Californian pleads guilty in terror case

LOS ANGELES - A California man who used the Internet and Facebook to connect with al-Qaida pleaded guilty Friday to a federal terrorism charge after admitting he attempted to assist the terrorist organization by providing weapons training, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

Sinh Vinh Ngo Nguyen, 24, of Garden Grove entered the plea before U.S. District Court Judge John Walter, who scheduled sentencing for March 21, prosecutors said in a statement. Reporters were not notified of his court appearance and were not present.

Nguyen faces a maximum of 15 years in federal prison.

Nguyen’s lawyer, Yasmin Cader, refused to comment on his decision, and U.S. attorney’s office spokesman Thom Mrozek said prosecutors also had no comment.

The judge who accepted the plea previously had expressed skepticism about whether Nguyen had any special skills to offer al-Qaida.

Nguyen had confessed to federal agents after an undercover FBI agent had posed as a recruiter for the terrorist group.

He said that he planned to offer himself as a trainer of al-Qaida forces to ambush troops in Syria, where he had already spent five months fighting with rebels, Assistant U.S. Attorney Judith Heinz said after Nguyen’s arrest in October. She said he underwent 50 hours of interrogation during which he confessed to his plan.

Nguyen’s admission was contained in a plea agreement filed in federal court, according to a U.S. attorney’s newsrelease issued after the plea was entered and accepted.

“Nguyen admitted that approximately one year ago he traveled to Syria where he joined opposition forces,” the statement said. “Using a social network site during a four month period he was in Syria, Nguyen told people that he was fighting against the Assad regime and that he had had a ‘confirmed kill.’”

Nguyen returned to the U.S., where he told associates that he had offered to train al-Qaida forces in Syria but was turned down, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

At a hearing in the fall, Walter asked Heinz what Nguyen had to offer the terrorist group, and she said, “He was providing himself.”

The judge noted that Nguyen was never a member of the U.S. armed forces, having been rejected because of a hearing problem.

“I don’t see evidence that this defendant had any particular skill in firearms,” he said, “or that he had the ability to procure or deliver weapons. … This is the part of the case that escapes me.”

Prosecutors said that between Aug. 3 and Oct. 11, Nguyen met with a man he thought was an al-Qaida recruiter but who actually was working for the FBI, telling him about what he’d done in Syria and saying he wanted to return to jihad.

On Oct. 1, Nguyen purchased a ticket to travel from Mexico to Pakistan, and he was arrested by FBI agents Oct. 11 as he was about to board a bus from Santa Ana, Calif., to Mexico. He had been told he would be meeting “his sheik” in Peshawar, the prosecutor had said.

Front Section, Pages 5 on 12/28/2013

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