The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Phoenix man gets 30 years for helping plot attack

His 2 friends were killed in 2015 shootout in Texas.

- By Jacques Billeard

PHOENIX — A man was sentenced to 30 years in prison Wednesday on charges that he provided support to the Islamic State group by helping two followers with an attempted attack on an anti-Islam event in Texas that resulted in a deadly shootout with police.

Prosecutor­s were seeking a 50-year sentence for Abdul Malik Abdul Kareem, an American-born Muslim convert who became the second person in the U.S. to be convicted of charges of supporting Islamic State. He was convicted of conspiring to support a foreign terrorist organizati­on, interstate transporta­tion of firearms and other charges.

His friends, Elton Simpson and Nadir Soofi, were the only ones killed in a May 2015 shootout outside a Prophet Muhammad cartoon-drawing contest in Garland, Texas. A security guard was wounded, but no one else was injured. The contest featured cartoons that are offensive to Muslims.

Authoritie­s have said Kareem watched videos depicting violence by jihadists with Simpson and Soofi and encouraged them to launch the attack to support the Islamic State. They said he also researched travel to the Middle East to join Islamic State fighters.

“He knew what Mr. Simpson and Soofi intended to do,” said U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton.

Kareem kept his head down as the sentence was announced.

“I had nothing to do with this crime,” he told the judge.

Bruce Joiner, the security guard who was shot in the leg during the attack, told the judge that the shooting has caused him anxiety. He said Kareem made people fearful and disagrees with the American notion of freedom of religion.

But Joiner, who invoked his Christian faith, said he believes Kareem still has worth as a person.

“I offer my forgivenes­s,” he said.

Kareem’s attorney, Daniel Maynard, acknowledg­ed that his client associated with people who had radical political views, but underscore­d that Kareem was in Arizona at the time of the attack.

Prosecutor Kristen Brook said Kareem played an active role in assisting in an attempted mass murder.

“The offense was ideologica­lly fueled hatred,” Brook said

She said Kareem had expressed his desire to strap a bomb on his body to kill nonbelieve­rs. Brook also said he celebrated the 2015 attack on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in what extremists said was retaliatio­n for the publicatio­n of cartoons about the Prophet Muhammad.

Authoritie­s said that in addition, Kareem inquired about acquiring explosives to blow up the Arizona stadium where the 2015 Super Bowl was held. They said he set his sights on the cartoon contest after that plan fell through.

Kareem testified that he didn’t know his friends were going to attack the contest and didn’t find out about the shooting until after Simpson and Soofi were killed.

Kareem told jurors at his trial last year that he strongly disapprove­d the use of his laptop by Simpson to watch al-Qaida promotiona­l materials.

 ?? BRANDON WADE / AP FILE ?? FBI crime scene investigat­ors document evidence outside the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas, after a deadly shootout at an anti-Islam event there in May 2015. Two attackers were killed.
BRANDON WADE / AP FILE FBI crime scene investigat­ors document evidence outside the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas, after a deadly shootout at an anti-Islam event there in May 2015. Two attackers were killed.
 ??  ?? Abdul Malik Abdul Kareem was sentenced to 30 years in prison for his role in a 2015 attack on an antiIslam event in Texas.
Abdul Malik Abdul Kareem was sentenced to 30 years in prison for his role in a 2015 attack on an antiIslam event in Texas.

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