Lionel Williams, 27, of Suffolk, Va., pleaded guilty today
to attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State of Iraq and
al-Sham (ISIS), a designated foreign terrorist organization.
Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security and
U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia Dana J. Boente; Special
Agent in Charge Martin Culbreth of the FBI’s Norfolk Field Office; and Chief
Thomas E. Bennett of Suffolk Police, made the announcement after U.S. District
Judge Arenda Wright Allen accepted the plea.
According to the statement of facts filed with the plea
agreement, Williams attempted to send money to a person he believed was an ISIS
financier on two occasions, believing the money would be used to kill. In court
documents, Williams admitted his interest in ISIS began in 2014. On Dec. 3,
2015, the day after the San Bernardino terrorist attack, he bought an AK-47
assault rifle. In March 2016, he publicly declared his support for ISIS on
social media, described his hope that ISIS would take over the U.S., and stated
he would decapitate any law enforcement agents he caught surveilling him. After
donating money to an individual he believed to be an ISIS financier - but was
actually a persona adopted by an FBI employee - Williams was told his donation
had helped purchase a rocket-propelled grenade. He responded with an Arabic
phrase meaning, “Praise be to Allah, and Allah is the Greatest.” Later in 2016,
Williams began discussing plans for a martyrdom operation with a woman living
outside the U.S. He asked an FBI confidential source to send him specific types
of AK-47 ammunition and told an FBI employee that his plan was for a “local”
operation. Williams was arrested and charged shortly thereafter. After his
arrest, he told agents he supported ISIS and believed he was part of a “holy
war.”
As part of the plea agreement, Williams agreed that he will
receive the statutory maximum of 20 years in prison when sentenced on December
20.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Joseph E. DePadilla and Andrew C.
Bosse, and Trial Attorneys Alicia H. Cook and Joshua D. Champagne of the
National Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section are prosecuting the case.
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