Assistant Attorney General for National Security John P.
Carlin, U.S Attorney Stephanie Yonekura of the Central District of California
and Assistant Director in Charge David Bowdich of the FBI's Los Angeles Field
Office announced today that two men with ties to the Inland Empire region of
California were each sentenced today to 300 months in federal prison for
participating in plots to provide material support to terrorists and to kill
American personnel.
The two men sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Virginia
A. Phillips are Sohiel Omar Kabir, 37, a naturalized U.S. citizen who was born
in Afghanistan and who until late 2011, resided in Pomona, California; and
Ralph Deleon, 26, of Ontario, a lawful permanent resident and citizen of the
Philippines.
Last summer, Kabir and Deleon were convicted by a federal
jury for their role in a plot to travel overseas to fight against U.S. and
allied forces in Afghanistan and elsewhere.
Specifically, the jury convicted Kabir and Deleon of conspiring to
provide material support to terrorists and conspiring to murder United States
military and government personnel. The
jury also found Kabir guilty of conspiring to provide material support to a
designated foreign terrorist organization, namely Al-Qa’ida, and conspiring to
receive military-type training from Al-Qa’ida.
In addition, the jury convicted defendant Deleon of conspiring to murder,
maim, or kindap overseas.
Two other defendants who were indicted in the case in 2012 –
Miguel Alejandro Santana Vidriales and Arifeen David Gojali – previously
pleaded guilty and are scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Phillips on March 16,
2015.
“This case demonstrates the need for vigilance and swift
action to counter the false allure of violent extremism,” said U.S. Attorney
Yonekura. “When confronted with young
Americans who succumbed to the empty promises of violent extremism and sought
to assist a terrorist group in killing American soldiers abroad, law
enforcement acted swiftly to eliminate the threat.”
“The defendants betrayed the citizens of the United States
by supporting terror and conspiring to murder military members serving
overseas” said Assistant Director in Charge Bowdich. “The lengthy prison sentences handed to Mr.
Kabir and Mr. DeLeon should send a clear message to those who support terror
groups that the FBI and our partners are committed to preventing deadly plots
hatched either at home or abroad targeting the United States.”
The evidence presented during last year’s trial showed Kabir
introduced Deleon and Santana to radical Islamic ideology in 2010. Kabir left the United States in the final
days of 2011, arriving in Afghanistan in July 2012. While in Afghanistan, Kabir continued to
communicate with Deleon and others, encouraging them to join him in
Afghanistan. Kabir told the group that he had contacts with terrorist
organizations and that, when they arrived, he and the group would join “the
Students” – referring to the Taliban – and later “the Professors” – referring
to Al-Qa’ida.
Deleon, Kabir, and others involved in the plot were heavily
influenced by the doctrine of now-deceased Al-Qa’ida in the Arabian Peninsula
spokesman Anwar Al-Awlaki and other advocates of violent jihad, whose teachings
they frequently invoked during their planning and preparation in this case.
In September 2012, Deleon recruited Gojali to join the plot
to travel overseas to engage in violent jihad.
As part of their planning and preparation, Deleon led Santana and Gojali
in training activities in southern California, including participating in paintball
activities and traveling to firearms ranges to fire AK-47s and other assault
weapons, which they expected to use in future fighting.
The men made plans to rejoin Kabir, who had relocated to
Kabul, Afghanistan. In effort to avoid
detection by law enforcement, Deleon and the others planned to cross the border
into Mexico by land and from there to travel to the Middle East by air. In November 2012, Deleon purchased airline
tickets for the group. On Nov. 16, 2012,
the FBI arrested Deleon, Santana, and Gojali as they departed a Chino apartment
in a car driven by one of Deleon’s associates intending to drive to
Mexico. Kabir was taken into custody by
American military personnel in Afghanistan.
The investigation into this terrorism scheme was conducted
by the Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) in Riverside, California. The Riverside JTTF is comprised of members
from the following agencies: Riverside County Sheriff’s Office; Riverside
Police Department; San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department; Beaumont Police
Department; Ontario Police Department; U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations; the U.S. Attorney’s Office; and
the FBI.
The case was prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Annamartine
Salick and Josh Parecki of the Justice Department’s National Security Division,
and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Allen W. Chiu, Christopher D. Grigg and Susan J.
DeWitt of the Central District of California.
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