US court sentences Turkish woman for funding terror in Pakistan

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A Turkish woman was sentenced to five years in jail by a US court on charges of sending money to a terrorist outfit in Pakistan to carry out attacks against American military personnel.
40-year-old Oytun Ayse Mihalik, a lawful permanent resident of the United States, residing in California, had pleaded guilty last August on one count of providing material support to terrorists.
Mihalik specifically admitted that she had provided money to an individual in Pakistan with the intention that the money be used to prepare for and carry out attacks against US military personnel and other persons overseas, the US justice department said on Saturday.
Using the alias Cindy Palmer, Mihalik sent a total of $2,050 in three wire transfers to the person in Pakistan over the course of three weeks, at the end of 2010 and the beginning of 2011.
“International terrorists require a steady pipeline of money to maintain and support their operations,” said US attorney Andre Birotte.
“The defendant in this case knowingly and deliberately made wire transfers to fund terrorist operations overseas, where contributions like these could have a significant and devastating impact on American interests,” he said.
Mihalik has been in federal custody since she was arrested on 27 August, 2011, as she was preparing to board a flight to her native country, Turkey, with a one-way ticket.
As part of this case, Mihalik agreed that the US can take away her immigration status and that she will be removed from the US to Turkey after serving her prison sentence.
After her arrest, she told the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) that she believed the person in Pakistan was a member of the Taliban and alQaeda, and she knew he was using the money for ‘mujahidin’ operations against American military forces in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region.