National Post (National Edition)

U.S. prosecutor­s seek life term for Canadian plotter

- The Canadian Press

citizen who emigrated from Kuwait as a child, spent several months in treatment at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto in 2014, court documents show.

In a handwritte­n letter submitted to the court on March 2, El Bahnasawy apologized for his behaviour and asked for a “second chance,” recounting his years of substance abuse, mental health issues and multiple suicide attempts.

“I want to experience life away from drugs and away from war and violence,” he wrote. “I want a stable life asserted instabilit­ies and addictive tendencies only further underscore the need for a sentence of life imprisonme­nt to protect the public from a future attack or other criminal conduct by El Bahnasawy,” Berman said.

Since being incarcerat­ed in a New York correction­s facility, El Bahnasawy has used opioids and marijuana multiple times, and “marked the walls of his prison cell with images and statements expressing his support for ISIS and terrorist attacks, and warning that more attacks were to come,” Berman said in his submission.

One photo of El Bahnasawy’s cell walls submitted to court shows a scrawled list of high-profile terror attacks, including 9/11 and the Boston Marathon bombing, encircled by what appears to be a heart and the words, “and more coming.”

El Bahnasawy began communicat­ing online with Islamic State followers in 2015, Berman said in his submission.

In 2016, at the request of a high-ranking member of the terror organizati­on, El Bahnasawy began planning a suicide attack on New York that was to include the detonation of improvised explosive devices at Times Square and in subways, and mass shootings at concert venues, court documents show.

El Bahnasawy recruited other purported Islamic State sympathize­rs to help co-ordinate and carry out the attacks, including one man who, unbeknowns­t to him, was an undercover FBI agent.

On May 21, 2016, under the guise of taking a family vacation, El Bahnasawy, then 18, drove to Cranford, N.J., with his parents and sisters to set the attack in motion, unaware that he was being heavily monitored by U.S. law enforcemen­t.

He was arrested by the FBI upon his arrival.

El Bahnasawy pleaded guilty to multiple offences that included conspiracy to use weapons of mass destructio­n, conspiracy to commit acts of terrorism transcendi­ng national boundaries, conspiracy to bomb a public place and public transporta­tions system and providing and attempting to provide material support.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada