Man accused in Key West bomb plot found guilty

Harlem Suarez convicted Wednesday afternoon in federal court

Harlem Suarez plotted to bury a bomb at a public beach in Key West and detonate it, the FBI says.

KEY WEST, Fla. – A man accused of plotting to detonate a bomb at a Florida Keys beach was found guilty Tuesday afternoon in federal court.

Harlem Suarez, 23, was convicted of attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and providing material support to a terrorist organization.

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According to a criminal complaint, Harlem Suarez, 23, who is also known as Almlak Benitez, caught the attention of the FBI in April 2015 after posting extremist rhetoric and promoting the Islamic State group through posts on his Facebook page.

Last spring, a Facebook user called the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office to report seeing messages from an ISIS recruiter. FBI agents traced the posts to Suarez and said they found a trove of ISIS-related postings.

One post from April read: "Stand up with us my brother. Stand up with the black flag and the AK with 10 mag, fight with us, be a gangster with us, kill our enemies and convert to Islam now in USA."

The FBI put a confidential informant on the case. Agents said Suarez plotted with that informant to make a "timer bomb" and planned to test his explosives in the garage under his parents' apartment.

According to the complaint, Suarez ordered AK-47s online that were to be delivered to a Key West pawnshop, where he intended to pick them up. Employees at the pawnshop also alerted the FBI.

The complaint said Suarez created an ISIS-recruiting video inside a Homestead motel.

The script for the video, according to the complaint, was: "I call to other brothers worldwide to create Caliphate in the Middle East. Destroy our enemies against us. Let live only who are our brothers and sisters. Send our mujahideen to a different soil with tanks, missiles grenades and other tactical needs. America soil is the past, we will destroy America and divide it in two. We will raise our black flag on top of your white house and any president on duty (cut head)."

The complaint said Suarez had planned other attacks before deciding to bomb a Key West beach, including a Fourth of July attack in South Beach or in Marathon.

Investigators said Suarez later decided to bury the bomb at a public beach in Key West and detonate it using a cellphone. He met with an informant at the motel and showed him the homemade bomb before being taken into custody, the complaint said.

The FBI said pawnshops and other weapon depots were warned about Suarez and agreed not to sell him weapons.

"Suarez wanted to kill innocent people by detonating a nail-laced, explosive-filled backpack on a crowded Key West beach," FBI Special Agent George L. Piro said in a statement. "He was denied his terroristic dreams by several hardworking, dedicated law-enforcement organizations and professionals. This is a job well done."

Taking the stand in his defense, Suarez insisted that he was only playing along with men he met online. His attorney, Richard Della Fera, told jurors that Suarez was no terrorist and that he had been goaded along by the FBI informant.

Suarez is scheduled to be sentenced in April.


About the Authors

Peter Burke returned for a second stint of duty at Local 10 News in February 2014.

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