Federal agents arrest two suspects in Montclair amid ISIS investigation, with police vehicles and a suburban backdrop.
Federal agents arrest two suspects in Montclair amid ISIS investigation, with police vehicles and a suburban backdrop.
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Two Montclair men arrested in ISIS-linked investigation; one charged with material-support conspiracy, another with interstate threats

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Federal authorities arrested Montclair residents Tomas Kaan Jimenez-Guzel and Milo Sedarat this week in a widening investigation tied to ISIS-inspired activity that also produced arrests in Michigan and Washington, officials and court filings indicate.

Federal agents arrested Tomas Kaan Jimenez-Guzel, 19, at Newark Liberty International Airport on Tuesday as he allegedly tried to fly to Turkey to reach Syria and join the Islamic State, according to the Associated Press and a federal complaint summarized by officials. He is charged with conspiring—and attempting—to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization. Authorities also arrested Milo Sedarat in Montclair; he is charged in a separate case with two counts of transmitting threats in interstate and foreign commerce, federal officials said.

In a video statement posted Nov. 6, Acting U.S. Attorney Alina Habba said the complaint against Jimenez-Guzel and a Washington State co-defendant describes discussions of detailed travel plans, physical training, weapons including firearms and improvised explosive devices, and methods to avoid detection. The statement also referenced images of Jimenez-Guzel posing with a knife in front of an ISIS flag and messages in which he volunteered to commit beheadings, according to reporting by the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Sedarat’s complaint describes a pattern of antisemitic messages advocating violence and purchases consistent with preparation for an attack, including a knife and sword collection, tactical gear, and images of him practicing at a gun range, the Inquirer reported. ABC7 New York also reported that photos showed Sedarat holding a sword and a knife and cited messages in which he threatened to strap on a bomb and blow up a company’s headquarters.

The arrests in New Jersey are connected to a broader FBI probe centered on an alleged Halloween plot near Detroit. Earlier in the week, two Michigan men were charged with terrorism-related firearms offenses after investigators said they had scouted LGBTQ+ bars in Ferndale; a juvenile was also in federal custody, according to the AP and court records summarized by multiple outlets. On Thursday, prosecutors announced conspiracy charges against Saed Ali Mirreh, 19, of Kent, Washington, who is accused alongside Jimenez-Guzel of planning to travel to join ISIS, the AP reported.

Rowan University confirmed that Jimenez-Guzel, a Montclair native, enrolled there this fall; the school said the FBI had notified it of an investigation and that there was no threat to campus, the Inquirer reported.

Community leaders expressed alarm. Rabbi Yaacov Leaf of Chabad of Montclair called the episode “frightening” and said radical ideology can surface even in diverse suburbs, according to comments reported by the Daily Wire.

Both defendants remain in federal custody pending further proceedings. The charges are allegations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

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Federal agents arresting suspects in an ISIS-inspired plot targeting Detroit's LGBTQ+ bars during Halloween.
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Authorities arrest three more in ISIS-inspired plot tied to Detroit Halloween

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Federal authorities said Wednesday they arrested three additional men — two in New Jersey and one in Michigan — in an investigation into an ISIS-inspired plan that discussed attacking LGBTQ+ bars around Detroit over Halloween.

Two Pennsylvania teenagers have been charged with federal terrorism offenses after throwing homemade explosive devices inspired by ISIS during an anti-Islam protest outside New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani's Gracie Mansion residence on March 8, 2026. The FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force is probing the planned attack, which involved undetonated IEDs containing TATP packed with shrapnel; a third suspicious device was later found nearby.

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In a key development in the ISIS-inspired bombing attempt near New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani's residence, surveillance video shows one suspect purchasing safety fuse at a Pennsylvania fireworks store five days prior. Federal charges against the teens have been announced amid searches uncovering more explosives.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have arrested several Somali nationals in Minneapolis as part of a targeted immigration enforcement operation. The effort focused on people with deportation orders and criminal convictions, including gang-related activity and sexual offenses, according to the Department of Homeland Security and statements reported by The Daily Wire.

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New York City police locked down part of Manhattan's Upper East Side on Sunday after discovering a suspicious device in a vehicle linked to an improvised explosive device thrown during Saturday's protests near Gracie Mansion. The incident involved clashes between opposing demonstrations, with two suspects arrested for deploying the explosives. Authorities, including the FBI, are probing potential terrorism ties.

A gunman with prior ISIS support convictions, Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, opened fire in an ROTC classroom at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, on March 12, 2026, killing retired Army Lt. Col. Brandon Shah and wounding two Army personnel before students subdued and killed him. The FBI is probing the attack as terrorism; no broader threat identified.

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Early Saturday morning, security forces detained Javier Gabriel “N”, alias “La Piruja”, in Mexicali, a suspected high-ranking member of a Sinaloa-linked criminal structure. The operation led to the seizure of weapons, drugs, and vehicles. The detainee faces federal investigation for his role in regional criminal activities.

 

 

 

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