Amor M. Ftouhi, 51, of Quebec, Canada, was found guilty of
three crimes, including an act of terrorism transcending national boundaries,
in conjunction with an attack on a Bishop Airport officer in Flint, Michigan on
June 21, 2017.
The announcement was made by Assistant Attorney General for
National Security John C. Demers, U.S. Attorney Matthew Schneider for the
Eastern District of Michigan, and Special Agent Timothy Slater of the FBI’s
Detroit field office.
“Ftouhi conducted research in Canada and entered our country
with a plan to obtain a weapon and kill American police officers. With today’s guilty verdict, he will be held
accountable for his brutal knife attack on an airport police officer in Flint,”
said Assistant Attorney General Demers.
“I want to thank the prosecutors and law enforcement partners who made
this result possible. The National
Security Division remains committed to holding accountable all who seek to
carry out terrorist attacks on our soil and target our men and women in
uniform.”
“Investigating and prosecuting terrorists remains the
Justice Department’s highest priority,” stated U.S. Attorney Schneider. “The Assistant United States Attorneys who
prosecuted this case to trial, as well as our federal and state law enforcement
partners, worked tirelessly to investigate this case and bring this would-be
murderer to justice.”
“Protecting our citizens and nation from terrorist attacks
remains the top priority of the FBI,” said Special Agent in Charge Slater. “Today’s conviction is the result of hard
work conducted by the men and women of the FBI, our partner agencies on the FBI
Detroit Joint Terrorism Task Force, and our foreign partners in the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police. I would also
like to acknowledge the heroic actions of civilian and law enforcement officers
who were present on the day of the attack and likely saved Lt. Neville’s life.”
According to evidence presented at trial, Ftouhi entered the
United States from Canada on a “mission” for the purpose of killing American
police officers in the United States.
Before entering the United States on June 16, 2017, while in Canada,
Ftouhi conducted online research of American gun laws and for gun shows in
Michigan. Ftouhi subsequently traveled
to Michigan where he was unsuccessful in repeated attempts to purchase a gun
and purchased a knife instead. On June
20, 2017, Ftouhi walked up to the victim, who is a lieutenant with the Flint
Bishop Airport police and was in full uniform, and stabbed the police officer
in the neck twice with a knife. Ftouhi
referenced killings in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, and yelled “Allahu
Akbar.” After his arrest, Ftouhi told
law enforcement that he was a “soldier of Allah,” subscribed to the ideology of
Al Qaeda and Usama bin Laden and that his plan had been to kill the victim,
steal his gun, and kill other police officers in the airport.
This investigation was conducted by the Detroit Joint
Terrorism Task Force, which is led by the FBI with the assistance of the FBI
Flint Resident Agency, the Michigan State Police and the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police. Additional assistance was provided
by the Flint Police Department, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives, and the Genesee County Sheriff’s Office in Michigan.
This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Cathleen M. Corken, Jules DePorres and Craig Wininger of the Eastern District
of Michigan, with the assistance from the National Security Division’s
Counterterrorism Section of the Department of Justice.
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