FORT WORTH – A North Texas man was sentenced today to 240
months in federal prison for conspiring to provide material support to
Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistani-based foreign terrorist organization also known as
LeT, announced U.S. Attorney Erin Nealy Cox for the Northern District of Texas
and Assistant Attorney General John C. Demers of National Security.
“This case demonstrates how an American citizen can be
radicalized by a violent ideology based upon hate and how the actions of the
FBI and our partners on the Joint Terrorism Task Force worked tirelessly to
prevent violence here, and abroad. We
cannot thank them enough for what they do to protect our community,” said U.S.
Attorney Nealy Cox. “The 20 year
sentence proves that justice in the Northern District of Texas can be swift and
certain. We will work aggressively to counter terrorist threats and treat these
cases with the highest priority.”
“Sewell conspired with another individual to provide
material support to LeT and assisted his coconspirator with his plans to travel
overseas to join the terrorist organization.
Today’s sentence provides just punishment for his crime,” said Assistant
Attorney General John C. Demers of National Security. “The National Security Division is committed
to identifying and holding accountable those who conspire to provide material
support to foreign terrorist organizations.”
“Eighteen years after 9/11, combatting terrorism remains the
FBI’s top priority. Here, the defendant,
a natural born American citizen, helped recruit a fellow American to fight for
a group responsible for unspeakable violence across South Asia,” said FBI
Special Agent in Charge Matthew J. DeSarno.
“The FBI Dallas Field Office, and its partners who make up the North
Texas Joint Terrorism Task Force, will work tirelessly to bring to justice
those who offer their support to terrorist organizations, both at home and
abroad.”
Michael Kyle Sewell, 18, was arrested in February and
pleaded guilty to the conspiracy charge in May. He was sentenced by U.S.
District Judge Reed O’Connor this morning. During sentencing, the United States
introduced evidence that Sewell’s offense was consistent with a long pattern of
online statements supporting violent extremism.
Sewell had posted numerous messages threatening to attack individuals
and gatherings of people who he believed were opponents of his radical
beliefs. Sewell also conducted internet
searches suggesting that he was investigating ways to carry out such attacks. During a search of Sewell’s home after his
arrest, agents found an AR-15 style rifle, multiple magazines, and a number of
knives in Sewell’s bedroom.
According to court documents, Sewell admitted to encouraging
an individual identified in court documents as cc1 to join LeT. Sewell provided
the coconspirator, who he spoke to on social media, with contact information
for an individual he believed could facilitate the coconspirator’s travel to
Pakistan to join LeT. Unbeknownst to
Sewell and the coconspirator, the facilitator was an undercover FBI employee.
After providing the facilitator’s contact information to the coconspirator,
Sewell coached the coconspirator about how to present himself to the
facilitator. Sewell then contacted the
facilitator to vouch for the coconspirator’s intentions and promised that he
would kill the coconspirator if he turned out to be a spy. Sewell also told the facilitator that he
would recruit additional fighters to join LeT.
The coconspirator continued to communicate with the facilitator, and
made arrangements to travel to Pakistan to join LeT.
The FBI and its Joint Terrorism Task Force members,
including the Arlington Police Department, the Fort Worth Police Department,
the Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office, the Naval Criminal Investigation Service,
Homeland Security Investigations, and the Texas Department of Public Safety
conducted the investigation. Assistant
U.S. Attorney Jay Weimer prosecuted the case with the assistance of Trial
Attorney Bridget Behling of the National Security Division’s Counterterrorism
Section.
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