-
Maserati driver kills man and dog crossing Sherman Oaks street - 19 mins ago
-
The Conspiracy Behind Bill Belichick Being Kept Out of the Hall of Fame - 39 mins ago
-
Trump Officials’ Use of ‘Domestic Terrorist’ in Minnesota Shootings Doesn’t Match Legal Reality - 40 mins ago
-
Suspects in U-Haul lead police on a chase through Los Angeles city streets - 60 mins ago
-
Cubs 26-Year-Old Named Out-of-Nowhere Breakout Candidate - about 1 hour ago
-
Trump Threatens Iran With ‘Massive Armada’ and Presses a Set of Demands - about 1 hour ago
-
Iraq’s Nominee for Prime Minister Rejects Trump Threats - 2 hours ago
-
Anthony Kazmierczak’s Ex-Wife Speaks Out After Ilhan Omar Attack - 2 hours ago
-
The Laws Designed to Protect My Son Could Very Well Kill Him - 3 hours ago
-
Expiration of federal health insurance subsidies: What to know in California - 3 hours ago
Long Beach man pleads guilty to sending money to ISIS, possessing homemade bomb

A Long Beach man pleaded guilty Tuesday to sending payments to suspected members of ISIS and for illegally posessing a homemade bomb, according to authorities.
Mark Lorenzo Villanueva, 29, pleaded guilty to attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization and being a felon in possession of a firearm, according to a U.S. Attorney’s Office Central District of California news release. Villanueva has been in custody since August.
According to his plea agreement, Villanueva began messaging a person claiming to be an ISIS fighter living in Syria since February. The person told Villanueva how to send money to him overseas.
Villanueva allegedly sent more than $1,600 knowing it would be spent on ammunition, weapons, and other supplies, authorities said. Villanueva also discussed conducting ISIS operations in the U.S.
Law enforcement searched Villanueva’s home in August and found a homemade bomb with large amounts of ball bearings and other objects, including nails, screws, and nuts, according to the release. The device was not federally registered as required by law.
At the time Villanueva had the bomb, he had been convicted of felony stalking in September 2017 and was prohibited from possessing any firearm, according to the release.
Villanueva is scheduled to be sentenced June 17 and faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison for trying to provide material support to a federal terrorist organization, and up to 15 years in prison for being a felon in possession of a firearm, according to the release.
Source link







