
Ex-National Guardsman Planned to Attack U.S. Army Base for ISIS, U.S. Says
A former member of the Michigan Army National Guard was charged on Tuesday with plotting to carry out a terrorist attack on a U.S. military base outside Detroit for the Islamic State using a drone, Molotov cocktails and armor-piercing ammunition, the F.B.I. said.
The man, Ammar Abdulmajid-Mohamed Said, 19, was arrested outside the U.S. Army Tank-Automotive & Armaments Command in Warren, Mich., by federal agents, with whom he had been unknowingly discussing his plans since last June, according to a criminal complaint.
Investigators said that Mr. Said, of Melvindale, Mich., had shared details about a planned mass shooting with two people he thought were fellow ISIS supporters, but were instead undercover F.B.I. agents recording their conversations.
Mr. Said told them that he was 'fed up with this country" and had long desired to engage in a violent jihad, either by traveling to an ISIS-held territory abroad or carrying out an attack in the United States, the authorities said.
While meeting with one of the undercover agents in November, Mr. Said mused that if he went to the Middle East, he would be able to kill only 'two, three, four other soldiers, but over here, it's like, it's a dream.' Around December, the National Guard discharged him.
Mr. Said was charged with attempting to provide material support and resources to a designated foreign terrorist organization and distributing information related to a destructive device or explosive. The charges could bring up to 40 years in prison if he is convicted.
Brig. Gen. Rhett R. Cox, the commanding general of the Army Counterintelligence Command, said in a statement on Wednesday that Mr. Said's arrest was a 'sobering reminder' of the importance of counterintelligence efforts.
'We urge all soldiers to remain vigilant and report any suspicious activity to their chain of command, as the safety and security of our Army and our nation depends on our collective efforts to prevent insider threats,' General Cox said.
It was not immediately clear whether Mr. Said, who was scheduled to make an initial appearance in federal court in Michigan on Wednesday, had a lawyer. Court records did not list one for him. A phone message left on Wednesday with the Federal Community Defender's office in Detroit was not immediately returned.
In 2022, Mr. Said enlisted in the National Guard and completed initial basic training at Fort Moore in Georgia, the authorities said.
Last July, about a month after Mr. Said had first spoken to one of the undercover agents, the F.B.I. secretly searched his iPhone when he gave it to National Guard personnel before boarding a military aircraft, investigators said.
They found a Facebook exchange written in Arabic between Mr. Said and someone in the Palestinian territories, in which Mr. Said declared, 'I want to go for Jihad,' according to the F.B.I., which said that the other person had instructed him to use the encrypted messaging app Telegram to communicate further. One of those channels contained videos and images with ISIS flags, the complaint said.
Last August, Mr. Said played a video of himself on his phone performing a 'bayah' pledge of loyalty to Abu Hafs al-Hashemi al-Qurayshi, the leader of ISIS, for one of the agents, the F.B.I. said.
In a conversation with an F.B.I. informant that same month, Mr. Said boasted that he could assemble and disassemble an AR-15 or M4-style rifle with his 'eyes closed' and had learned about firearms, grenade throwing and land navigation, the complaint said.
'I wanted to train so that I know what I'm doing,' Mr. Said told one of the undercover agents, according to the F.B.I. 'I know how they think, and how they act, you know.'
Last fall, Mr. Said told the undercover agents that he had flown a drone over the base outside Detroit to identify entry points and potential targets, investigators said. He also mentioned that he had visited stores to inspect firearms and military uniforms, and had purchased glass bottles to be used for Molotov cocktails, the complaint said.
The undercover agents accompanied Mr. Said to a pawnshop in the area, where he asked to see assault-style weapons that were for sale, the F.B.I. said.
'I recommend everyone have about seven magazines because you don't want to be in there and run out of ammo,' he told the agents, according to the complaint.
But as plans for the attack became more concrete, the F.B.I. said, the former guardsman grew suspicious. In December, the agents told Mr. Said that they had discovered an Apple AirTag in their car, which he acknowledged placing there, the authorities said.
