An ISIS operative arrested and criminally charged in Ohio this month
has confirmed that the terrorist group has cells in Mexico, according to
federal authorities. Judicial Watch has reported this for years,
documenting it in a series
of articles as part of an ongoing investigation on the connection
between drug cartels, corruption and terrorism on the southern border.
In fact, last spring Judicial Watch broke a story
about an ISIS camp just a few miles from El Paso, Texas in an area
known as “Anapra” situated just west of Ciudad Juárez in the Mexican
state of Chihuahua.
Though a number of high-level law enforcement, intelligence and
military sources on both sides of the border have provided Judicial
Watch with evidence that Islamic terrorist cells are operating in
Mexico, the Obama administration has publicly denied it, both to
Judicial Watch and in mainstream media outlets. Now we have a terrorism
suspect in custody proudly affirming it. His name is Erick Jamal
Hendricks and the U.S. has charged him with conspiring to provide ISIS
and ISIL material support. Hendricks created a sleeper cell with at
least ten members, according to the Department of Justice (DOJ), and
claims that some of his jihadist “brothers” are just south of the U.S.
border in Mexico. The 35-year-old lived for a short time in Charlotte,
North Carolina and was arrested and charged in Ohio last week. Hendricks
tried to “recruit people to train together and conduct terrorist
attacks in the United States,” according to the government’s criminal complaint.
Hendricks contacted another ISIS operative, referred to as “CW-1”,
who was arrested last summer, about working with him and several other
terrorists to carry out attacks. “Hendricks allegedly told CW-1 that he
‘needed people’ and wanted to meet in person; that there were several
‘brothers’ located in Texas and Mexico; that he was attempting to ‘get
brothers to meet face to face;’ and that he wanted ‘to get brothers to
train together,'” according to a DOJ announcement.
Hendricks and his sleeper cell targeted U.S. military members and a
woman who organized a “Draw Muhammad” cartoon contest in Garland, Texas
last May. Two men in body armor with assault rifles
tried to carry out an attack in the Dallas suburb building where the
event took place but were shot dead by police. The FBI says Hendricks
was connected with the terrorism-related shooting. Federal prosecutors
reveal that Hendricks vetted CW-1 by testing his religious knowledge and
commitment to jihad, to die as a martyr and his desire to enter Jannah
(paradise), the feds say.
The Hendricks case points to a broader issue of, not only homegrown
terrorism, but the immense threat along the southern border. Islamic
terrorists are training in southern border towns near American cities
and have joined forces with Mexican drug cartels to infiltrate the
United States. Judicial Watch has investigated this national security
crisis for years and interviewed local, state and federal law
enforcement officials as well as military sources on both sides of the
border. Besides exposing ISIS camps just miles from Texas, Judicial
Watch has verified that Mexican drug cartels are smuggling foreigners
from countries with terrorist links to stash areas in a rural Texas town
called Acala. Judicial Watch also uncovered a massive FBI scandal
involving a narco-terror ringleader with ties to ISIS and Mexican drug
cartels. As part of the FBI cover-up the agency facilitated the
ringleader’s release from a Chicago jail last year.
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