Michael Todd Wolfe aka Faruq, 24, of Austin, Texas, was
sentenced this afternoon by U.S. District Court Judge Sam Sparks of the Western
District of Texas to serve 82 months in federal prison for attempting to
provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization,
announced Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Carlin, Acting
U.S. Attorney Richard L. Durbin Jr. for the Western District of Texas and
Special Agent in Charge Christopher Combs of the FBI’s San Antonio Division.
In June 2014, Wolfe pleaded guilty to the charge, admitting
that from August 2013 to June 17, 2014, he planned to travel to the Middle East
to provide material support to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
(ISIL). Wolfe previously acknowledged
that he applied for and acquired a U.S. passport, participated in physical
fitness training, practiced military maneuvers and made efforts to conceal his
communications about his plans to travel overseas to engage in violent jihad. Wolfe also purchased airline tickets so that
he could travel to Europe to meet an FBI undercover employee, whom the
defendant then believed would facilitate travel to Syria through Turkey. In furtherance of his attempt to provide
material support to ISIL, Wolfe travelled to Houston and was apprehended on
June 17, 2014, on the jet-way, as he attempted to board a flight to Toronto,
Canada. His ticketed itinerary had him
traveling through Iceland and arriving in Copenhagen, Denmark, on June 18,
2014. He then planned to make his way to
Syria to join with ISIL and engage in the armed conflict. Wolfe has remained in federal custody since
his arrest.
The case was investigated by the agencies comprising the
Central Texas JTTF, which include the FBI; Internal Revenue Service-Criminal
Investigation; U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services; U.S. Army
Intelligence; Austin Police Department; Round Rock, Texas, Police Department;
Killeen, Texas, Police Department; University of Texas Police Department;
Travis County, Texas Sheriff's Office; Texas Department of Public Safety,
Office of the Texas Attorney General and the Texas Alcoholic Beverage
Commission.
The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Gregg N.
Sofer and Michael Galdo of the Western District of Texas, and Trial Attorneys
Josh Parecki and Michael Dittoe of the National Security Division’s
Counterterrorism Section.
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