Albuquerque Journal

FBI: U.S. soldier arrested after pledging loyalty to IS group

Undercover officers were involved in yearlong probe

- BY AUDREY MCAVOY AND LOLITA C. BALDOR ASSOCIATED PRESS

HONOLULU — An active-duty U.S. soldier has been arrested on terrorism charges that accuse him of pledging allegiance to the Islamic State group and saying he wanted to “kill a bunch of people.”

The FBI took Sgt. 1st Class Ikaika Kang into custody over the weekend in a Honolulu suburb after a yearlong investigat­ion involving multiple undercover officers and confidenti­al informants. The 34-year-old from Hawaii made an initial appearance Monday in federal court.

Kang’s court-appointed defense attorney, Birney Bervar, said it appears his client may suffer from service-related mental health issues of which the government was aware, but neglected to treat. Bervar declined to elaborate.

He said Kang was “a decorated veteran of two deployment­s” to Iraq and Afghanista­n.

A 26-page affidavit from FBI agent Jimmy Chen filed in court Monday detailed how Kang thought he was dealing with people working for Islamic State, but who were actually undercover agents.

Paul Delacourt, the FBI agent in charge of the Hawaii bureau, told reporters the FBI believed Kang was a lone actor and not affiliated with anyone who poses a threat.

On Saturday, agents arrested him after he pledged loyalty to Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and said he wanted to “take his rifle, his magazines and kill ‘a bunch of people.’”

Kang and the agents made combat training videos he believed would be taken to the Middle East to help prepare the group’s soldiers to fight American forces, according to the affidavit. Kang had received the highest level of combat training available in the Army and was a mixed martial arts enthusiast.

Also on Saturday, Kang and an undercover agent allegedly went shopping for a drone to give to Islamic State fighters.

Kang said the drone would allow the fighters to view the battlefiel­d from above “to find tank positions and avenues for escape” from U.S. soldiers, the affidavit said. He used his debit card to pay nearly $1,400 for the drone, Go-Pro camera and related equipment. The agent paid him $700 to split the cost.

A trained air traffic controller based at Hawaii’s Wheeler Army Airfield, Kang had his military clearance revoked in 2012 for making pro-Islamic State comments while at work and on-post, and threatenin­g to hurt or kill fellow service members.

His clearance was reinstated a year later after he completed military requiremen­ts.

However, the affidavit said, the Army believed Kang was becoming radicalize­d in 2016 and asked the FBI to investigat­e.

Kang’s father told Honolulu television station KHON and the Star-Advertiser newspaper his son may have had posttrauma­tic stress disorder.

Kang has two firearms registered in his name, an AR-15-style rifle and a handgun. After the shooting last summer at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., he told a confidenti­al source that the shooter “did what he had to do” ... according to the affidavit.

The document alleges he also later told the same source that “Hitler was right” and that he believed in the mass killing of Jews.

He told the source he was angry at a civilian who had taken away his air traffic controller’s license and that he wanted to torture him, the affidavit said.

 ?? BRUCE ASATO/HONOLULU STAR-ADVERTISER ?? Clifford Kang, father of soldier Ikaika E. Kang, poses with a photo of his son in Kailua, Hawaii, on Monday.
BRUCE ASATO/HONOLULU STAR-ADVERTISER Clifford Kang, father of soldier Ikaika E. Kang, poses with a photo of his son in Kailua, Hawaii, on Monday.

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