US Attorney Alina Habba says the DoD moved quickly to stop the Halloween-inspired conspiracy

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Federal prosecutors say that the FBI has separated the network connected to Isis that is connected to Michigan to New Jersey, charging several young men in a joint paper involving the shooting techniques of Halloween Masses.
Tomas Jimenez-Guzel, 19, of New Jersey, and Sayubona Mirreh, 19, of Went, Washington, were arrested this week in connection with the arrest of others in Michigan.
The Justice Department announced the new charges Wednesday, calling the investigation “high-level” into activists who used encrypted messaging to communicate. US Attorney Alina Habba said the new Jersey defendants were “engaged with ISIS” and were in regular contact with the Michigan cell. “
“We will continue to move quickly and to the limit whenever terrorism or hatred threatens our communities,” Habba said on Friday. “The threat of terrorism is real when Americans are threatened. We respond fast, focused, and together.”
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It is said that Milo Sedarat sent these photos to a friend on social media in January 2025. (Obtained via FOX News Digital)
The 93-page complaint was filed on Nov. 5 in the Eastern District of Michigan Charges Ayob Asamil Nasser and his brothers Mohammed Ali and Mahmed Mahmoud with providing material aid to Isis. Prosecutors say the Trio stockpiled ar-15-style rifles, rifles, clips for handguns and about 1,680 rounds of ammunition as “pumpkin” – code for the Halloween attack. Another fraud is Milo Sedarat, 21, from New Jersey.
Agents said they were trained in Detroit-area neighborhoods, distributing anti-Yis propaganda and LGBTQ barriers to Ferndale and the Jewish Center. During the attack on Oct.
In Newark, Jimenez-Guzel and Mirreh face charges of conspiring to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization, the report said. Jimenez-Guzel is also facing attempted murder after agents arrested him on Tuesday at Newark Liberty International Airport for allegedly flying to Turkey on his way to Syria.
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A classified photo showing selfies allegedly exchanged between suspects in an Isis-inspired farm involving at least six young men from three drugs. The man on the left is said to be Tomas Jimenez-Guzel, posing under the flag of ISIS, and on the right is suspected to be Sated Mirreh, wearing a dress inspired by ISIS. Both are suspected of having their faces twisted before sending the photos to a group chat with federal investigators. (Obtained via FOX News Digital)
Court filings shown by the AP say their travel plans “picked up speed after the Oct. 31 Arrest” of several suspects in Michigan who “had been in contact with him.”
“We will not stop. We will follow the tents where they lead,” said US Attorney Jerome F. Gorgon Jr. in Detroit.
FBI Detroit special agent Jennifer Ruyan said her team will “continue to investigate, arrest and disrupt all attempts or plots that are supposed to cause harm.” Habba praised the cooperation between the offices of Michigan and New Jersey, which he called “a model of communication against loose threats.”
Both of these complaints describe encrypted WhatsApp conversations called “Musleen,” where the suspects exchanged materials, organized gun training and discussed the “Pumpkin line”.
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Explosive images show that the images were taken from a surveillance video showing Mohammed Ali at the Richigan Gun Range. (Eastern Michigan District)
Michigan defendants remain in custody in Detroit; Jimenez-Guzel and Mirtreh appeared in court in Nenark and Seattle.
All face charges of providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization, and additional charges could be under wraps.
A criminal complaint is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
FOX News Digital’s Michael Ruiz and the Associated Press contributed to this report.



