Khaled Abu Dahab, 57, an Egyptian-born naturalised US citizen and former Silicon Valley car salesman, was arrested in 1998 on terrorism charges in Cairo and confessed to being a member of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, an Al-Qaeda affiliate.
Chief Judge Beryl A. Howell of the US District Court for the District of Columbia entered the order revoking al-Dahab's citizenship on Thursday. The judge ordered him to immediately surrender his certificate of naturalisation to federal authorities, the Justice Department said.
Citing investigators, The Los Angeles Times reported that Al-Dahab admitted that he operated a communications hub for terror operatives out of his residence in California.
He said he recruited Americans into the Al-Qaeda during his 12 years in California, it said.
He told investigators that the 9/11 mastermind bin Laden "personally congratulated him for his work," the paper said.
Al-Dahab also admitted to attending a training camp near Jalalabad, Afghanistan, where he received military-style training and taught foreign fighters to fly hang gliders for terror attacks. He assisted in a number of terror attacks in Egypt and Pakistan, the paper said, citing case documents.
The move followed a 2015 civil action filed by the US seeking the revocation on the grounds that Al-Dahab "illegally procured his citizenship" based on false testimony during his naturalisation proceedings.
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