The FBI says a 16-year-old Somali girl and her friends, 15- and 17-year-old sisters of Somali descent, were headed toward Turkey en route to Syria when authorities stopped them on October 20 at the Frankfurt, Germany airport. They sent them back to Denver, where FBI agents again interviewed them before releasing them to their parents without pressing charges.
"She told me they were going to get there and somebody is going to contact them," said the father of the 16-year-old, who spoke to the press on the condition of anonymity because he is concerned for the girls' safety. "I ask her, 'Who's that person?' She actually didn't have a clear idea about what's going on. They're just like, you know, stupid little girls. They just want to do something, and they do it."
The FBI is focusing on what contacts they had in Syria, having searched the girls' computers for clues.
"What they did is unacceptable, and they changed their lives, and they changed our lives," the father said, adding that he pulled his daughter out of school. She hasn't had contact with her friends. She told her father she was afraid to talk to him about going to Syria because she knew he would oppose it. "She realises she made a mistake."
"She asked her friends to pray for her because she and the other two girls ... And at that time, I just knew that something really bad was going to happen," he said. Then, he noticed her passport missing. He called the FBI and his state lawmaker, Representative Daniel Kagan, for help.
The girl left behind her laptop, which showed she had been researching whether minors could travel alone and if an entry visa to Turkey was required.
The father wasn't sure how his daughter, a typical high school girl who likes going to the movies and the mall, was lured to terrorism online. Officials have said one of the girls had planned the voyage and encouraged the others to come along.
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