Los Angeles Times

Man in terrorist case gets 30 years

- By Cindy Carcamo cindy.carcamo@latimes.com Times staff writer Richard Winton contribute­d to this report.

The judge was not sure whether Mahanad Badawi had been actively recruiting for Islamic State.

The 24-year-old Anaheim man had been convicted by a federal jury in June of conspiring to help the terrorist group in Iraq and Syria. Badawi had used his debit card to purchase a one-way ticket so that a friend, Nader Elhuzayel, could board a plane to the Middle East to join Islamic State.

On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge David O. Carter asked to listen to audiotapes of Badawi in which he seemed to be trying to entice other men from a local mosque. After listening to the recordings, and a fiveminute recess, Carter said he was convinced.

“I believe you’re radicalize­d. I believe you’re a recruiter and I believe you’re dangerous,” the judge told Badawi, who did not appear to betray emotion.

The judge sentenced Badawi to 30 years in prison — the same sentence Elhuzayel got after being found guilty of the same charge. After the sentencing, Badawi’s mother, Samia Suliman, was embraced by family members and friends as she sobbed.

Badawi had purchased a ticket for Elhuzayel to fly from Los Angeles to Tel Aviv. While Carter initially admitted feeling torn about the sentence he would give Badawi, he said he believed Elhuzayel was “beyond redemption.”

Kate Corrigan, Badawi’s attorney, argued that her client was not an Islamic State recruiter. If that were the case, she stated, federal officials would have had secured multiple indictment­s of the people he had allegedly recruited.

But for Carter, the audiotapes clinched the sentence he would hand down.

Badawi and Elhuzayel were convicted after a twoweek trial that detailed their efforts to join the terrorist group, including their recorded pledges to “fight for the cause of Allah and to die in the battlefiel­d,” according to court documents.

The pair were arrested May 21, 2015. Agents from a counterter­rorism task force intercepte­d and detained Elhuzayel at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport before he boarded a plane bound for Israel. Badawi was arrested at an Anaheim gas station.

Agents began monitoring the men after seeing their inflammato­ry remarks on social media. Scrutiny of the men intensifie­d in April and May of 2015 as agents eavesdropp­ed on their phone calls and surveillan­ce teams tracked their movements.

Elhuzayel was found guilty of attempting to provide material support to Islamic State, and Badawi was convicted of aiding and abetting the attempt to provide material support. In September, Elhuzayel was sentenced to 30 years in prison.

Corrigan argued that a sentence of more than 15 years for Badawi would be excessive. She said that the sentencing guidelines had resulted in an “outrageous” punishment and that the terrorists had already won because people’s rights to fair sentencing were being trampled on.

She said such sentences were normally reserved for criminals who have been in prison several times for felony conviction­s.

“My client has no evidence of even a parking ticket. He’s not a career offender,” she said.

Badawi’s family was stunned. They had expected a more lenient sentence, his older brother said.

Mohamed Badawi didn’t want to elaborate anymore on Wednesday, but did say in an earlier interview that his brother was naive and had a “misguided friendship.”

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