated in the arrest of terrorism suspect Mohamed Mohamud in November 2010, the defense argues. The bomb was a fake provided by the undercover agents posing as members of al-Qaida.

At Mohamud’s terrorism trial in U.S. District Court on Friday, attorney Lisa Hay found at least two examples of the agent, testifying under the pseudonym “Youssef,” giving Mohamud a list of choices. None included backing off the plot entirely, and Mohamud’s defense argues he was entrapped by the FBI.

The agent denies attempting to influence Mohamud.

In one meeting held after Mohamud allegedly picked the time and place of the purported bomb plot, the agent tried to dissuade him from choosing martyrdom, telling him he could kill himself or, preferably, get on a boat after the detonation and leave the country.

“You didn’t give him the option to go home,” Hay said. “You didn’t give him three options, did you?”

The agent responded, “We gave him outs.”

Hays pressed him. “Actually, you were trying to influence him to pick which option you wanted.”

In recordings previously aired, the agent repeatedly said that Mohamud should do “what’s in (his) heart,” a statement that Hay said could be taken several ways, depending on the tone of voice.

Remember, Hay said, Mohamud considered “Youssef” and his purported al-Qaida co-conspirator “Hussein” to be hardened terrorists who were interviewing Mohamud, then 19, about his ability to serve the cause of violent jihad against the West.

The agent said he was merely giving Mohamud “suggestions,” and wasn’t trying to say that Mohamud couldn’t leave.

The prosecution is trying to show that Mohamud was a threat to commit an act of terrorism without their intervention, and the sting operation only showed what he was capable of doing.

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Reach reporter Nigel Duara on Facebook at http://bit.ly/RSmBei

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Ore. terrorism suspect portrayed as inexperienced

A defense attorney for an Oregon terrorism suspect used her cross-examination of an FBI agent on Wednesday to raise the idea that Mohamed Mohamud was a naive, inexperienced teenager manipulated into taking part in a phony plot to detonate a bomb.

The agent, who had posed as an al-Qaida terrorist, was cross-examined by defense attorney Lisa Hay during the third day of testimony in Mohamud’s trial. He acknowledged that Mohamud had trouble with relatively simple tasks, such as renting a storage shed and buying items to be used in the making of the bomb.

The device was to be set off at a Portland Christmas tree-lighting ceremony in 2010. But it was a fake, supplied by the undercover FBI agents.

The agent, who used the pseudonym Youssef, also testified that he suggested topics for Mohamud’s so-called “goodbye video.” The video, shot at the behest of the agents, was to be shown after Mohamud committed the crime and fled the country.

The 21-year-old Mohamud is charged with attempting to ignite a weapon of mass destruction, which could put him in prison for life.

Hay said during her questioning that Mohamud “didn’t have much money until you came into his life,” and that the older undercover agents provided financial and emotional support — and food — at a time when Mohamud’s parents were separated and a close friend had gone to Afghanistan.

Youssef testified that Mohamud shed tears during their initial meeting, something the agent attributed to the teen’s loneliness because of his friend’s departure.

When the agent met Mohamud, the young man was living with his mother. Hay played wiretapped recordings in which the agent, in the attorney’s view, spoke to him like a child.

“No offense, but to us you’re a kid,” the agent said on one recording.

The agents eventually wanted Mohamud to get his own apartment because it would make the sting operation easier to facilitate. They gave him almost $3,000 to rent a place and buy bomb-making materials.

Mohamud wrote in a September 2010 email that he had never rented an apartment before and asked if they or a “brother” might co-sign.

“Kind of a clueless idea to think al-Qaida would co-sign,” Hay said. “Don’t you agree?”

The attorney also played recordings in which the agents asked Mohamud to rent a large storage shed in which to build the bomb.

Youssef testified the FBI assigned such tasks to test the Mohamud’s resolve. In this test, however, Mohamud initially didn’t understand what type of storage unit the agents wanted, and then took a month to follow through. The agent acknowledged that he and another agent had to prod Mohamud, eventually giving him the name of a storage company and driving by.

