An indictment was unsealed today charging Mirsad Kandic, 36,
a legal permanent resident of the United States who left the United States in
2013, with one count of conspiring to provide material support and resources to
the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), a designated foreign terrorist
organization, resulting in death, and five counts of providing and attempting
to provide material support and resources to ISIS, including personnel,
equipment and false documentation and identification, including one count
resulting in death. The defendant was
extradited to the United States from Bosnia and Herzegovina yesterday and is
scheduled to be arraigned at 2:00 p.m. before U.S. District Judge Nicholas G.
Garaufis at the federal courthouse in Brooklyn, New York.
Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security Dana
J. Boente, Acting U.S. Attorney Bridget M. Rohde for the Eastern District of
New York, Assistant Director in Charge William F. Sweeney, Jr., of the FBI’s
New York Field Office and Commissioner James P. O’Neill of the NYPD announced
the extradition and charges.
“As part of his support for ISIS, the defendant traveled
overseas and, while abroad, recruited and facilitated the travel of foreign
fighters to join the terrorist organization,” said Acting Assistant Attorney
General Boente. “The National Security
Division will continue to use all its tools to disrupt the flow of foreign
fighters and bring to justice those who provide material support to foreign
terrorist organizations.”
“As alleged, defendant Kandic abandoned the United States,
his adopted country, and joined ISIS, a violent terrorist organization opposed
to the U.S. and its interests,” stated Acting U.S. Attorney Bridget M.
Rohde. “From Turkey, he proceeded to
recruit others to join ISIS, swelling their ranks and helping them commit
terrorist acts such as suicide bombings.
Together with our law enforcement partners, we will continue to
prosecute ISIS members, as well as other terrorists, to the fullest extent of
the law.” Ms. Rohde thanked the
authorities of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the FBI Legal Attaché’s Office in
Sarajevo, and the Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs, for
their assistance in the investigation and effecting the defendant’s
extradition.
“As alleged, at the same time Kandic lived freely among us
in New York, he expressed a desire to travel overseas to kill or maim U.S.
military forces,” stated Assistant Director in Charge Sweeney. “Kandic eventually put his desire in action
when he traveled to Turkey to join ISIS, and from there he set about recruiting
others, including Jake Bilardi, to support his cause. Just prior to Bilardi successfully detonating
a suicide bomb in Ramadi, Kandic told Bilardi he hoped Bilardi’s victims’
organs would ‘implode,’ and just after the attack, Kandic publicized it on
Twitter. Kandic is now back in New York,
no longer living freely among us, but rather in federal custody to face
justice. ”
As alleged in the indictment and other court filings, prior
to November 2013, while living in the Bronx and Brooklyn, Kandic expressed the
desire to travel overseas to engage in “jihad” against U.S. military forces to
obtain martyrdom. In December 2013,
Kandic traveled to Istanbul, Turkey, and joined ISIS. From there, Kandic recruited individuals from
the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia and elsewhere, to travel to
ISIS-controlled territory in Syria and Iraq and serve as foreign fighters. In online communications with an associate, Kandic
stated he worked in ISIS’s Border Office in Turkey and was part of a team that
conducted background checks of foreign fighters seeking to join ISIS in
Syria. Kandic told associates that he
traveled to and from ISIS-controlled territory, including Raqqa, Syria, in
connection with his work with ISIS. In a
recorded voice memo from Kandic to an associate, Kandic stated, “I have a lot
of Mujahideen in Europe, a lot,” and “I sent out over 20,000 brothers . . . to
Sham.” “Mujahideen” refers to
fighters. “Sham” is frequently used by
ISIS members to refer to the region of the Levant, including Syria.
One of the individuals Kandic assisted was Jake Bilardi, an
18-year-old Australian citizen who traveled from Melbourne, Australia, to
Istanbul, Turkey, in August 2014. A few
days before Bilardi flew to Turkey, Kandic sent Twitter messages instructing
Bilardi to stand in a particular section of an airport in Istanbul. Kandic informed Bilardi that he would send
someone to meet him there. From Turkey,
Bilardi traveled to ISIS-controlled territory in Syria and Iraq. Kandic continued to communicate with Bilardi
and encouraged him to follow through with his plan to commit a suicide attack
in Iraq. In early March 2015, Bilardi
informed Kandic via Twitter that he “just went to look at my target today for
my operation.” Kandic replied, “May
Allah reward you immensely.” Kandic
later added: “May Allah make there [sic] inner organs implode.” On March 11, 2015, Bilardi committed a
suicide bombing in Ramadi, Iraq. Kandic
publicized the attack via Twitter.
Kandic also worked to further ISIS’s media and propaganda
operations. Kandic set up and used over
100 Twitter accounts to provide updates about ISIS attacks and territorial
gains, which announcements were close in time to when the events occurred.
If convicted, Kandic faces a maximum sentence of life
imprisonment. The charges in the
indictment are allegations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and
until proven guilty.
Trial Attorneys Jennifer Levy and Jolie Zimmerman of the
National Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section, and Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Saritha Komatireddy, Tiana A. Demas and J. Matthew Haggans of the
Eastern District of New York are prosecuting this case.
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