A
New Jersey teenage boy, has pleaded guilty to a plot allegedly inspired
by the Islamic State group to kill Catholic Pontiff, Pope Francis
during his 2015 visit to the US.
Pope Francis
A teenager from New Jersey, USA, pleaded guilty on Monday to a 2015
assassination plot, inspired by the Islamic State militant group (ISIS)
and its focus a high-profile target: Pope Francis.
The pontiff visited the U.S. in 2015, parading in his open ‘Popemobile’ at a Mass held in the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on September 27.
The U.S. Justice Department said it was there that Santos Colon,
15-years-old at the time, attempted to recruit a sniper to shoot and
kill the leader of the Catholic faith, who is revered by more than a
billion followers.
Colon’s plot failed: the sniper he attempted to recruit was an
undercover FBI agent. Authorities arrested him 12 days before the Mass.
He plotted the attack in the name of ISIS and took on the alias Ahmad
Shakoor, according to court documents.
The jihadi group has inspired several attacks on U.S. soil, in San
Bernardino, California; Orlando, Florida; and Garland, Texas. It has
also released a series of hit lists providing supporters with personal
details of U.S. civilians.
“Colon engaged someone he believed would be the sniper, but in
reality was an undercover FBI employee. Colon engaged in target
reconnaissance with an FBI confidential source and instructed the source
to purchase materials to make explosive devices,” the Justice Department said in a statement, AFP news agency reported.
Colon, now 17, agreed to a plea bargain and to plead guilty as an
adult to the charge of providing material support to an extremist
organization, named by court documents as the Islamic State.
He now faces a maximum of 15 years in prison, but authorities will
sentence him at a later date so he can receive psychiatric treatment,
AFP reported. In his plea, Colon reportedly said he has a history of
mental health, having previously stayed at a mental institution.
It remains unclear if Colon, from Lindenwold, New Jersey,
communicated with the jihadi group through online channels or if he was
inspired by the group’s online propaganda.

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