https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/cholo-abdi-abdullah-convicted-conspiring-commit-911-style-attack-direction-al-shabaab


A jury returned a guilty verdict today against Cholo Abdi Abdullah, 34, on
all six counts in the indictment, which included conspiring to provide, and
providing, material support to a foreign terrorist organization; and
conspiring to murder U.S. nationals, commit aircraft piracy, destroy
aircraft, and commit transnational acts of terrorism. Abdullah is scheduled
to be sentenced on March 10, 2025.

“The jury found that Cholo Abdi Abdullah, an operative of the terrorist
organization al Shabaab, conspired to murder Americans in a terrorist
attack reminiscent of the September 11 attack on our country,” said
Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “Today’s conviction ensures that
Abdullah will spend decades in prison for his crimes. The Justice
Department will never stop working to identify, investigate, and prosecute
those who would use heinous acts of violence to harm the American people.
It does not matter where terrorists hide, they will not evade the long arm
of the law.”

“Today, the jury returned a unanimous verdict holding Cholo Abdi Abdullah
responsible for trying to replicate one of history’s most heinous acts of
terrorism,” said U.S. Attorney Damian Williams for the Southern District of
New York. “Abdullah trained with al Shabaab for months in Somalia to become
a deadly terrorist, and then spent months at flight school preparing to
hijack a commercial aircraft to crash it into a building in the United
States. Abdullah relentlessly pursued his goals and was on the cusp of
getting a commercial pilot license while conducting extensive attack
planning, such as how to breach an airplane cockpit door. I commend the
tireless work of our federal law enforcement partners and the career
national security prosecutors of this office. This effort has been carried
forward by generations of agents and prosecutors who never relented in
their effort to bring Abdullah to justice and keep this nation safe. Thanks
to their work and today’s verdict, Abdullah will now serve a lengthy
sentence in federal prison.”

According to the indictment and the evidence presented at trial, Abdullah
was an operative for the foreign terrorist organization Harakat al-Shabaab
al-Mijahideen, commonly known as “al Shabaab,” based in Somalia. After
training with al Shabaab for months with AK-47 assault rifles and
explosives at a series of safe houses in Somalia, Abdullah participated in
a plot to hijack a commercial aircraft and crash it into a building in the
U.S. He spent months at a flight school in the Philippines working toward a
commercial pilot license, and researched how to obtain pilot jobs, targets
such as the tallest buildings in a major American city, transit visas to
the U.S., and how to open a cockpit door from the outside. Abdullah also
sent encrypted messages reporting his progress to his al Shabaab handler,
including his extensive research on post-September 11 hijackings.

Abdullah conspired to commit this attack on behalf Al Shabaab, which has
sworn allegiance to al Qaeda and is responsible for numerous deadly
terrorist attacks, including attacks that have claimed American lives.
Starting in or about 2019, al Shabaab embarked on a string of terrorist
attacks as part of an operation in response to the U.S.’s decision to move
its embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, which the group has dubbed “Operation
Jerusalem Will Never be Judaized.” In particular, these terrorist attacks
perpetrated by al Shabaab included an attack on Jan. 15, 2019, at a hotel
in Nairobi, Kenya, which resulted in the deaths of approximately 21 people,
including a U.S. national and survivor of al Qaeda’s September 11 attack on
the World Trade Center in New York; a Sept. 30, 2019, attack on a U.S.
military facility in Somalia; and a Jan. 5, 2020, attack on another U.S.
facility in Kenya, in which three Americans were killed.

Abdullah was convicted on six counts: conspiring to provide material
support to a foreign terrorist organization, for which he faces a maximum
penalty of 20 years in prison; providing material support to a foreign
terrorist organization, for which he faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in
prison; conspiring to murder U.S. nationals, for which he faces a maximum
penalty of life in prison; conspiring to commit aircraft piracy, for which
he faces a mandatory minimum penalty of 20 years in prison and a maximum
penalty of life in prison; conspiring to destroy aircraft, for which he
faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison; and conspiring to commit
acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries, for which he faces a
maximum penalty of life in prison.

The FBI New York Field Office’s Joint Terrorism Task Force investigated the
case.

The Justice Department also thanks the FBI Legal Attaché Offices in
Nairobi, Kenya, and Manila, Philippines; the FBI’s Hudson Valley Resident
Agency; the Office of International Affairs of the Department of Justice’s
Criminal Division; the U.S. Department of Defense; the Kenyan Directorate
of Criminal Investigations, including the Anti-Terrorism Police Unit and
the Joint Terrorism Task Force-Kenya; the Office of the Director of Public
Prosecutions in Kenya; the Philippine National Police; the Philippine
Department of Justice; the Joint Terrorism Financial Investigations
Group-Philippines; and the Philippine Bureau of Immigration, for their
assistance.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Nicholas S. Bradley and Jonathan L. Bodansky for
the Southern District of New York and Trial Attorney John Cella of the
National Security Division's Counterterrorism Section are prosecuting the
case.

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