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10 November 2024

Californian facing new charges related to attempt to travel to Syria

An image grab taken from a video released by 'Daesh' and identified by private terrorism monitor SITE Intelligence Group on September 13, 2014 purportedly shows British aid worker David Haines dressed in orange and on his knees in a desert landscape speaking to the camera before being beheaded by a masked militant (R). (AFP)

Published
By AP

A 21-year-old man previously charged with lying on a passport application so he could fly to Syria to join the Daesh terrorist group was indicted Wednesday on a charge of trying to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization.

Adam Dandach was also charged in the superseding indictment with obstructing justice by trying to destroy records of his online activity to thwart investigators.

Dandach was stopped in July in the Orange County airport while trying to board a flight to Turkey with an expedited replacement passport he got after he said he accidentally threw his old one away. Prosecutors said he knew that wasn't true and that his mother had confiscated the passport when she heard about his plan to go overseas.

The FBI said Dandach told agents he planned to pledge allegiance and offer to help the Daesh in Syria any way he could. He told agents he believed the killings of American soldiers were justified.

When told he could face criminal charges, Dandach said he was more disappointed about not going to Syria than about getting in trouble with the law, according to court papers.

Dandach is in custody and scheduled to be arraigned March 16 on the new charges.

"He's going to plead not guilty and we're going to fight them in court," defense lawyer Pal Lengyel-Leahu said.

The defendant, also known as Fadi Fadi Dandach, previously pleaded not guilty to lying on a passport application and using a passport secured through false statements. Prosecutors added in the new indictment that he committed those offenses to facilitate international terrorism.

If convicted, Dandach could face up to 15 years in federal prison on the terrorism charge, and up to 25 years on each of the other counts, federal authorities said.