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US soldier pleads guilty to assisting ISIS, agrees to 25 years in jail

29-8-2018 < RT 130 382 words
 

A Hawaii-based US Army soldier has pleaded guilty to aiding the Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) terrorist group. The soldier was arrested last year after pledging allegiance to the group in an FBI-staged ceremony.


Ikaika Erik Kang, 35, Sergeant First Class of the US Army, entered a guilty plea, admitting his guilt in four counts of attempting to provide material support to ISIS. Kang became the first person ever to be convicted of such a crime in Hawaii, the US Department of Justice said in a statement.



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Kang was arrested on July 19, 2017 shortly after he took an oath of loyalty to the IS mastermind, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, in a ceremony staged by an undercover FBI agent impersonating a senior IS member.


During the mock ceremony, Kang kissed the IS flag and voiced the desire to go downtown and celebrate by shooting people with his rifle.


In the months preceding his arrest and eventual indictment on terrorism charges, Kang was actively interacting with undercover FBI agents who he believed were IS operatives, providing them with troves of sensitive military papers, including those marked classified and outlining aircraft types, missions procedures, radio frequencies and other information that might have compromised the security of US troops.


"Kang swore to defend the United States as a member of our military, but betrayed his country by swearing allegiance to ISIS and attempting to provide material support to the foreign terrorist organization," Assistant Attorney General Demers said, announcing the guilty plea. According to the agreement between Kang and the state, if approved by the presiding judge, he would spent in prison 25 years and further 20 years up to life on supervised release.


Kang's indoctrination with IS ideology began at least in early 2016, when he started binge-watching the terrorists' propaganda videos, including those showing beheadings, and expressed the wish to join the organization and commits acts of violence. At the time he was making these threats, the statement notes, Kang had an AR-15-style rifle and a pistol at his home in Oahu.


The disgraced soldier's sentencing is scheduled for December 10.


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