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New York man pleads guilty to attempting to join Islamic State

A New York man has pleaded guilty to trying to help Islamic State by traveling to Turkey with the goal of entering Syria and fighting for the militant group, federal prosecutors announced on Tuesday.

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A New York man has pleaded guilty to trying to help Islamic State by traveling to Turkey with the goal of entering Syria and fighting for the militant group, federal prosecutors announced on Tuesday.

Arafat Nagi, 47, entered his plea on Monday before US District Judge Richard Arcara in Buffalo, New York, the US Department of Justice said.

"The plea gives the court wide sentencing latitude and we trust the judge to be fair," Jeremy Schwartz, Nagi's lawyer, said in an email. "Mr. Nagi never engaged in violence and he does not wish harm to the United States."
Nagi, of Lackawanna, New York, is scheduled to be sentenced by Arcara on May 7. He faces a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison, according to prosecutors.

Nagi, who was born in the United States to Yemeni parents, was arrested in July 2015 and charged with attempting to materially aid Islamic State. Prosecutors said he pledging allegiance to the group and traveled to Turkey twice, in October 2012 and July 2014, to meet Islamic State supporters.

Prosecutors said at the time that the arrest followed a Federal Bureau of Investigation probe prompted by a tip from one of Nagi's neighbors in Lackawanna, which is located in upstate New York near Buffalo.

The neighbor told the FBI that Nagi regularly argued with local residents about his beliefs, which included support of Islamic State, and was planning to travel to Turkey again, according to prosecutors.

Upon searching Nagi's apartment, law enforcement found military equipment, including body armor, a machete and night vision goggles, prosecutors said.

Lackawanna drew national attention as the home of the so-called "Lackawanna Six," a group of young American men of Yemeni descent who pleaded guilty to providing material support for terrorism by attending al Qaeda's al Farouk training camp in Afghanistan in early 2001.

Multiple people are currently facing charges of aiding Islamic State in New York federal courts, including Sayfullo Saipov, accused of killing eight people by driving a truck into a New York bicycle path, and Akayed Ullah, accused of trying to detonate a homemade bomb in a Manhattan subway station.

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