He told them that he just wanted to 'make sure' they were who they said they were, according to the complaint.
In the conversations with the undercover agents, Mr. Said discussed how one of them should livestream the attack on a GoPro camera and mention Gaza and Palestine, investigators said. He also advised the agents that they should wait until they got inside the base to display an ISIS flag.
'If they see the flag, they know you are foe,' he told on the agents, according to the complaint.
On Tuesday, Mr. Said was wearing all black when he left his home to go meet one of the undercover agents at a park in Dearborn, Mich., investigators said. The two of them then drove to the Army base in Warren, where, the authorities said, Mr. Said had launched his drone for the purposes of aerial surveillance before the attack.
That's when law enforcement officers moved in and arrested him.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The latest personnel purge at the FBI adds to a destabilizing problem
Among the many problems that have emerged in federal law enforcement during Donald Trump's second term is the campaign against key personnel. Indeed, there's been an unsubtle campaign to purge federal law enforcement of prosecutors and FBI officials for unsubtle political reasons. As The New York Times reported, those efforts are ongoing. The F.B.I. has targeted another round of employees who ran afoul of conservatives, forcing out two veteran agents in Virginia — one of whom is friends with a critic of President Trump — and punishing another in Las Vegas, according to several people familiar with the matter. Two of the men, Spencer Evans and Stanley Meador, are senior agents who ran F.B.I. field offices in Las Vegas and Richmond, Va. The third, Michael Feinberg, a top deputy in the Norfolk, Va., office, had ties to a former agent whom Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, identified in his book as part of the so-called deep state. The rationales behind the reported moves have varied. Evans, for example, apparently became a target after a stint at the FBI's human resources department, where he was reluctant to approve exemptions for Covid vaccines. Republicans didn't like Meador after his office issued a memo in 2023 related to possible threats from anti-abortion activists. As for Feinberg, the Times' report added that he issued a statement a couple of weeks ago, explaining that he was threatened with an investigation and the possibility of a demotion because of his friendship with Peter Strzok — who appeared on FBI Director Kash Patel's infamous 'enemies list.' On his way out, Feinberg added that the FBI as institution had begun 'to decay,' and it's easy to understand how and why he came to that conclusion. For years, the public has been bombarded with hysterical rhetoric from Republican conspiracy theorists who insisted that the FBI — one of the most politically conservative institutions in the federal government and an agency that has literally never had a Democratic director — had secretly become 'weaponized' by rascally liberals hellbent on targeting poor, unsuspecting victims on the right. The baseless claims never made sense, though the FBI's Trump-appointed leadership is now engaging in many of the same political efforts that Republicans long claimed to oppose. On the 11th day of Trump's second term, for example, NBC News reported, 'Trump administration officials have forced out all six of the FBI's most senior executives and multiple heads of FBI field offices across the country,' in part as retribution for the president having faced federal criminal charges in 2023 and in part to punish officials involved in Jan. 6 cases. It was the first such purge on Team Trump's revenge tour, but it was hardly the last. The Times added in a separate report earlier this week, 'Behind the scenes, [Patel's] vision of an F.B.I. under President Trump is quietly taking shape. Agents have been forced out. Others have been demoted or put on leave with no explanation. ... The actions have obliterated decades of experience in national security and criminal matters at the F.B.I. and raised questions about whether the agents taking over such critical posts have the institutional knowledge to pursue cornerstones of its work.' I don't know if the bureau will ever recover from the efforts to Trumpify it, but I know that recovery won't happen anytime soon. This post updates our related earlier coverage. This article was originally published on


Axios
33 minutes ago
- Axios
Boulder firebombing suspect appears in federal court
The man accused of yelling "Free Palestine" and throwing Molotov cocktails at demonstrators in Boulder, Colorado, made his first appearance Friday in federal court in Denver. The latest: Magistrate Judge Timothy P. O'Hara advised the suspect of the hate crime charge he faces and the possibility of a life sentence, court records show. The hearing lasted just 7 minutes, per court records. The right side of the suspect's face appeared to be burned, the Colorado Sun reports. The big picture: The Friday hearing comes one day after the suspect was charged in Colorado state court with 118 counts, including 28 counts of attempted first-degree murder. Mohamed Sabry Soliman also faces multiple counts related to the use and attempted use of an explosive/incendiary device. The 45-year-old suspect has been held at the Boulder County Jail on a $10 million cash bond since his arrest after Sunday's attack. Zoom in: The attack near the Boulder County courthouse on the city's popular Pearl Street injured at least 15 people and a dog, according to the Boulder County District Attorney's Office. All of the victims — ages 25 to 88 — are expected to survive, Boulder Police Chief Stephen Redfearn told the Daily Camera on Tuesday. Catch up quick: Last Sunday, Soliman threw Molotov cocktails at people advocating for the release of hostages held by Hamas, according to an affidavit reviewed by Axios. The suspect allegedly told law enforcement he wanted to kill all Zionist people and that he had been planning the attack for a year. Run for Their Lives, the group targeted in the attack, gathered in support of the hostages "to show solidarity with the hostages and their families, and a plea for their release."
