Abdirahman Bashiir's desire to join the Islamic State and the change of heart that led him to work for the FBI — along with how much they paid him — all fell under defense scrutiny Monday as the federal terror recruitment trial entered its third week.
Attorneys for three Minneapolis men accused of conspiring to join the terror group and to commit murder abroad took turns Monday questioning the co-conspirator turned paid informant whose testimony has spanned more than three days.
"It would be fair to say that the best job you ever had was working as an informant for the FBI," said Glenn Bruder, an attorney for defendant Guled Omar.
The government objected to the question, but Judge Michael Davis overruled, allowing Bashiir to answer.
"Yes," the 20-year-old said.
Omar, 21, Mohamed Farah, 22, and Abdirahman Daud, 22, each stand accused of charges that include conspiracy to join the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and to commit murder abroad. Six others pleaded guilty in the case and prosecutors say another, Abdi Nur, successfully joined the terror group and remains a fugitive.
Bashiir has testified that he decided to help the government investigate his one-time friends after lying to federal agents and two grand juries, and being "traumatized" by the deaths of four cousins who had previously joined ISIL.
Bashiir told Bruder that before he was paid roughly $119,000 to secretly record conversations among a group of Somali-American friends suspected of trying to go to Syria, his previously highest-paying job was $12 an hour.