Mohamad Saeed Kodaimati, 25, appeared in federal court in San Diego where he was given the maximum sentence for making false statements involving international terrorism.
Kodaimati denied knowing anyone in the extremist group or taking up arms when he was stopped in March 2015 on his way back from Syria and interviewed by FBI and State Department officials at the US Embassy in Ankara, Turkey. He was arrested in April at his California home.
In his plea agreement, he admitted to knowing a member of the Islamic State group in Iraq and fighting alongside Al Nusrah, an al-Qaida-affiliated organization in Syria. After his arrest, prosecutors released photos of him allegedly holding an AK-47 in Syria.
His lawyer, Barbara Donovan, said her client made poor choices after getting caught up in a difficult, complex situation in his war-torn country, where he had gone to see his mother and try to help his family there. The Islamic State member he knew was someone he had known from living there and he approached the person to ask about friends who had gone missing, Donovan said.
Kodaimati lied to US officials in Turkey because he feared if he told the truth, it would delay his return to the United States and he needed to get back to earn money to send to his mother, Donovan said.
US District Judge Anthony Battaglia told the court that an eight-year sentence was necessary to deter others from lying.
Kodaimati was born in Syria and became a naturalized US citizen in September 2008. He left San Diego in December 2012 and traveled to Turkey and Syria until his return to the United States in 2015.
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