LOS ANGELES -- Four Southern California men have been charged
with plotting to kill Americans and destroy U.S. targets overseas by
joining al-Qaida and the Taliban in Afghanistan, federal officials said
Monday.
The defendants, including a man who served in the U.S. Air
Force, were arrested for plotting to bomb military bases and government
facilities, and for planning to engage in "violent jihad," FBI
spokeswoman Laura Eimiller said in a release.
A federal complaint
unsealed Monday says 34-year-old Sohiel Omar Kabir of Pomona introduced
two of the other men to the radical Islamist doctrine of Anwar
al-Awlaki, a deceased al-Qaida leader. Kabir served in the Air Force
from 2000 to 2001.
The other two - 23-year-old Ralph Deleon of
Ontario and 21-year-old Miguel Alejandro Santana Vidriales of Upland -
converted to Islam in 2010 and began engaging with Kabir and others
online in discussions about jihad, including posting radical content to
Facebook and expressing extremist views in comments.
They later recruited 21-year-old Arifeen David Gojali of Riverside.
Authorities
allege that in Skype calls from Afghanistan, Kabir told the trio he
would arrange their meetings with terrorists. Kabir added the would-be
jihadists could sleep in mosques or the homes of fellow jihadists once
they arrived in Afghanistan.
The trio made plans to depart in
mid-November to carry out plots in Afghanistan, primarily, and Yemen,
after they sold off belongings to scrape together enough cash to buy
plane tickets and made passport arrangements.
In one online
conversation, Santana told an FBI undercover agent that he wanted to
commit jihad and expressed interest in a jihadist training camp in
Jalalabad, Afghanistan.
The complaint also alleges the men went to
a shooting range several times, including a Sept. 10 trip in which
Deleon told a confidential FBI source that he wanted to be on the front
lines overseas and use C-4, an explosive, in an attack. Santana agreed.
"I
wanna do C-4s if I could put one of these trucks right here with my,
with that. Just drive into, like, the baddest military base," Santana
said, according to the complaint.
Santana added he wanted to use a
large quantity of the explosive. "If I'm gonna do that, I'm gonna take
out a whole base. Might as well make it, like, big, ya know," he said.
According
to the complaint, at the shooting range that day both Santana and
Deleon told a confidential FBI source they were excited about the
rewards from becoming a shaheed, which is Arabic for martyr.
Ten
days later, during another trip to the shooting range to fire
assault-style rifles, Santana told the source he had been around gangs
and had no problem taking a life.
On Sept. 30, Gojali was
recruited to the plot after he was asked if he had it in him to kill in
jihad. Gojali answered, "Yeah, of course."
"I watch videos on the
Internet, and I see what they are doing to our brothers and sisters. ...
It makes me cry, and it gets like I'm, like, so angered with them,"
Gojali said, according to the complaint.
The men wiped their
Facebook pages of radical Islamist content and photos of themselves in
traditional Muslim attire, and devised a cover story that they were
going to Afghanistan to attend Kabir's wedding.
Federal
authorities said the trio and the FBI's confidential source bought
airplane tickets last week for a Sunday flight from Mexico City to
Istanbul, with plans to later continue to Kabul.
After Kabir began
talking to him about Islam, Santana said he "accepted Islam without
knowing anything about it besides it being the truth" and that he
believed the religion would help him "fit in and actually be able to
fight for something that's right," according to the complaint.
If convicted, each defendant faces a maximum of 15 years in federal prison.
Kabir
is being detained in Afghanistan. The other three appeared for a
detention hearing Monday in Riverside, and all but Gojali were remanded
to federal custody with no bail. His detention hearing was delayed.
After-hours calls left for the men's attorneys were not immediately returned Monday.
A preliminary hearing is slated for Dec. 3, and an arraignment is set for Dec. 5.
Kabir
is a naturalized U.S. citizen who was born in Afghanistan. Santana was
born in Mexico, while Deleon was born in the Philippines. Both are
lawful, permanent U.S. residents. Gojali is a U.S. citizen.
Associated Press