Testimony by a key government witness in Minnesota's ISIL recruitment trial had to be paused Friday afternoon after a confrontation erupted in the audience, prompting the trial judge to remove several people from the courtroom.
As Abdullahi Yusuf testified about his relationship with the three defendants, an audience member made comments to Yusuf's mother, seated nearby, and court security ordered them to leave. Yusuf's mother was later allowed back inside.
A short time later, the district's chief judge issued an order barring Khadar Ali Omar, brother of defendant Guled Omar, from the courthouse. Khadar Omar had been stopped Thursday while trying to bring a 6-inch pair of scissors into the building and had also taken photos of the building's public elevators.
Yusuf, 20, is one of the government's three star witnesses in the trial of Abdirahman Daud, 22; Mohamed Farah, 22, and Omar, 21, in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis. The three are accused of conspiring to provide material support to the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and to commit murder abroad for the terrorist group.
Along with Yusuf, they were among 16 mug shots on a chart given to jurors, showing young Minnesotans who since 2014 have tried, some successfully and some not, to fight for ISIL in Syria.
Omar, who Yusuf said was appointed as "emir," or leader, of the group, took notes throughout Yusuf's testimony and at one point tried to lock eyes with him. He dropped his jaw as Yusuf described a pivotal spring 2014 meeting at a Bloomington mosque that went into the early morning hours. After playing basketball, Yusuf said the friends spent hours watching propaganda videos about atrocities committed by the Syrian government — which Yusuf said first caught his attention when he was assigned to write a high school history report on the country.
"I was recruited that night," Yusuf said.
"And who recruited you?" asked Assistant U.S. Attorney John Docherty.