NEW YORK (AP) — A U.S. Air Force veteran and airplane
mechanic plotted to travel to Syria to join the Islamic State group and
was arrested on terrorism charges, federal prosecutors said Tuesday.
Tairod Nathan Webster Pugh, of Neptune, New Jersey, was due Wednesday in
a New York federal court after being indicted on charges of attempting
to provide material support to a terrorist group and obstructing
justice.
Prosecutors said Pugh had been stopped at a Turkish airport in January
carrying a laptop with information on Turkey-Syria border crossing
points, 180 jihadist propaganda videos including footage of an Islamic
State prisoner beheading, and a letter declaring: "I will use the
talents and skills given to me by Allah to establish and defend the
Islamic States."
"There is only two possible outcomes for me. Victory or martyr,"
continued the letter, which authorities believe was to Pugh's Egyptian
wife, investigators said in court papers.
Pugh's lawyer, Michael K. Schneider, said Pugh would plead not guilty. Schneider declined to comment further.
The 47-year-old Pugh served in the Air Force from 1986 to 1990 and was
trained in installing and maintaining aircraft engines and navigation
and weapons systems, according to Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch's
office. An airman first class, Pugh was assigned to the Woodbridge Air
Base in England in July 1987 and Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona
in July 1989, the Air Force said.
Pugh converted to Islam around 1998, court papers said.
After leaving the Air Force, he worked as an avionics specialist and
airplane mechanic for a number of companies in the Middle East and the
U.S. — including American Airlines, where the FBI got a 2001 tip about
him from a co-worker who said Pugh expressed sympathy for Osama bin
Laden, according to court papers. The airline said he left in early 2000
after a few months at American.
In 2002, an associate of Pugh's told the FBI that Pugh was interested in
traveling to Chechnya to wage war, the investigators' court filing
said.
Pugh worked on for DynCorp International in Iraq as an Army contractor
in 2009 and 2010, the filing said. McLean, Virginia-based DynCorp
declined to comment.
Pugh has been living overseas for the past year and a half, most
recently in Egypt, investigators said. Last summer, Kuwait-based charter
airline Gryphon Airlines considered hiring Pugh for a project but
decided he didn't meet the requirements, the company said in a
statement. He told an acquaintance in a December email that he'd been
fired from his most recent job, according to investigators.
Prosecutors said Pugh then decided to join the Islamic State group,
traveling from Egypt to Turkey to ultimately cross the border into
Syria. He was stopped at the Turkish border Jan. 10, turned away and
returned to Egypt, where he was detained to be returned to the U.S.
Pugh variously told authorities in Turkey and Egypt that he had gone to
Turkey for vacation and to look for a job, and he said had no desire to
go to Syria, court papers said.
But investigators said they found a chart of crossing points between
Turkey and Syria, plus information about whether the border checkpoints
were staffed, on Pugh's laptop. Investigators said his cellphone also
had photos of a machine gun and airplanes, including an airplane
bathroom and an area under passenger seats.
He was flown back to the U.S. on Jan. 15.
The Department of Justice has charged roughly 20 people in the past year
with planning to travel to the Middle East to fight alongside militants
such as the Islamic State group, which controls parts of Syria and
Iraq. Federal officials have been concerned about Americans going
overseas to train with these groups and returning with plots to carry
out attacks at home.
"We will continue to vigorously prosecute extremists, whether based here
or abroad, to stop them before they are able to threaten the United
States and its allies," Lynch said in a statement Tuesday.
Three men were arrested late last month in a plot to travel to Syria; they have pleaded not guilty.
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