Lawal Olaniyi Babafemi, 35, a Nigerian citizen, was
sentenced today to 22 years in prison for conspiring to provide and providing
material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization, al-Qaeda in
the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). The
sentence was imposed by the U.S. District Judge John Gleeson of the Eastern
District of New York.
Assistant Attorney General for National Security John P.
Carlin, Acting U.S. Attorney Kelly T. Currie of the Eastern District of New
York, Assistant Director in Charge Diego G. Rodriguez of the FBI New York Field
Office and Commissioner William J. Bratton of the New York City Police
Department (NYPD) made the announcement.
Babafemi pleaded guilty to providing and conspiring to
provide material support to AQAP on April 29, 2014. According to previous court filings, between
approximately January 2010 and August 2011, the defendant traveled twice from
Nigeria to Yemen to meet and train with leaders of AQAP, the Yemen-based branch
of al-Qaeda that has been linked to a number of plots targeting the U.S. homeland
over the past decade. AQAP leaders
trained Babafemi in the use of weapons, including AK-47 assault rifles, and
taught him the importance of AQAP’s English-language media operations to its
mission of inspiring “lone-wolf” style attacks abroad in the name of AQAP. Babafemi assisted in AQAP’s English-language
media operations, which include the publication of the online Inspire Magazine,
and worked closely with Samir Khan, the founder of Inspire and a U.S. citizen. Babafemi’s photograph, alongside Khan and
other AQAP members, each holding an AK-47, was published in Issue 5 of Inspire;
he also wrote rap lyrics on behalf of the group, hoping to extend its appeal to
young Westerners. At the direction of
the now-deceased senior AQAP leader Anwar al-Aulaqi, AQAP provided Babafemi
with the equivalent of almost $9,000 in cash to recruit other English-speakers
from Nigeria to join the terrorist organization. Babafemi attempted to recruit other Nigerians
to join AQAP, but was arrested before he could complete that mission and
conduct further activities on behalf of the organization.
“With this sentence, Lawal Olaniyi Babafemi is being held
accountable for conspiring with members of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
and providing material support to the foreign terrorist organization,” said
Assistant Attorney General Carlin.
“Babafemi travelled to Yemen to receive weapons training and to learn
how to contribute to AQAP’s English-language media operation, in addition to
receiving money to recruit others to join AQAP’s ranks. Counterterrorism is the National Security
Division’s highest priority and we will continue our efforts to detect, deter
and hold accountable those who provide material support to designated foreign
terrorist organizations.”
“The defendant traveled to Yemen twice to seek out and
commit himself to the radical terrorist organization AQAP and its goal of
causing mass devastation in the West,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Currie. “He undertook his journey soon after his
fellow countryman’s notorious, albeit failed, attempt on behalf of AQAP to
detonate a bomb concealed in his underwear in U.S. airspace. Babafemi received weapons training and worked
with AQAP’s English-language media organization to recruit Westerners to its
murderous mission. The investigation,
prosecution, and conviction of Babafemi exemplifies the tireless efforts of the
FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Forces in New York and San Diego to identify and
bring to justice those intent on joining and supporting violent terrorist
organizations around the globe. This
case is especially important as it relates to efforts to prosecute individuals
who both engage in physical violence themselves and who create and disseminate
violent terrorist propaganda worldwide in an effort to convince others to do
so.”
The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Zainab Ahmad and Hilary Jager of the Eastern District of New York, with
assistance from Trial Attorney Annamartine Salick of the Justice Department’s
Counterterrorism Section.
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