New Jersey Man Pleads Guilty in Plot to Join ISIS, Talk About Targeting White House

A 21-year-old New Jersey man pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to plotting with others in the tri-state area to travel overseas to join ISIS and to aspirational talk about targeting landmarks in the United States, including the White House.

Wearing a yellow prison jumpsuit, a handcuffed Samuel Topaz, of Fort Lee, pleaded guilty in Newark court to one count of material support for terror. He could face 15 years in prison but his lawyer says his client plans to cooperate against others arrested in the investigation in hopes of a lighter sentence.

Topaz, a recent convert to Islam, was arrested in mid-June, accused of conspiring with at least one of several other men arrested in the tri-state area the same week as part of the ongoing investigation.

Topaz's attorney Ian Hirsch said some in the group had discussed getting guns and traveling to Washington, D.C., to shoot up the White House lawn after they encountered difficulty leaving the country to join ISIS in Iraq or Syria. No specific attack was planned, Hirsch said.

Hirsch said Topaz told him he knows some in the group allegedly talked about carrying out possible other attacks on domestic soil as well.

He said Topaz, who was born in the United States, was troubled by the talk of his alleged co-conspirators. Hirsch described him as "naive" and said he is "not a terrorist," "does not hate America" and is remorseful for his behavior. 

The investigation into Topaz began when a friend reported to the FBI that he may try to travel overseas, according to the criminal complaint.

Topaz watched ISIS videos with co-conspirators and held meetings with other suspects, including one near the World Trade Center site, the complaint unsealed this summer said stated.

Under questioning, Topaz said he sympathized with ISIS and watched videos, and admitted speaking with three others about wanting to join ISIS, the complaint stated.

A Facebook page showed photos of Topaz dressed as a jihadist fighter, according to the complaint.

In a Facebook post dated April 25, Topaz said he was planning to delete his social media accounts until "I leave the country," though he didn't specify why he planned to leave.

On another Facebook post showing him dressed as an apparent ISIS fighter, he wrote: "Which assassin am I, or am I all of them?"

Topaz is scheduled to be sentenced in November. 

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