A Starkville, Mississippi, couple was arrested over the
weekend for allegedly conspiring and attempting to provide material support to
the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a designated foreign terrorist
organization.
The announcement was made by Assistant Attorney General for
National Security John P. Carlin, U.S. Attorney Felicia C. Adams of the
Northern District of Mississippi and Special Agent in Charge Donald Alway of
the FBI’s Jackson Division.
Jaelyn Delshaun Young, 20, and Muhammad Oda Dakhlalla, 22,
were charged by criminal complaint with conspiring and attempting to provide
material support to ISIL. They appeared
this morning for preliminary and detention hearings before U.S. Magistrate
Judge S. Allan Alexander of the Northern District of Mississippi. Young and Dakhlalla were denied bond and
remanded to the custody of the U.S. Marshal Service.
According to the criminal complaint filed in this case:
This investigation began in May 2015, when the defendant
expressed a desire to travel to Syria in support of ISIL, and made several
supportive statements about the designated foreign terrorist organization. Both defendants subsequently expressed their
readiness to travel overseas to join ISIL.
The defendants procured passports and made arrangements to
fly to Istanbul via Amsterdam. On or
about Aug. 8, 2015, Young and Dakhlalla travelled to the Golden Triangle
Regional Airport in Columbus, Mississippi, for their international flight. The defendants were arrested and, according
to the complaint, were interviewed and both confessed to attempting to travel
to Turkey to join ISIL in Syria.
The charge in the complaint carries a maximum of potential
penalty of 20 years in prison and a fine of $250,000.
The case is being investigated by the FBI Jackson’s Joint
Terrorism Task Force. The case is being
prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Clayton Joyner and Robert Norman of the
Northern District of Mississippi and Trial Attorney Rebecca Magnone of the
National Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section.
The charge and allegations contained in the complaint are
merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until
proven guilty.
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