Joshua Van Haften, 36, of Madison, Wisconsin, was sentenced
today to 10 years in federal prison and lifetime supervised release for
attempting to provide material support, namely himself as personnel, to the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a designated foreign terrorist
organization.
Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security Mary
B. McCord, U.S. Attorney John W. Vaudreuil of the Western District of Wisconsin
and Special Agent in Charge Justin Tolomeo of the FBI’s Milwaukee Division made
the announcement. U.S. District Judge James D. Peterson handed down the
sentence.
“With this sentence, Joshua Van Haften will be held
accountable for attempting to travel overseas to join ISIL and to provide
material support to the designated terrorist organization,” said Acting
Assistant Attorney General McCord. “The National Security Division’s highest
priority is countering terrorist threats, and we will continue to work to stem
the flow of foreign fighters abroad and bring to justice those who attempt to
provide material support to designated foreign terrorist organizations.”
“Today’s sentence reflects the gravity of the defendant’s
plan to betray the United States and to join terrorists dedicated to the murder
of innocent individuals, both in the U.S. and abroad,” said U.S. Attorney
Vaudreuil. “The U.S. Attorney’s Office and the FBI, working with our state and
local partners on the Joint Terrorism Task Force, will continue to work to
investigate, arrest, and vigorously prosecute all extremists who choose to aid
ISIL, or any other terrorist organization, and to stop them before they harm
the United States or our allies. We also remain committed to working with
dedicated community members to bring this cycle to an end.”
“I commend the efforts of the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task
Force which includes our local and state law enforcement partners who brought
the defendant to justice,” said Special Agent in Charge Tolomeo. “Protecting
Americans from terrorism remains our top priority.”
Van Haften admitted that in 2014, he attempted to provide
material support to ISIL, knowing that the organization was a designated
terrorist organization that has engaged and engages in terrorism.
According to the government’s evidence, Van Haften traveled
to Turkey in 2014 and attempted to cross into Syria. He posted online that he
had taken an oath of allegiance to the leader of ISIL, and that “The only thing
that matters to me is joining my brothers for the war against America [sic] liars.”
In addition to traveling to Turkey in an attempt to fight
with ISIL, Van Haften tried to assist another American, Leon Davis, in joining
ISIL. He attempted to meet Davis in Istanbul upon Davis’s arrival – actually
waiting for Davis at a bus stop in Istanbul – and planned to travel with Davis
to Syria to join and fight with ISIL.
Leon Davis, of Augusta, Georgia, was sentenced to 15 years
in federal prison in July 2015, following his conviction in the Southern
District of Georgia for attempting to provide material support to a designated
foreign terrorist organization, namely ISIL.
Van Haften was arrested at O’Hare Airport in Chicago,
Illinois in April 2015, after his arrival in custody on an international flight
from Turkey. He has been held in federal custody since his arrest.
The charge against Van Haften is the result of an investigation
by members of the FBI-Joint Terrorism Task Force which include the FBI; the
Wisconsin Department of Justice, Division of Criminal Investigation; the Dane
County Sheriff’s Office in Wisconsin; and the University of Wisconsin Police
Department. Assistance was also provided by the Department of Homeland
Security.
The case was prosecuted by First Assistant U.S. Attorney
Jeffrey Anderson for the Western District of Wisconsin and Trial Attorney
Lolita Lukose of the National Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section.
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