Monday, May 25, 2026
ADVT 
International

Mississauga Teen Who Admitted To NYC Terror Plot Asks For ‘Second Chance’

The Canadian Press, 05 Mar, 2018 12:54 PM
  • Mississauga Teen Who Admitted To NYC Terror Plot Asks For ‘Second Chance’
A Canadian who admitted to plotting a terrorist attack on New York City is pleading for "a second chance" in a letter submitted to the court ahead of his upcoming sentencing.
 
 
In the letter filed to a New York court on Friday, Abdulrahman El Bahnasawy of Mississauga, Ont., outlined his personal history with addiction and mental illness, and explained that he felt American airstrikes against the Middle East drove him to jihadism. 
 
 
The 20-year-old wrote that he felt that Americans were trying to disrupt the lives of people in the Middle East with airstrikes and he thought "it was appropriate to use similar methods back until and unless they stop."
 
 
The 24-page hand-written letter, addressed to the judge in his case and partially redacted, is part of a package his lawyers submitted ahead of his sentencing for multiple terrorism-related charges that he pleaded guilty to last year.
 
 
El Bahnasawy described his disenfranchisement with western society, including "so-called democracy and freedom."
 
 
He said he chose to go to the U.S. to carry out the plan because Canada had recently stopped its airstrikes, "and it didn't make sense to transgress back against them in such a way."
 
 
Police secretly arrested El Bahnasawy, then 18, in what they said was a plot by Islamic State sympathizers to attack New York City concert venues, subway stations and Times Square. He was arrested after travelling from Canada to New Jersey in 2016. The records in his case were sealed for over a year as police tried to hunt down his accomplices.
 
 
Authorities announced the charges against him after two other suspects were arrested in Pakistan and the Philippines.
 
 
The Canadian didn't discuss the specifics of the plot in the letter, instead focusing on why he decided to go to such extremes.
 
 
"My detailed reasons about this is in no way a justification for it, I merely am explaining my thought process at the time," he wrote, adding that he no longer believes extremism is the answer.
 
 
"There are many issues in this world but I don't want to lose my life or freedom to try fixing them, and I definitely do not want to resort to violence or harm to fix them. I sincerely apologize for my (behaviour) and I only ask for a second chance."
 
 
El Bahnasawy also used the letter to outline his struggles with addiction and mental illness, including several trips into hospital psychiatric wards and rehab centres. He said he spent a month in a psych ward in Kuwait, and eight months in rehab in Egypt. Court records show he also spent time at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto.
 
 
"I want to experience life away from drugs and away from war and violence," he wrote.
 
 
He wrote that he wondered where he would be if anyone who knew about his plans had encouraged him to find a more productive way to fight the injustice he saw in the world.
 
 
The young man's lawyers, in a submission included in the package with the letter, requested the judge impose a sentence "no greater than necessary to comply with (the law)."
 
 
They suggested that his release might coincide with "the onset of Abdulrahman’s mid-twenties when his cognitive development will be complete."
 
 
El Bahnasawy's sentencing hearing is scheduled for April 9.

MORE International ARTICLES

India Tells UNHCR That Terror Factories In Pakistan Destabilizing South Asia

India Tells UNHCR That Terror Factories In Pakistan Destabilizing South Asia
Accusing Pakistan of "nurturing" terrorism, India has told the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHCR) in Geneva, Switzerland, that Islamabad continues to sponsor terrorism and warned that this will ultimately affect the stability of the South Asian region.

India Tells UNHCR That Terror Factories In Pakistan Destabilizing South Asia

London Bridge Attacker Khurram Shehzad Butt Visited Pakistan Four Years Ago

London Bridge Attacker Khurram Shehzad Butt Visited Pakistan Four Years Ago
One of the three London attackers involved in last week's attack in the London Bridge area, Khurram Shehzad Butt had travelled to Pakistan four years ago to visit his relatives.

London Bridge Attacker Khurram Shehzad Butt Visited Pakistan Four Years Ago

From Trump To Assad: Syrian Artist Reimagines World Leaders As Vulnerable Refugees

From Trump To Assad: Syrian Artist Reimagines World Leaders As Vulnerable Refugees
 A Syrian refugee artist has spent 19 months creating a series of paintings of world leaders, with an aim to picture them outside their positions of power.

From Trump To Assad: Syrian Artist Reimagines World Leaders As Vulnerable Refugees

Hotel Surveillance Footage Shows Chaotic Scene In Kelowna, B.C., Murder Trial

Hotel Surveillance Footage Shows Chaotic Scene In Kelowna, B.C., Murder Trial
KELOWNA, B.C. — Surveillance footage played in a Kelowna, B.C., court Thursday showed two shooters dressed in black running from the Delta Grand Hotel in a chaotic scene that left a gang leader dead.

Hotel Surveillance Footage Shows Chaotic Scene In Kelowna, B.C., Murder Trial

British Author Naomi Alderman’s The Power Wins Baileys Women’s Prize For Fiction

British Author Naomi Alderman’s The Power Wins Baileys Women’s Prize For Fiction
Naomi Alderman Was Awarded The £30,000 Prize For Her Dystopian Novel, In Which Women Suddenly Discover They Have The Power To Electrocute People At Will.

British Author Naomi Alderman’s The Power Wins Baileys Women’s Prize For Fiction

Indian-Origin Rajiv Chhatwal, Rupinder Kaur and Harinder Singh Reach Settlement In Tech Scam

Indian-Origin Rajiv Chhatwal, Rupinder Kaur and Harinder Singh Reach Settlement In Tech Scam
Rajiv Chhatwal, Rupinder Kaur and Harinder Singh and companies Global Access Technical Support, Source Pundit and Helios Digital Media LLC were the defendants that had been charged in October 2016

Indian-Origin Rajiv Chhatwal, Rupinder Kaur and Harinder Singh Reach Settlement In Tech Scam