This article examines two cases involving foreign nationals in the US who plotted attacks against Jewish communities. It raises concerns about how individuals with known ties to terrorist organizations, like ISIS and Al Qaeda, were allowed to remain in the country despite previous encounters with law enforcement.
Last month, 18-year-old George Mason University freshman Abdullah Hassan, described as 'tall and skinny,' who is studying Information Technology, appeared in a federal magistrate’s courtroom in Virginia. The charge? Plotting a mass casualty attack targeting Jews.
The FBI monitored Hassan allegedly talking to an informant about traveling to support ISIS. In October, his thoughts turned closer to home: He began discussing a terrorist attack in the United States – recruiting the other person in a scheme to kill Jews. Allegedly sending the informant a 'pro-ISIS video that called for the killing of Jews' in mid-November, Hassan then shared instructions on 'how to prepare a martyrdom video' and bomb-making.
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