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Army vet killed in crash was well-known in Tacoma motorcycle community
When a biker in Pierce County purchased a new motorcycle, they'd often find a little fish hook drawn on its mirror. Rodger Smith, who went by Dean and also was known as 'Fish Hook,' was the usual culprit. 'As soon as you went outside on the bike and looked in your mirror you realized Fish Hook was there,' Ryan Eaton, who considered Smith his best friend, told The News Tribune. 'And there were places you would go and see little fish hooks.' Eaton said seeing little fish hooks now is hard to take after Smith was killed over a week ago in a crash. Smith and his wife were riding their motorcycles on 152nd Street East in South Hill when the driver of a Jeep Cherokee reportedly struck him. Before the crash, the driver's vehicle reportedly went out of control when it exited a right-hand corner, crossed the center line and hit Smith head-on, according to charging documents. Smith was ejected from his bike and died upon impact, documents show. Pierce County prosecutors charged Christy Lynn Carter, 42, with vehicular homicide. Prosecutors say Carter was driving drunk at the time, with her recorded her blood-alcohol level allegedly at 0.15 percent, above the legal limit of 0.08. She was released from the Pierce County Jail on May 28 on a $100,000 bond, records show. The Pierce County Medical Examiner's Office identified the victim as Rodger Smith of Puyallup. He died from multiple blunt force injuries and his manner of death was listed as an accident, according to a news release. Eaton met Smith through mutual friends that he rode motorcycles with over a decade ago. Smith was part of a local motorcycle club in Tacoma and a proud U.S. Army combat veteran. 'He was the kind of guy to try to make everything fun,' Eaton told The News Tribune on Thursday. 'He always tried to put a positive twist on things, and try to get everybody to laugh.' Eaton said he learned of Smith's death after a mutual friend called him to say people had been posting on Facebook about the crash. 'Then I saw the video, the raw video from the scene, and I immediately recognized the bike, because that bike spent several months with me. I just got that bike put back together, had the engine done up, and just got it running right,' Eaton said. 'It was his favorite bike.' The next day, Eaton rode out to the accident scene because felt he needed to go there. 'That's kind of how I had to originally accept what had happened, by actually being there and seeing the large area that this accident scene covered,' he said. Tributes have poured in through Facebook from people who knew Smith. Eaton said his friend was well known, and anytime Smith showed up at an event, there was always someone who knew him there. Smith also always made it a priority to check up on the soldiers that he served with, Eaton said. He would go to reunions with them, making sure they were OK as they had seen stuff 'that none of us want to think about seeing.' 'That's the ultimate sacrifice, to leave your country and lose your life for your country. But to survive it, come home and be taken out this way — it just doesn't seem right,' Eaton said. A celebration of life is scheduled for June 21 when people will be riding to Eatonville for a gathering. There will be a service at the Tahoma National Cemetery on June 25. Eaton said he expected 'quite a few people' to show up at both events.