Skip Navigation

Homeland Security News

A collection of open-source homeland security and terrorism news from around the world.
Date: Jun 21, 2018

A federal judge sentenced Aziz Sayyed to 15 years in prison and a lifetime of supervision for plotting a terror attack in Huntsville. He also cannot travel outside of the United States. Sayyed pleaded guilty to federal charges in March.

Prosecutors had recommended a sentence of 15 years and lifetime monitoring after the guilty plea.

Sayyed was arrested in June 2017 after telling an undercover agent that he was interested in serving ISIS. Prosecutors and Sayyed's own attorney both say he had already obtained chemicals that could be used in a TATP explosive device, like the one used in the terror attack in Manchester that killed 23 people, including the bomber.

Read more: WHNT

Since a deadly explosion rocked Baghdad’s Sadr City area June 6, there's been a lot of talk about getting armed factions to turn over their weapons to the Iraqi government, but it remains to be seen how successful such a campaign would be.

The blast, which occurred when illegally stored weapons and ammunition detonated, killed at least 18 people and wounded more than 100. Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi called for an urgent investigation into the explosion.

Muqtada al-Sadr, a nationalist Shiite cleric and head of the Sadrist movement — whose family is Sadr City's namesake — addressed the incident June 8. He stressed that he had given orders to search for the “fugitive” responsible, though some of his opponents alleged the weapons, which had been stored in a mosque, were owned by Sadr's own Peace Companies militia.

Read more: Al-Monitor

Few Islamic State group fighters return but home-grown attacks rise, Europol says
Europeans who have fought on behalf of the Islamic State group have not flooded back in large numbers since losing strongholds in Syria and Iraq, Europe's police agency said on Wednesday but they’ve inspired a growing number of home-grown attacks.

Manuel Navarrete, head of Europol's Counter Terrorism Centre, told a press conference at its Hague headquarters that a big influx of returning fighters had not materialised.

"The main threat is coming from foreign terrorist fighters even though the numbers ... that are returning are quite low," he said, referring to outsiders who travelled to Syria and Iraq to fight alongside militants there.

Read more: France24

Two female suicide bombers left 15 people injured in north-eastern Nigeria, news agency AFP reports.

Borno state police spokesman Edet Okon told the agency the first woman exploded when she was shot by officers near a military base in Maiduguri on Wednesday evening.

The second woman died after detonating her device near a rickshaw, he added.

 

Source:  BBC News

As mass shootings filter in and out of the news cycle at an almost dizzying pace with each new tragedy, the FBI has continued to probe why these atrocities continue and what can be done to stop them. 

In a new report released Wednesday, the bureau shed light on behaviors of shooters before they acted out, finding most obtained a gun legally and did not have diagnosed mental health issues, points that run contrary to some popular beliefs. 

Active shooting incidents have continued to plague the nation but last year, there were 30 incidents across the U.S. — the highest number since the FBI began tracking the phenomenon. Last year also broke a record for the highest death toll in any single year. 

"Faced with so many tragedies, society routinely wrestles with a fundamental question: can anything be done to prevent attacks on our loved ones, our children, our schools, our churches, concerts and communities?" the study says. "There is cause for hope because there is something that can be done." 

The 30-page report examines active shooter incidents from 2000 to 2013 and suspects in 63 cases, finding suspects showed signs before they attacked but law enforcement wasn't notified in more than half the cases until it was too late.

Forty percent of suspects purchased a firearm or multiple guns legally for the sole purpose of an attack. Another 35 percent already legally owned a gun before planning an attack, meaning 75 percent of active shooter incidents reviewed by the FBI legally owned the gun they used in the attack. 

The remaining suspects stole, borrowed or purchased a weapon illegally. 

The FBI could only verify that 25 percent of the gunmen examined in the study had any type of mental illness diagnoses, including disorders affecting mood, anxiety and personality. 

 

Read more:  USA Today