Houston Chronicle Sunday

Ohio St. attack could be latest with terror ties

Series of cases in heartland state involve young men

- By John Seewer and Dan Sewell

CINCINNATI — Authoritie­s are investigat­ing terrorism as a possible motive in the car-and-knife attack on the Ohio State University campus, the latest in a series of cases involving young men who apparently became radicalize­d in the heartland state.

They are still piecing together informatio­n on the activities of Abdul Razak Ali Artan, the Ohio State student killed Nov. 28 by a police officer after he ran his car into others and began slashing with a butcher knife. Among other recent cases that left people close to the suspects stunned, one man has been sentenced to 20 years in prison, another will be sentenced Monday and another was arrested last month.

Their cases have similariti­es but difference­s that underscore the challenges to understand­ing what causes someone to embrace Islamic State calls to violence and how to spot homegrown terrorists.

Christophe­r Lee Cornell, 22, faces sentencing Monday for a plot to assault the U.S. Capitol in support of the Islamic State group. Munir Abdulkader, 22, of the Cincinnati suburb of West Chester Township, was sentenced Nov. 23 to 20 years for an ISIS-involved plot to kill a military veteran and attack a police station.

In Columbus, Aaron T. Daniels, 20, was arrested in early November at the airport on his way, authoritie­s said, to fly to Libya to fight for the Islamic State. The alleged plots

Cornell wanted to go into the Capitol building during President Barack Obama’s 2015 State of the Union address and shoot the president and others including members of Congress, according to court documents.

Abdulkader wanted to behead a military veteran while taping for a propaganda video, then storm a police station with guns and Molotov cocktails.

Daniels planned to go to Libya to fight to help establish an Islamic State caliphate there, prosecutor­s have said.

Artan reportedly posted on Facebook about the treatment of Muslims, such as the killing of minority Muslims in the southeast Asian nation of Myanmar, and warning that the United States should leave their countries alone.

Investigat­ors say they haven’t yet found any direct connection to the Islamic State extremists.

Cornell’s attorneys say he self-radicalize­d and lived a fantasy life on his computer, reading ISIS propaganda and conspiracy theories online. They say he was steered in his violent plotting by an FBI confidenti­al informant.

Abdulkader began posting messages of support for extremists on social media in 2014, and communicat­ed with Junaid Hussain, an ISIS recruiter reported killed last year in Syria in a U.S. drone strike. Authoritie­s say Hussain helped him develop his plot, although his attorney also blamed an FBI confidenti­al informant for pushing him. ‘I’m a Muslim’

Daniels began in 2015 posting social media messages in support of jihad and insurgency in Afghanista­n and against Russian-Iranian involvemen­t in Syria, federal authoritie­s said. They said Daniels was encouraged by an Islamic State recruiter, Abu Isa Al-Amriki, who was killed in May by an airstrike in Syria. An undercover agent helped intercept Daniels, authoritie­s said.

Artan told the OSU student newspaper The Lantern at the start of the school year that he was concerned about potential reactions to praying in public.

“I’m a Muslim; it’s not what the media portrays me to be,” he said. Neighbors described him as friendly.

Cornell’s attorneys say he was lonely and depressed, immature and had mental issues that might have caused him to distort reality.

Abdulkader’s defense said he was thoughtful, but quiet and shy, with a limited network of social influences.

Daniels’ mother said her son was hearing voices and told her that co-workers were calling him the devil in Arabic, according to the court filings. His attorneys are seeking courtappro­ved mental health counseling and treatment.

 ??  ?? Artan
Artan
 ??  ?? Abdulkader
Abdulkader
 ??  ?? Daniels
Daniels
 ??  ?? Cornell
Cornell

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