John T. Booker Jr., 22, of Topeka, Kan., was sentenced today
to 30 years in prison for attempting to detonate a vehicle bomb on the Fort
Riley military base in Manhattan, Kan. On Feb. 3, 2016, Booker pleaded guilty
to one count of attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction and one count of
attempted destruction of government property by fire or explosion.
Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security Dana
J. Boente, U.S. Attorney Tom Beall of the District of Kansas and Special Agent
in Charge Darrin E. Jones of the FBI’s sKansas City Division made the
announcement.
“With this sentence, John Booker is being held accountable
for his plan to kill U.S. military personnel on American soil in the name of
ISIS,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Boente. “The National Security
Division’s highest priority is countering terrorist threats and protecting
American lives by bringing to justice those who plot to attack us. I want to
thank the many agents, analysts, and prosecutors who made this result
possible.”
“Violent extremism is
a threat to America and all its people,” Acting U.S. Attorney Beall said. “Our
goal is to prevent violent extremists and their supporters from inspiring,
financing or carrying out acts of violence.”
“The investigation leading to today's sentencing illustrates
the FBI's commitment to disrupting acts of terrorism,” said Special Agent in
Charge Jones. “If Mr. Booker had been successful in detonating a car bomb, the
results could have been dozens, if not hundreds, of casualties. The FBI and our
law enforcement partners remain committed to protecting the citizens of the
United States and thwarting acts of terrorism.”
In his guilty plea, Booker admitted he intended to kill
American soldiers and to assist ISIS’s (Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham)
fight against the U.S. His plan called for constructing a bomb containing 1,000
pounds of ammonium nitrate. Booker intended to trigger the bomb himself and die
in the process, and filmed a video he intended Americans to see after his
death.
“You sit in your homes and think this war is just over in
Iraq,” Booker said in the video. “Today we will bring the Islamic State
straight to your doorstep.”
Unbeknownst to Booker, the bomb that he constructed was made
with inert materials, and the two men working with him were undercover
informants for the FBI.
The FBI began investigating Booker in March 2014 after he
posted on his Facebook page that he wanted to commit jihad. Booker admitted
that he tried to enlist in the U.S. Army in order to commit an insider attack
against American soldiers like the one at Fort Hood in Texas, but his deadly
plans were thwarted when he was denied entry into the Army. In October 2014,
Booker began communicating with an undercover FBI informant. He told the
undercover FBI informant that he dreamed of being a fighter in the Middle East,
and proposed capturing and killing an American soldier.
In March 2015, Booker was introduced to another FBI
informant who he believed would help him plan an attack. Booker said he wanted
to detonate a suicide bomb because he couldn’t be captured, all the evidence
would be destroyed, and he would be guaranteed to hit his target. On March 10,
2015, Booker made a video filmed at Freedom Park near Marshall Army Airfield at
Fort Riley in which he pledged allegiance to Abu Bakr al Baghdadi, the leader
of ISIS. That month, he rented a storage unit in Topeka where the bomb would be
assembled.
On April 10, 2015, Booker and the informants drove to an
area near Fort Riley that Booker believed to be a little-used utility gate
where they could enter Fort Riley undetected. He was arrested when he made the
final connections on the device that he believed would arm the bomb.
Mr. Boente and Mr. Beall commended the FBI Joint Terrorism
Task Force for their investigation of this case. They also thanked Assistant
Trial Attorneys Josh Parecki and Rebecca Magnone of the National Security
Division’s Counterterrorism Section, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Tony Mattivi
of the District of Kansas, who prosecuted this case.