Crime & Safety
Orange County Man to be Sentenced for Aiding Islamic Terrorists
An Orange County man scheduled for sentencing for his part in aiding Islamic Terrorist group ISIL. His co-defendant received 30 years.

Federal prosecutors will ask a judge on Wednesday to sentence an Orange County man to 30 years in federal prison for attempting to aid an Islamic terrorist group
Muhanad Elfatih M.A. Badawi was convicted June 21, say that the ISIL "travel case" along with co-defendant Nader Salem Elhuzayel, who was sentenced Sept. 26 to 30 years behind bars. Prosecutors in the case say that Badawi deserves the same punishment of his co-defendant, though Badawi claims all that he did was loan Elhuzayel money to return to Israel to get married.
"Badawi was a radicalizer, recruiter, and facilitator, and like co- defendant Elhuzayel, defendant Badawi aspired to die a martyr fighting jihad for ISIL," prosecutors argue in their pre-sentencing brief, using one of the acronyms for the group also known as ISIS.
Find out what's happening in Fountain Valleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"Despite the attempts of others to dissuade him, defendant Badawi continued to promote the ISIL ideology and gather fighters for ISIL. In short, defendant Badawi's role as a radicalizer, recruiter, and facilitator makes him more dangerous than any single would-be fighter."
Badawi's attorney, Kate Corrigan, conceded that her client engaged in a great deal of "un-American" and at times "repulsive" speech, but said Badawi "was a lot of talk and absolutely no action." She claimed her client was duped by a dishonest Elhuzayel about what he intended to do with money Badawi loaned him.
Find out what's happening in Fountain Valleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Elhuzayel was the first defendant convicted at trial to be sentenced in a so-called ISIL "travel case," U.S. District Judge David O. Carter noted as he handed down the punishment last month. Elhuzayel was also convicted of 26 counts of bank fraud.
Carter went through a lengthy detailing of Elhuzayel's social-media declarations in support of the Islamic State before obtaining a ticket to Istanbul.
The judge noted that the most important "ingredient" for the militant group was young warriors for the cause, adding that "what strikes this court" was the defendant's willingness to die for his cause.
Elhuzayel's "constant" references to martyrdom "makes you extremely dangerous," Carter told the defendant. The judge also noted that when Elhuzayel was arrested, he was carrying personal information about Defense Department employees.
"Those documents were leaked to the government so everyone had access to them," Elhuzayel said, interrupting the judge.
"There is no remorse, no repudiation of ISIL, only the message of death and destruction," Carter responded.
The judge ordered the defendant to pay $3,376.14 in restitution and ordered lifetime supervised release, telling Elhuzayel that his "greatest concern is you'll be 55 and you'll still have vigor" when released from prison.
Earlier in the hearing, the defendant interrupted Assistant U.S. Attorney Judith Heinz as she was detailing much of the same evidence Carter recounted, including Elhuzauel's previous conviction for resisting arrest as he was being evicted from his family's home, which fell into foreclosure.
"I would like to note all I did was resist," Elhuzauel said. "I am a good guy. I am not bad. I am not evil. I am a good guy. I say that with my heart. Love you, mom and dad."
In his statement to the judge before sentencing, the Israeli citizen stuck with his story that he had been headed to Israel to marry a woman he had met online.
Defense attorney Pal Lengyel-Leahu asked Carter for mercy, saying his client turned to religion when he faced ostracism from American and Israeli youths as he lived in both countries with dual citizenship.
"He looked different, he acted different, he was from over there," Lengyel-Leahu said.
The attorney argued that decades behind bars would be "inhumane," saying his client did not pose any danger to anyone because "all he had was a plan to make a plan."
During the trial, prosecutors characterized Elhuzayel and co-defendant Badawi as obsessively praising Islamic militants in Iraq and Syria on social media as they shared photos of beheadings of "unbelievers."
Elhuzayel's attorney argued that his client should be acquitted on the legal technicality that the United States did not recognize the Islamic State as a terrorist organization at the time of the defendant's arrest.
Elhuzayel used the ISIS flag as his profile picture on a Facebook account, according to prosecutors, who said Badawi in October 2014 made a video of Elhuzayel swearing allegiance to the leader of ISIS, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, and pledging to travel to Syria to be an ISIS fighter.
In March 2015, Badawi received a $2,865 Pell grant, which prosecutors said he used two months later to purchase a one-way airline ticket for Elhuzayel from Los Angeles International Airport to Tel Aviv, Israel, with a six-hour layover in Istanbul.
Elhuzayel, who operated a scheme to rip off banks by depositing stolen checks into his personal accounts and then withdrawing cash from automated teller machines, was arrested at the airport.
Shutterstock photo
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.