The Borneo Post

Teen pleads guilty to IS-inspired plot to kill Pope Francis

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A New Jersey teen pleaded guilty Monday to a plot allegedly inspired by the Islamic State group to kill Pope Francis during his 2015 visit to the US.

The US Justice Department said Santos Colon, 15 years old at the time, sought to recruit a sniper to shoot the pope as he celebrated mass in Philadelph­ia on Sept 27, 2015. Colon also allegedly planned to set off explosives.

But the teen unwittingl­y recruited an undercover FBI agent for the job, and was arrested quietly 12 days before the event.

“Colon engaged someone he believed would be the sniper, but in reality was an undercover FBI employee. Colon engaged in target reconnaiss­ance with an FBI confidenti­al source and instructed the source to purchase materials to make explosive devices,” the Justice Department said in a statement.

Court documents said Colon sought to carry out the act in support of the Islamic State group and that he had used the adopted name Ahmad Shakoor.

In a plea bargain with prosecutor­s, Colon, now 17, agreed to forego trial and plead guilty as an adult to one charge of providing material support to a terror group.

With the deal, prosecutor­s dropped three other charges fi led against him as a juvenile.

Court documents said the charges were in relation to the Islamic State group, which Washington has designated a foreign terrorist organisati­on.

But there were no details on how Colon became interested in the group and if or how he communicat­ed with them.

Pope Francis celebrated mass for tens of thousands of followers in front of the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art in the historic east coast city to cap a week-long visit for the World Meeting of Families

Colon’s home is in Lindenwold, New Jersey, just east of Philadelph­ia.

Colon faces a maximum of 15 years in prison but sentencing would likely be held off until 2021 while he undergoes psychiatri­c treatment in a secure facility. — AFP

A US appeals court said on Monday it would hold a hearing in May over a Hawaii federal judge’s order that blocked President Donald Trump’s revised travel restrictio­ns on citizens from six Muslim-majority countries.

The 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals previously upheld a Seattle judge’s block of Trump’s fi rst travel order.

The appeals court did not say on Monday which three judges would preside over the latest appeal.

Trump signed the revised ban last month, in a bid to overcome legal problems with his January executive order that caused chaos at airports and sparked mass protests before its enforcemen­t was halted in February.

Trump has said the travel ban is needed for national security.

The state of Hawaii challenged the revised travel directive as unconstitu­tional religious discrimina­tion.

Hawaii and other opponents of the ban claim it is based on Trump’s election campaign promise of ‘a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the US’. — Reuters

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