A Minneapolis man convicted of threatening FBI agents who arrived on his doorstep to question his brother about alleged terrorism involvement was released from jail Tuesday, calling the incident "just a big misunderstanding."
Mohamed Ali Omar, 22 spent the past seven months in federal detention after he was charged in November with threatening federal agents and an interpreter who arrived at his home looking for his brother. He was convicted in March. That brother, Guled Omar, is among several men charged with providing material support to the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). He awaits trial. Another brother, Ahmed Ali Omar left Minnesota to fight in Somalia in 2007.
Hours after the hearing, in which Chief Federal Judge Michael Davis ordered the sentencing postponed and Omar released, Omar emerged from the federal courthouse in Minneapolis dressed in a suit and tie, flanked by his attorney and mother, who smiled with relief.
"I just want to say that I'm glad to be out," said Omar, who said the altercation with agents began after a Somali interpreter called his sister "a very degrading, insulting name."
"All I really was doing was just defending my sister and, as a man and the culture I come from, you have to look out for your siblings," he said. "So once my sister was disrespected, I just made a few warnings. That's pretty much what it was, I was just sticking up for my sister."
Kyle Loven, the FBI's spokesman, said, "This gentleman was convicted at trial by a jury of his peers and the FBI will stand by the verdict rendered by the jury."
The encounter occurred on Nov. 6, 2014, when two FBI agents and a Somali-English interpreter showed up at Mohamed Omar's family home.
The 54-second cellphone video, recorded by one of Mohamed's sisters, shows him on the front porch, demanding to see a business card before telling the agents to get off his property.