Three Convicted of Conspiring to Commit
Terrorist Acts Against Americans Overseas
WASHINGTON, D.C.—A federal jury in the Northern District of Ohio has
convicted three Ohio residents, Mohammad Zaki Amawi, 28, Marwan Othman
El-Hindi, 45, and Wassim I. Mazloum, 27, of conspiring to commit terrorist
acts against Americans overseas, including U.S. military personnel in Iraq,
and other terrorism-related violations.
Today’s verdicts were announced by Patrick Rowan, Acting Assistant Attorney
General for National Security; William J. Edwards, Acting United States
Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio; and C. Frank Figliuzzi, Special
Agent in Charge, Cleveland Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI).
In February 2007, Amawi, El-Hindi, and Mazloum were charged in a superseding
indictment with conspiring to kill or maim persons outside the United States,
including U.S. military personnel serving in Iraq, and conspiring to provide
material support to terrorists. Amawi and El-Hindi were also charged individually
with distributing information regarding the manufacture or use of explosives,
including suicide bomb vests and Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs). Three
additional counts in the superseding indictment were severed before trial
and were not considered by this jury.
Today, the jury convicted the defendants on all counts. Amawi, a citizen
of Jordan and the United States, and El Hindi, a naturalized U.S. citizen
born in Jordan, were each convicted of one count of conspiring to kill
or maim persons outside the United States, one count of conspiring to provide
material support to terrorists, and two counts of distributing information
on explosives. Mazloum, a U.S. legal permanent resident from Lebanon, was
convicted of one count of conspiring to kill or maim persons outside the
United States and one count of conspiring to provide material support to
terrorists.
At trial, the government proved that all three defendants engaged in a
conspiracy, beginning sometime prior to June 2004, to kill or maim persons
outside the United States, including U.S. armed forces personnel in Iraq.
As part of the conspiracy, the defendants conducted firearms training and
accessed and copied instructions in the construction and use of explosives
– including IEDs and suicide bomb vests. In addition, the defendants conspired
to recruit others to participate in jihad training; researched and solicited
funding sources for such training; and proposed sites for training in firearms,
explosives and hand-to-hand combat to prospective recruits.
The government also proved that all defendants conspired to provide material
support and resources, including personnel, money, explosives and laptop
computers, to terrorists, including a co-conspirator in the Middle East,
who had requested such materials for use against U.S. and coalition forces
in Iraq. For example, among other activities, Amawi communicated with a
contact in the Middle East on chemical explosives and traveled to Jordan
in August 2005 with laptop computers intended for delivery for mujahideen
“brothers” whom he learned were preparing to cross into Iraq.
The government also proved that Amawi knowingly distributed to others
a guide describing the step-by-step process for manufacturing chemical
explosive compounds, as well as a video entitled, “Martyrdom Operation
Vest Preparation,” which described the step-by-step construction and use
of a suicide bomb vest. Amawi distributed these materials with the intent
that they be used for training others to commit a crime of violence, including
the killing of U.S. nationals overseas.
The government further proved that El-Hindi knowingly distributed a slide
show demonstrating the preparation and use of IEDs against apparent U.S.
military vehicles and personnel, as well as the video entitled “Martyrdom
Operation Vest Preparation.” El-Hindi distributed these materials with
the intent that they be used for training others to commit a crime of violence,
including the killing of U.S. nationals overseas.
“Today’s verdicts should send a strong message to individuals who would
use this country as a platform to plot attacks against U.S. military personnel
in Iraq and elsewhere,” said Patrick Rowan, Acting Assistant Attorney General
for National Security. “This case also underscores the need for continued
vigilance in identifying and dismantling extremist plots that develop in
America’s heartland.”
Acting United States Attorney William J. Edwards said: “These verdicts
are testament to the hard work and dedication of all the federal, state
and local law enforcement officers who have spent years investigating this
case and to the tireless efforts and perseverance of an extremely talented
team of federal prosecutors who, with their law enforcement partners, keep
this country safe from terrorists.”
“This case demonstrates
the stark reality of home grown terrorism. If a
plot like this can be developed in Toledo, OH, it can happen anywhere.
With radical extremists in our midst, the FBI works day and night with
our law enforcement and intelligence partners to pursue suspected terrorists
and their supporters,” said C. Frank Figliuzzi, Special Agent in Charge,
Cleveland Division, FBI.
The maximum statutory penalties for the offenses on which the defendants
were convicted include: life imprisonment for conspiracy to kill or maim
persons outside the United States; 20 years imprisonment for distributing
information regarding explosives (each count); and 15 years imprisonment
for conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists.
Each defendant’s sentence will be determined by the Court after review
of factors unique to this case, including the defendant’s prior criminal
record, if any; the defendant’s role in the offense and the characteristics
of the violation. In all cases, the sentences will not exceed the statutory
maximum, and in most cases, it will be less than the maximum.
This case was investigated by the FBI and the Joint Terrorism Task Force
in Toledo, Ohio, with the assistance of the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal
Investigation Division; the U.S. Secret Service; U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement; the Drug Enforcement Administration; the Ohio Highway Patrol;
the Toledo Police Department; and the Lucas and Wood County Sheriff’s Departments.
This case is being
prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Thomas E. Getz and Justin E. Herdman
of the National Security Unit of the U.S Attorney’s
Office in Cleveland, as well Assistant U.S. Attorney Gregg N. Sofer of
the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Austin, Texas, (formerly of the Justice Department’s
Counterterrorism Section) and Trial Attorneys Jerome J. Teresinski and
David I. Miller of the Justice Department’s Counterterrorism Section. The
U.S. Attorney’s office in Detroit also provided assistance in this case.
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