Woman Sentenced to Four-and-a-half Years for False Statements in ISIS Romance Case

Woman Sentenced to Four-and-a-half Years for False Statements
Courtesy: Facebook

Woman Sentenced to Four-and-a-half Years for False Statements in ISIS Romance Case

May 11 2015 (US Department of Justice)- In a press release from the US Department of Justice today, Heather Elizabeth Coffman, 29, of Glen Allen, Virginia, was sentenced to 54 months in prison for making false statements in an international terrorism investigation.

Coffman, according to the statement of facts filed with the plea agreement, admitted that beginning prior to June 2014 and continuing up through November 2014, she used several Facebook accounts under different names showing her support for the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s (ISIL, referred to as ISIS by the defendant and within court documents) cause.

These accounts also revealed the defendant’s romantic involvement with an individual referred to as “N.A.,” a foreign national living outside of the United States.  In the months leading up to September 2014, Coffman and N.A. communicated almost daily via Facebook and other communications platforms.

Coffman Facebook Page
One of Coffmans Facebook pages Courtesy Facebook

During their conversations, Coffman and N.A. explored options for N.A. to travel to Syria in order to fight for ISIS and die a “Shaheed,” referring to a martyr who dies for “jihad.”

Coffman cultivated online relationships with individuals she believed were ISIS facilitators operating in Syria.  She put N.A. in contact with a facilitator to assist with his travel and eventual training with ISIS (with the Coffman’s financial assistance for travel) before he was to cross the border into Syria to fight with ISIS.

This plan was moving forward when the couple’s relationship deteriorated in early September 2014, and N.A. backed out of the plans.  Coffman later communicated with others about her disappointment and expressed how she wished the plan had succeeded.

According to the plea documents, Coffman admitted that she lied during the ongoing investigation on Nov. 13, 2014, when she told FBI agents that she did not know whether N.A. had talked to anybody else who supported ISIS, and that she did not know anybody N.A. had talked to when, as Coffman well knew, she had previously put N.A. in contact with ISIS fighters and N.A., in turn, had communicated with them to facilitate N.A.’s travel to Turkey to join ISIS.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here