12 Kasım 2015 Perşembe

Ohio Man Arrested For Alleged Support Of Radical Islamist Groups On Social Media

Terrence McNeil, 25, was arrested on charges of soliciting the murder of members of the U.S. military after posting pro-jihad messages on Twitter and Tumblr and reblogging a post calling for the death of American military personnel.

McNeil in an image uploaded to his Tumblr account.

Via abu-fil.tumblr.com

A 25-year-old man was arrested Tuesday on charges of "solicitation of a crime of violence" after he allegedly reblogged a Tumblr post that called for Muslims in America to kill 100 U.S. service members, whose purported names and addresses were included in the post.

The Department of Justice announced the arrest of Terrence J. McNeil, 25, of Akron, Ohio, in a news release that appeared to acknowledge the First Amendment implications of the case.

"While we aggressively defend First Amendment rights, the individual arrested went far beyond free speech by reposting names and addresses of 100 U.S. service members, all with the intent to have them killed," said Stephen Anthony, the special agent in charge of the FBI's Cleveland Division, in the news release.

McNeil did this, according to the 33-page complaint, by reblogging a pro-ISIS post of a GIF to his own Tumblr account.

"According to the allegations in the complaint, Terrence McNeil solicited the murder of members of our military by disseminating ISIL's violent rhetoric, circulating detailed U.S. military personnel information, and explicitly calling for the killing of American service members in their homes and communities," Assistant Attorney General Carlin said in the news release.

The complaint laid out multiple instances of McNeil allegedly posting violent, pro-ISIS material on Tumblr. A BuzzFeed News review of the Tumblr account, viewable on Thursday afternoon, found that multiple instances of alleged support were reblogged pictures. Additionally, the complaint details McNeil allegedly posting statements supporting violence against Americans on Facebook and Twitter. The complaint notes the Twitter account was suspended, and the Facebook account appears to have been suspended Thursday evening.

Neither the Justice Department nor the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Ohio responded on Thursday to a question regarding the First Amendment implications of such an arrest.

Unlike other arrests of Americans charged with connections to extremist groups, the complaint does not state that McNeil provided financial support or planned to leave the U.S. to join a group.

The only mention of McNeil being observed under physical surveillance is under a section that details his bus travel, stating that he was seen leaving his residence in October and taking public transportation to his place of employment, Akron City Hospital.

An examination of McNeil's bank accounts yielded similar mundane results, showing two direct deposits from his employer and five transactions at the Akron City Hospital Cafe and Starbucks.


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