Afghan man accused of plotting US Election Day attack pleads guilty

An Afghan man in Oklahoma is accused Planning for the election day attack In the United States, on behalf of the Islamic State, on Friday, a terrorist charge of terrorism was approved.
Nasser Ahmed Ahadi, 27, acknowledged that he is guilty of two crimes: conspiracy and support to the Islamic State Group, and an attempt to receive firearms to commit a federal terrorist crime. The Islamic State has been appointed by the United States as a foreign terrorist organization.
Facing up to 35 years in prison.
“The defendant admits that he was planning and obtained firearms to carry out a violent terrorist attack on election day in 2024, a conspiracy that was discovered and suspended through good work of the FBI and our partners,” Cash Patel, director of the FBI, said in a statement.
She left a phone message for a comment from Craig Huwaih, Tahdi’s lawyer.
Tadiche lived in Oklahoma City last year when he acquired AK-47 and 500 rounds From ammunition to target large crowds, according to court documents. The authorities said that he conspired with many people, including his son -in -law, Abdullah Haji Zada, for several months to draw the attack.
Zada, who was 17 years old at the time, was accused as an adult and acknowledged that he was guilty in April. He faces up to 15 years in prison.
Autism arrived in the United States in September 2021 with a special migration visa shortly after the capital of Afghanistan, Kabul, which the Taliban seized. At the time of his arrest on October 7, he was autism in the conditional release while the migration situation was suspended, according to the Ministry of Justice. His condition has been canceled since then.
The FBI agents had previously witnessed that Tawhedi, who was working as a Rideshare driver and in car stores, was under observation for more than a month before his arrest.