Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Canadian man pleads guilty to U.S. terror charges

- By Tom Hays

A Canadian man pleaded guilty Tuesday to U.S. charges that he sent money and provided longdistan­ce support to Tunisian jihadists believed responsibl­e for a 2009 suicide attack in Iraq that killed five American soldiers. The deal could spare him a term of life behind bars.

Faruq Khalil Muhammad ‘Isa entered the plea in federal court in Brooklyn 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 that 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.”

Defense attorney 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, Alberta, 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 explosives-laden 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 paperwork said. The documents allege he correspond­ed with “facilitato­rs” who were trying to get the attackers into Iraq, and wired one of them $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.

No sentencing date was set.

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