A thirteen-year-old boy from the NM terror compound told police what they were teaching the older kids in the compound in New Mexico. He said they were taught to shoot and how to rapid reload. He said that his mother’s boyfriend was teaching them jihad.
His mother is Jany Leveille, one of the five adults arrested at the compound. Allegedly, they were hoping to train a lot of kids, with the goal of creating a large army. The plan was to attack a hospital in Atlanta, while also targeting school children and law enforcement officers.
An affidavit filed in federal district court in New Mexico claims Ibn Wahhaj trained the boys in “firearms and military techniques, including rapid reloads and hand-to-hand combat, and told them jihad meant killing non-believers on behalf of Allah,” Reuters reported.
Unfortunately, it gets worse.
The boy told investigators he witnessed his mother and Ibn Wahhaj perform “exorcism” rituals on the 3-year-old boy later found dead when authorities raided the remote outpost in northern New Mexico.
In one instance, the adults choked the young boy, stopping his heart. The teenager told authorities his mother threatened him to guarantee his silence.
After a New Mexico judge dropped child abuse charges against the five adults living at the compound, the FBI re-arrested all five on weapons and conspiracy charges.
That judge accused prosecutors of racism for disliking terrorists, I presume. They need to remove her from the bench or transfer her to traffic court duty. Had they all actually been let go, they may well have decided to launch a major terror attack before they could be rearrested.
Defense attorneys said the state Supreme Court put in place the rule on an evidentiary hearing as a fundamental protection of individual liberty and the right to due process.
“We’re talking about a month that someone was in custody, it’s an absolute deprivation of liberty and that is very precious,” said Aleks Kostich, who is representing Morton.
Prosecutors had planned to present as evidence a hand-written document called “Phases of a Terrorist Attack” that was seized from the compound and includes vague instructions for “the one-time terrorist” and mentioned an unnamed place called “the ideal attack site.”