“Not much of a test if you’re pointing out the right one,” Hay said.

Under re-direct questioning by prosecutor Ethan Knight, the agent said the FBI did not have to manipulate Mohamud to get him to participate in a plot to potentially kill thousands of people.

“He knew what he wanted to do, and it was to kill Americans,” Youssef said, adding that this was: “Before I met him.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Agent: Car-bomb suspect sincere, spelled out plan

An undercover FBI agent has testified that he didn’t initially take a terrorism suspect seriously until the man began to propose specific elements of a car-bomb plot.

The agent, identified only under the pseudonym “Youssef,” testified Tuesday at a trial in federal court that he doubted the sincerity of suspect Mohamed Mohamud in initial meetings in early August 2010.

By the end of the month, however, the agent says he was convinced Mohamud was serious about carrying out a terrorism plot.

The agent says he kept close tabs on Mohamud because he was worried Mohamud would “martyr himself early.”

Mohamud was the subject of an FBI sting that ended at a Christmas tree-lighting ceremony in November 2010. Prosecutors claim Mohamud tried to detonate a bomb that was a fake provided by the FBI.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

FBI: Terrorism suspect 'radicalized and dangerous'

Justice Department attorneys focused on the contact between an Oregon terrorism-sting suspect and suspected terrorists overseas in the opening salvo of their case.

Mohamed Mohamud was 19 when he was arrested. His defense team has said the FBI entrapped him in a yearlong sting. Key to the defense is proving Mohamud had no predisposition to terrorism before the FBI got involved.

But on Monday, FBI agent Miltiadis Trousas said government agents first found Mohamud because of his emails to an American-born al-Qaida recruiter.

Trousas says other communication, including a mention of martyrdom, convinced the bureau that Mohamud as “already radicalized and dangerous.”

Mohamud faces terrorism charges after prosecutors say he tried to detonate a bomb in Portland in November 2010. The bomb was a fake supplied by the FBI.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Terrorism suspect's mindset debated at Ore. trial

There’s no dispute that a 19-year-old Muslim college student tried to set off a car bomb at Portland’s 2010 Christmas tree lighting ceremony, but how he reached that point is the crux of his trial that began in federal court this week.

A jury of seven men and nine women will decide whether this was a case of the U.S. government preventing the radicalization of a young Somali-American man, or was instead the FBI‘s coercion of an impressionable, hotheaded braggart into a plan he was otherwise incapable of carrying out.

Mohamed Mohamud‘s attorneys began to build their case during opening statements Friday, arguing that he was the victim of a sophisticated manipulation by undercover FBI agents.

“In America, we don’t create crime,” defense attorney Steve Sady said. “The FBI cannot create the very crime they intend to stop. And sometimes, it’s just a matter of going too far.”

Sady said Mohamud was an impressionable 18-year-old who talked big about carrying out terrorism plots but had neither the means nor the experience to follow through.

That changed, Sady said, when undercover FBI agents posing as jihadist co-conspirators provided Mohamud with a fake bomb in November 2010.

Prosecuting attorney Pam Holsinger said Mohamud was on the path to radicalization, and it was only the FBI‘s intervention that prevented him from committing terrorism in the U.S. or abroad.

Holsinger pointed to a picture of the estimated 25,000 people at the Christmas tree-lighting event.

“Little did they know that the defendant plotted and schemed for months to kill each and every one of them with a massive truck bomb,” Holsinger said.

Given multiple chances to reconsider, Mohamud refused, Holsinger said, intent instead on being a “soldier” in a religious and cultural war with the West.

Even prominent radical Islamic contacts in the Middle East, including the American-born Samir Khan, had to admonish Mohamud against being too violent, Holsinger said.

“Even (Khan) had to tone down the radical and violent message,” Holsinger said.

The trial continues Monday with evidence from the prosecution.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News