Former OSU student guilty in plot to bomb Christmas tree ceremony

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — A federal jury found an Oregon man guilty of federal terrorism charges on Thursday, rejecting the defense team's argument that Mohamed Mohamud was entrapped or induced by a yearlong FBI sting that began to target him when he was a teenager.
Mohamud was accused of leading a plot to detonate a bomb at Portland's 2010 Christmas tree-lighting ceremony. But the device he thought was a bomb was a fake, supplied by undercover FBI agents posing as members of al-Qaida.
After his arrest, the mosque where he sometimes visited in Corvallis while attending Oregon State University suffered a fire bomb attack.
Mohamud sat still, giving no visible reaction as Thursday's verdict was read. His attorney, Steve Sady, later said an appeal was being planned for after the scheduled May 14 sentencing.
"We are disappointed with the verdict," Sady said. "We obviously though he was entrapped."
Prosecutors argued that Mohamud was predisposed to terrorism as early as 15 years old.
Mohamud, now 21, traded emails with an al-Qaida lieutenant later killed in a drone strike. He also told undercover agents he would pose as a college student while preparing for violent jihad.
Mohamud was never called to testify. Instead, the jurors saw thousands of exhibits and heard hours of testimony from friends, parents, undercover FBI agents and experts in counterterrorism, teenage brain development and the psychology of the Muslim world.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Ethan Knight told the jury earlier this week that the decision would be easy. Mohamud pressed a keypad button on a black Nokia cellphone and intended to kill people. Whatever else they might think about the methods of undercover agents or the government's decision to investigate a teenager, the underlying decision was Mohamud's and the motivation was hatred of the West.
Sady had argued that Mohamud wasn't radicalized by online recruiters or friends with jihadist leanings, but rather by a Justice Department hungry for convictions that ignored every caution sign along the way. Undercover agents manipulated Mohamud's faith and plied him with praise and the promise of a life leading other jihadis, Sady said.
Mohamud could be ordered to serve life in prison.
(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)
Mohamud is evil, no question about it. Â But this case should make us all uncomfortable. Â There was no bomb, there was no real plot, and no one was ever endangered. Â Someone is going to spend the rest of his life in prison not for something he did, but for something he *would* have done. Â And the minds of teenagers are easily manipulated by those intent on doing so. Â I'm not saying this conviction is right or wrong, I'm just saying the methods used by law enforcement make me kind of ill. Â
OSU students are all terrorists
 entrapped by the FBIÂ
 @godless anarchist Really? as a Liberal do have any logic? Could you be persuaded to dial a phone knowing when you hit send men, women and children would die? You have no honor, some people can be entrapped into doing prostitution,illegal gambling,pyramid schemes etc. but killing other human beings? Please he's a scumbag terrorist that wrote for a Jihadist website he wanted to kill Americans!
 @grainger
Men are so simple and so much inclined to obey immediate needs that a deceiver will never lack victims for his deceptions. ~ Niccolo Machiavelli Â