Edmonton Journal

City man pleads guilty to terror charges in U.S.

- The Associated Press with files from Postmedia News

An Edmonton man NEW YORK pleaded guilty Tuesday to U.S. charges that he sent money and provided long-distance support to Tunisian jihadists believed responsibl­e for a 2009 suicide attack in Iraq that killed five American soldiers.

Faruq Khalil Muhammad ’Isa entered the plea in federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y., for a murder conspiracy charge that carried a maximum life sentence.

He instead faces a 26-year prison term followed by deportatio­n as part of the deal, which a judge still must sign off on.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Peter Baldwin told the judge that prosecutor­s met in person with the families of each of the victims before agreeing to a sentence the government believes “will serve to punish (the defendant) and deter others, while also requiring the defendant to admit his participat­ion in these heinous acts.”

Defence lawyer Mildred Whalen said in a statement: “We are mindful of how difficult this case is for so many, but think that the proposed plea agreement would be an appropriat­e resolution of the case.”

Muhammad ’Isa, 50, is a Canadian citizen and Iraqi national who was arrested in 2011 on a U.S. warrant after an investigat­ion by authoritie­s in New York, Canada and Tunisia. He was held in Edmonton until he lost an extraditio­n fight in 2015.

An extraditio­n request cited wiretap evidence and an interview of Muhammad ’Isa that U.S. authoritie­s claim linked him to the terror network that used a suicide bomber to detonate an explosives­laden truck outside the gate of the U.S. base in Mosul, Iraq, on April 10, 2009, killing the soldiers.

During the interview, Muhammad ’Isa admitted he correspond­ed by email with two of the jihadists while they were in Syria, and that they were on a mission to kill Americans, the document said.

The documents allege he correspond­ed with “facilitato­rs” who were trying to get the attackers into Iraq, and wired one of them US$700.

U.S. authoritie­s alleged that the day after the attack on the U.S. base, Muhammad ’Isa asked in an electronic communicat­ion, “Did you hear about the huge incident yesterday? Is it known?” He also identified the bomber as “one of the Tunisian brothers,” to which a facilitato­r responded, “Praise God.”

Muhammad ’Isa told investigat­ors in the interview that by “huge incident” he meant an explosion, the papers said.

The former constructi­on worker was arrested on Jan. 19, 2011, by RCMP at an Edmonton apartment near 132 Avenue and 82 Street, a residence he shared with his common-law spouse, Cara Rain, and her four children.

But the investigat­ion started long before then.

According to documents filed in a U.S. court, a Canadian court authorized wiretaps and search warrants to allow police to monitor the suspect’s telephone, computer and internet and email accounts back in 2009. Between 20 and 25 RCMP employees within its national security enforcemen­t section in Edmonton worked daily on “Project Semolina,” which was the randomly assigned name of the lengthy investigat­ion.

Muhammad ’Isa, whose aliases including Sayfildin Tahir Sharif and Tahir Sharif Sayfildin, moved to Canada in 1993.

No sentencing date was set.

 ??  ?? Faruq Khalil Muhammad ’Isa
Faruq Khalil Muhammad ’Isa

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