A young American who assumed the online identity of an
Australian jihadist has been arrested for an alleged plan to bomb a September
11 memorial event, authorities said.
Joshua Ryne Goldberg, who was arrested in Florida, has
admitted to providing instructions on how to make a pressure cooker bomb with
the intent “to kill and injure persons,” according to court documents.
The 20-year-old’s directives included instructions on
how to fill the bomb “with nails, metal and other items dipped in rat poison,”
to be placed at a September 11 memorial in Kansas City, Missouri, the US
Department of Justice said.
He could face up to 20 years in prison if convicted,
the department said.
Australian Federal Police confirmed they had helped
the Federal Bureau of Investigation track down the 20-year-old man.
They alleged that Goldberg, who posed online as
“Australi Witness,” had “provided information over the Internet in an attempt
to facilitate and encourage terrorist acts in Australia” as well.
Goldberg’s arrest, which was authorized Wednesday by a
US judge, came as Americans prepared for the 14th anniversary of the September
11 attacks that brought down the World Trade Center in New York and destroyed
part of the Pentagon, killing nearly 3,000 people.
Australian authorities, who raised the nation’s terror
alert to high a year ago, said US investigators took over when the Australians
determined the person responsible for the threats was likely in the United
States.
Australian Federal Police’s acting deputy commissioner
for national security Neil Gaughan said the alleged assailant had presumed he
was safe.
“This man thought that he could willingly and
maliciously distribute disturbing information via the Internet and never have
his identity discovered,” Gaughan said.
“This operation again highlights how law enforcement
can investigate people in the online space and use our long-established
partnerships to work with overseas agencies to bring people to account for
their actions.”
Australia, which is part of the US-led coalition
against Islamic State in the Middle East, has been increasingly concerned about
the radicalization of its youth.
Some 120 Australians are still fighting with IS in
Iraq and Syria, while at least 30 have been killed. Another 160 sympathizers
are believed to be supporting jihadists from home.
To combat the problem, Canberra has raised its terror
threat alert level to high, introduced new national security laws and conducted
several counter-terrorism raids.
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