Daesh recruiter sentenced to life in New York court

This picture taken on March 24, 2019 shows surrendering Daesh jihadists boarding pickup trucks after having surrendered to the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in the village of Baghouz in Syria's eastern Deir Ezzor province near the Iraqi border. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 15 July 2023
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Daesh recruiter sentenced to life in New York court

  • Mirsad Kandic left his home in New York in 2013, traveling to Syria where he joined the Daesh group
  • He left for the Balkans later, was arrested in July 2017 in Sarajevo, and extradited to the US after 3 months

WASHINGTON: A Kosovo-born US man who helped supply “thousands” of recruits to the Daesh group was sentenced to life in prison Friday for helping the extremist group, the Justice Department announced.

Mirsad Kandic, 40, was a high-ranking member of the jihadist group also known as ISIS between 2013 and 2017, when it controlled large swathes of Iraq and Syria, the Justice Department said.
In 2013 he left his home in New York and traveled to Syria where he joined Daesh, becoming a fighter in Haritan outside of Aleppo.
Then he was directed to move to Turkiye to help smuggle foreign fighters and weapons for the group into Syria, it said.
He was also an emir for Daesh media, the department said, disseminating the group’s propaganda and recruitment messages online, including via more than 120 Twitter accounts.
As recruiter, “he sent thousands of radicalized Daesh volunteer fighters from Western countries into Daesh-controlled territories in Syria and elsewhere in the Middle East,” the Justice Department said.
One recruited volunteer was a fellow New Yorker, Ruslan Asainov, who became a sniper for the Daesh group and was convicted in February of providing material support to a designated terror group.
Another was Australian teen Jake Bilardi, who was lured into the Daesh group in 2014 before killing himself and more than 30 Iraqi soldiers in a March 2015 suicide bomb attack.
By early 2017, Kandic was hiding in Bosnia under a pseudonym. He was arrested in July 2017 in Sarajevo, and extradited to the United States three months later.
He was convicted in a jury trial in May 2022 of conspiracy and five counts of providing support to Daesh.


US halts some Medicaid payments to Minnesota, alleging fraud

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US halts some Medicaid payments to Minnesota, alleging fraud

  • Human rights advocates and ​Trump critics say the administration is using fraud allegations as an excuse to target immigrants and political opponents

WASHINGTON: The Trump administration is ​withholding more than a quarter of a million dollars of Medicaid funding from Minnesota, saying the state allowed the theft of federal funds intended for social-welfare programs in the state.
US Vice President JD Vance and Dr. Mehmet Oz, who oversees the Medicaid health care program for low-income households, announced the temporary halt at a joint press conference on Wednesday, where they criticized Minnesota Governor Tim Walz’s administration for not doing enough to combat fraud.
“We are stopping the federal payments that will go to the state government until the state government takes ‌its obligations seriously,” ‌Vance said.
Walz fired back on social media, accusing the ​administration of ‌attempting ⁠to punish ​Democratic-run ⁠states.
“This has nothing to do with fraud,” he said in a post on X. “This is a campaign of retribution. Trump is weaponizing the entirety of the federal government to punish blue states like Minnesota.”
Republican President Donald Trump’s administration has used fraud allegations in Minnesota as part of its justification for a months-long immigration crackdown in the state, during which federal agents shot and killed two US citizens, and for freezing funds meant for social programs.
Administration officials have pointed to ⁠a scandal that began during the COVID-19 pandemic, when the Department ‌of Justice indicted 47 people for allegedly defrauding $250 million from ‌a federally funded child nutrition program.
Walz, a Democrat, said ​the latest withholding of Medicaid funding would be ‌devastating for families, veterans and people with disabilities.
GOVERNMENT WITHHOLDS $259 MILLION IN MEDICAID FUNDS
Oz said ‌the federal government had paused the payment of $259 million of deferred Medicaid payments to Minnesota following an audit, and would hold on to the funds until the state government proposes “a comprehensive corrective action plan.” He added that Walz had 60 days to respond.
Vance and Oz also announced a six-month ‌nationwide moratorium blocking durable medical equipment suppliers — including for prosthesis, orthotics and other items — from enrolling in Medicaid, saying such suppliers had become ⁠a source of fraud.
Oz, ⁠citing an estimate from the non-profit Kaiser Family Foundation, said $300 billion a year is spent nationwide on health care that is “fraudulent, abusive or wasteful.” Of that, the federal portion is around $100 billion, he said.
The administration will soon announce additional actions targeting other states, he said, citing issues with health care fraud in southern Florida, California and New York.
Trump has tapped Vance to spearhead an administration “war on fraud” and created the new role of assistant attorney general for national fraud enforcement to lead the Justice Department’s investigation and prosecution of fraud that affects the federal government and federally funded programs.
Trump has repeatedly attempted to withhold funding from Democratic-led states, although such cuts have frequently been blocked by federal judges who found the actions potentially retaliatory ​or legally flawed.
Human rights advocates and ​Trump critics say the administration is using fraud allegations as an excuse to target immigrants and political opponents.