A New York man pleaded guilty Thursday to three charges over online threats he posted against the creators of the television show "South Park," the Department of Justice said.
On November 3 law enforcement agents secretly watched as a young Hispanic convert to Islam surfed the internet at a public location in Woodlawn, Maryland, a western suburb of Baltimore. What they saw, according to court documents, followed a pattern of online radicalization that has caused counterterrorism officials plenty of anxiety in recent years.
Creator of a radical Islamic website is now saying that it was the wrong message to send. CNN's Drew Griffin reports.
He might not be a household name, but Yousef al-Khattab and his Revolution Muslim extremist group have been pivotal in inspiring a wave of homegrown American jihadists over the past three years.
U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman says 2 N.J. men charged with planning a violent Jihad will be held without bail pending trial.
Two New Jersey men arrested last week at John F. Kennedy International Airport allegedly on their way to fight with an al Qaeda-affiliated group in Somalia were followers of an extreme Islamist group based in New York, CNN has learned.
A Revolution Muslim rally on the streets of New York in October 2009.
Nothing is sacred on "South Park."
A radical Islamic website warns the creators of "South Park" after the Prophet Mohammed was featured on the show.