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New Jersey man, 22, allegedly planned ISIS attack on synagogue, DOJ says

Add The New York Post on Google Mohamed Sagha, 22, of Passaic County, N.J., was charged with aiding a foreign terror group for allegedly planning to carry out an ISIS attack on a synagogue, the US Department of Justice said on Monday.

He faces up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Sagha, who lives in Wayne, discussed “potential attacks on targets within the United States, including places of worship” with an undercover source, whom he believed to be part of the terror group, in online chats from December 2025 until June 2026, the department alleged. It said that he also shared photos and videos of the alleged target sites.

The Department of Justice said Mohamed Sagha shared information about his alleged target sites in online chats with the terror group. Kristina Blokhin – stock.adobe.com The New Jersey man allegedly told the source that “he was contemplating carrying out an attack of his own, possibly on a National Guard location or on a Jewish place of worship” near his home, and in March 2026, he tried to travel to ISIS territory in Syria to support the terror organization, according to court filings.

“Those who seek to advance the objectives of foreign terrorist organizations should expect a swift and coordinated response from federal law enforcement,” stated Robert Frazer, US attorney for the District of New Jersey.

According to court filings, Sagha tried to travel to ISIS territory in Syria to support the terror organization. Pictures from History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images The Justice Department alleges that Sagha purchased a virtual private network, a communications encryption tool, for the source, whom he believed to be part of ISIS.

In the complaint, an FBI special agent wrote that “based on my training and experience, had Sagha been communicating with an actual ISIS member and not a confidential source, he would have provided members of a terrorist organization with a tool capable of enhancing their operational security and ability to communicate and operate online with reduced risk of identification, thereby facilitating their planned acts of terrorism.”

Read original at New York Post

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