A former Chicago college student was crime” target=”_blank” rel=”noreferrer noopener”>convicted< during an FBI sting. He faces up to 20 years in prison.
His attorney, Joshua Herman, said during closing arguments that the case centered on the right to free speech and that Osadzinski had the right to watch and share the videos.
The Lincoln Park campus of DePaul University is seen largely empty as it closes to faculty in March, 2020 in Chicago. Recently, a former DePaul University student was convicted on terrorism charges and he faces up to 20 years in prison.
(Max Herman/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
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“Liking ISIS is not illegal,” Herman said in court.
But prosecutors alleged Osadzinski worked in coordination or at the direction of IS. Authorities said Osadzinski boasted in communications about his computer skills and ability to speak Arabic, and he bragged that he would use a gun and explosives to elude authorities if need be.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Melody Wells said Osadzinski was responding to the group’s directives to support it “on the digital front.”
This photo shows looking east across State Street at the DePaul Center, home of the downtown Loop campus of DePaul University in Chicago, Illinois, 2020. Recently, a former DePaul University student was convicted on terrorism charges.
( Interim Archives/Getty Images)
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“There is nothing independent about this,” Wells said.
The jury, which deliberated for four hours starting Friday, returned its verdict Monday at Chicago’s federal court. The trial lasted two weeks.