Teen from New Mexico compound says he was trained for jihad

Teen from New Mexico compound says he was trained for jihad

by Joseph Anthony
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Defendant Jany Leveille (L to R) sits next to her defense lawyer Kelly Golightley, defendant Siraj Ibn Wahhaj and his defense lawyer Tom Clark at hearing in Taos County District Court in Taos County, New Mexico, U.S.

A 13-year-old boy who was part of group taken into custody at a squalid New Mexico compound last month has told FBI agents his motherโ€™s boyfriend was training him to conduct โ€œjihadโ€ against non-believers, according to federal court documents.


The boy was among 11 children and five adults living at the compound in Taos County when it was raided on Aug. 3 by local sheriffโ€™s deputies who discovered a cache of firearms and the children living without food or clean water. The dead body of a three-year-old boy was found buried at the site later.

They initially faced state charges, then on Friday, the five adults including a Haitian woman described as the groupโ€™s leader, 35-year-old Jany Leveille, were arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and accused of conspiracy and firearms offenses.

In an affidavit filed in support of a criminal complaint, an FBI special agent wrote that Leveilleโ€™s 13-year-old son told investigators that his motherโ€™s boyfriend, Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, 40, wanted to โ€œget an army togetherโ€ and train them for jihad.

The boy told agents that Ibn Wahhaj trained him and another of Leveilleโ€™s teenage sons 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, according to the affidavit filed in U.S. District Court in New Mexico.

The 13-year-old also told the FBI that his mother believed she received messages from God, and that he watched her and Ibn Wahhaj perform supposed โ€œexorcismโ€ rituals over the three-year-old boy, including one during which the boy choked and his heart stopped, according to the special agentโ€™s affidavit.


The teenager said his mother and others at the compound told him not to talk to anyone about the three-year-old ever being at the compound because they would โ€œall go to jail.โ€

Defense lawyers have said that the five adults were exercising their constitutional rights to practice their religion and own firearms, and that the group is being discriminated against because they are black and Muslim. The defense attorneys could not immediately be reached for comment on Saturday.

The five defendants came under FBI surveillance in May after Leveille wrote a letter to Ibn Wahhajโ€™s brother asking him to join them and become a โ€œmartyr,โ€ state prosecutors have said.

They are due to appear in court in Albuquerque on Tuesday.

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