Seeking to send an emphatic message that there is "no doubt" about the depth of terrorism recruitment in the Twin Cities, a federal judge on Wednesday sentenced the final three of Minnesota's ISIL conspiracy defendants to the sternest prison sentences yet handed down in a Minnesota terrorism case.
"It's clear, and I've stated it the last two days … this community has to understand that there is a jihadist cell in this community — its tentacles spread out," Senior U.S. District Judge Michael Davis told a packed courtroom. "Young people went to Syria and died."
Davis concluded three days of hearings by sending defendant Guled Omar to prison for 35 years, and sentencing two others — Mohamed Farah and Abdirahman Daud — to 30 years each. The three were the only defendants to plead not guilty and go to trial, where a jury in June convicted them of charges including conspiracy to commit murder outside the United States. They were also convicted of conspiring to provide material support to the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), the same charge on which six others pleaded guilty and were sentenced this week.
Addressing Davis earlier in the afternoon, one of the prosecutors called Omar, 22, "not redeemable," and said he presented a unique case because he watched his older brother leave Minnesota to join the Somali terror group Al-Shabab, then applied those lessons to advise the current group as its emir, or leader.
"He was like a well that people kept going to to get … advice, and he kept doling it out," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Winter, adding that Omar "has blood on his hands" for helping two men now believed dead after reaching Syria in 2014.
Prosecutors sought a 40-year sentence for Omar, while his attorney, Glenn Bruder, called for 15. Standing before the judge Wednesday, Omar grew emotional as he said he didn't want to continue down a "horrible path."
"I understand the seriousness of what I've been convicted of, and I understand that I will not be able to go home anytime soon," Omar said as relatives sobbed nearby. "I always had energy for justice as a young man, but I lost my way."
But after passing sentence, Davis recalled Omar's May 2014 attempt to drive away with two co-conspirators planning to cross into Mexico and fly overseas — foiled when Omar's family intervened.