Crime & Safety
Final Three Twin Cities Men Sentenced for Helping ISIS Will Spend Decades in Prison
A total of 11 Minnesotans have been charged for supporting ISIS. Nine have been sentenced, and two have fled to join ISIS in Syria.
MINNEAPOLIS, MN — The final three of nine total men were sentenced to spend decades in prison this week in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis for conspiring to provide material support to ISIS. Guled Omar, 22, was sentenced Wednesday to 35 years in prison. Mohamed Farah, 22, was sentenced to 30 years in prison. Abdirahman Daud, 22, was sentenced to 30 years in prison.
In all, 11 Minnesotans have been charged as part of this conspiracy to provide material support to ISIS. The men are all associates and friends of one another. Six defendants pleaded guilty before trial and two, Abdi Nur and Mohamed Roble, have joined ISIS in Syria.
The announcement was made by United States Attorney for the District of Minnesota Andrew M. Luger.
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“ISIL remains one of the most dangerous terror organizations in the world,” Luger said in a statement.
“The defendants sentenced today remind us that this ideology ruins the lives of those who ascribe to it. Omar, Daud and Farah will spend the next several decades in prison because of their unbreakable desire to kill on behalf of ISIL. I commend the agents and officers of the FBI-led JTTF for continuing to keep Minnesotans safe.”
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Patch's previous coverage on the Twin Cities men charged for attempting to help ISIS
- Twin Cities Man Used I-35W Bridge Collapse Settlement to Help ISIS: Feds
- Day One: Three Twin Cities Men Sentenced For Supporting ISIS
- Day Two: More Twin Cities Men Sentenced for Helping ISIS, Get Tougher Punishments for Lack of Cooperation
As proven at trial, between May 2014 and their arrests on April 19, 2015, these three defendants and their co-conspirators made multiple attempts to join ISIS in Syria. In May 2014, defendant Omar and two other members of the conspiracy made an attempt to join ISIS by traveling across the United States – Mexico border near San Diego, according to a news release.
This planned failed when members of defendant Omar’s family prevented his travel. Omar again attempted to join ISIS in Syria on Nov. 6, 2014, by first flying from Minneapolis/St. Paul International Airport to San Diego, California. Again, defendant Omar planned to cross the United States – Mexico border near San Diego and travel onward to Syria to join ISIS. Before he could board the flight in Minnesota, Omar was stopped at the airport and prevented from boarding the plane.
In order to fund this second attempt to join ISIS in Syria, Omar intended to use federal financial aid provided to him by the United States Department of Education to attend college.
Also in November 2014, Farah was one of four co-conspirators to take a Greyhound bus to New York City and attempt to board a flight to Europe. Defendant Farah’s ultimate destination was Syria, where he planned to join and fight with ISIS. Federal agents in New York prevented defendant Farah and his three co-conspirators from traveling.
In April 2015, defendants Daud and Farah drove from Minneapolis to San Diego, where they intended to purchase fake passports, cross the border into Mexico, travel to Syria to join ISIS.
Unbeknownst to them, the individual from whom they purchased the fake passports was a law enforcement officer and both were arrested by federal agents immediately after obtaining the phony travel documents.
“The sentences handed down today reflect the true gravity of the defendants' crimes to betray their country, travel overseas, and ultimately join a terrorist organization dedicated to the murder of innocent people,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge for the Minneapolis Division Richard T. Thornton.
“We hope these sentences will serve as a strong message that those who support terrorism will face justice. The FBI, through our Joint Terrorism Task Force, remains dedicated to working with our community partners to disrupt threats posed by ISIL and their supporters.”
“This case - culminating in the sentencings of nine young men in the last three days - demonstrates our commitment to disrupting those who would conspire to travel to Syria to fight with ISIL,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General McCord.
“Counterterrorism is the National Security Division’s highest priority, and we will continue to work to stem the flow of foreign fighters abroad and to bring to justice those who seek to provide material support to designated foreign terrorist organizations.”
Defendant Information
Guled Ali Omar, 22, Minneapolis
Convicted:
- Conspiracy to Murder Outside the United States, 1 count
- Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), 1 count
- Attempting to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, 2 counts
- Attempted Financial Aid Fraud, 1 count
Sentenced:
- 35 years in prison
- Supervised release for a term of life
Mohamed Abdihamid Farah, 22, Minneapolis
Convicted:
- Conspiracy to Murder Outside the United States, 1 count
- Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), 1 count
- Attempting to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, 2 counts
- Perjury, 1 count
- False Statement, 1 count
Sentenced:
- 30 years in prison
- Supervised release for a term of life
Abdirahman Yasin Daud, 22, Minneapolis
Convicted:
- Conspiracy to Murder Outside the United States, 1 count
- Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), 1 count
- Attempting to Provide Material Support to a Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization, 1 count
Sentenced:
- 30 years in prison
- Supervised release for a term of life
Image via Sherburne County Jail
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