New Mexico man charged with supporting Daesh group

New Mexico man charged with supporting Daesh group
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Updated 28 August 2022
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New Mexico man charged with supporting Daesh group

New Mexico man charged with supporting Daesh group

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.: A New Mexico man has been arrested and charged with trying to provide material support to the Daesh group and shutting down an online platform that could have tied two other men to similar charges.
Herman Leyvoune Wilson, 45, of Albuquerque, was arrested Friday and will remain in custody pending a scheduled Tuesday arraignment in federal court, the US Attorney’s Office in New Mexico said. Wilson’s newly appointed federal public defender did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment on the charges.
The US Attorney’s Office statement said Wilson, also known as Bilal Mu’Min Abdullah, was indicted earlier in the week by a federal grand jury on the charges related to the Daesh group, a US designated foreign terrorist organization.
Federal prosecutors believe Wilson was trying to establish an “Islamic State Center” in New Mexico that would teach Daesh group ideology, provide martial arts training and serve as a haven for people preparing to fight for the group in the US and abroad.
Two men arrested in September 2020 for providing material support to the Daesh group testified that Wilson had radicalized them to the group’s ideology. Prosecutors say that afterward Wilson allegedly shut down an online platform that could have tied the men to his group.
Kristopher Matthews and Jaylin Molina were arrested for providing material support to the Daesh group and later pleaded guilty to that charge in the Western District of Texas. Prosecutors accused them of plotting to bomb or shoot up sites including the White House and Trump Tower in New York City.
The men were later convicted by a US court in Texas. Matthews, 36, of South Carolina, was recently sentenced to 20 years in prison, and Molina, 24, of Cost, Texas, got 18 years.