HONOLULU — An active duty soldier based in Hawaii pledged his allegiance to the Islamic State, helped purchase a drone for the group to use against American forces and said he wanted to use his rifle to “kill a bunch of people,” according to an FBI affidavit.
HONOLULU — An active duty soldier based in Hawaii pledged his allegiance to the Islamic State, helped purchase a drone for the group to use against American forces and said he wanted to use his rifle to “kill a bunch of people,” according to an FBI affidavit.
Ikaika Kang, a sergeant first class in the U.S. Army, made an initial appearance Monday in federal court in Honolulu. He was arrested Saturday on terrorism charges.
Paul Delacourt, the FBI special agent in charge of the Hawaii bureau, said Kang gave military documents to people he thought would give them to the Islamic State, but none of them got to the organization. He told reporters the FBI thinks Kang was a lone actor and wasn’t affiliated with anyone who poses a threat.
Kang’s court-appointed defense attorney, Birney Bervar, said it appears his client might suffer from service-related mental health issues of which the government was aware but neglected to treat. Bervar declined to elaborate.
He said Kang was “a decorated veteran of two deployments” to Iraq and Afghanistan.
The 26-page affidavit from FBI Special Agent Jimmy Chen details the yearlong investigation into the 34-year-old soldier, who thought he was dealing with Islamic State agents but they were undercover agents or sources instead.
Among the charges was that Kang copied military secret documents in 2015 and wanted to provide them to IS, according to the affidavit. It also says Kang admitted he voluntarily pledged loyalty to Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
The pledge occurred Saturday at a home in Honolulu, where Kang thought he was meeting an actual member of the organization, the affidavit says. They made combat training videos he thought would be taken back to the Middle East to help prepare IS soldiers to fight American forces, according to the affidavit.
Kang, who received extensive combat training, also helped purchase a drone Saturday that he thought would help Islamic State soldiers evade U.S. tanks in battle, explaining U.S. tank crews were highly trained and difficult to defeat. Kang told the undercover agents that the drone would allow IS members to view the battlefield from above “to find tank positions and avenues for escape.”
Kang, a trained air traffic controller based at Wheeler Army Airfield on Oahu, had his military clearance revoked in 2012 for making pro-Islamic State comments while at work and on-post and threatening to hurt or kill fellow service members.
His clearance was reinstated a year later after he completed military requirements.
However, the affidavit says the Army thought Kang was becoming radicalized in 2016 and asked the FBI to investigate.
Kang has two firearms registered in his name, an AR-15-style assault rifle and a handgun. After the shooting last summer at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., he told an undercover source that the “shooter did what he had to do and later said that America is the only terrorist organization in the world,” according to the affidavit.
The document alleges he also later told the same source that “Hitler was right, saying he believed in the mass killing of Jews.”
He told a confidential informant in March that he was angry at a civilian who took away his air traffic controller’s license and that he wanted to torture him, the affidavit said.
“Kang said that if he ever saw him again, he would tie him down and pour Drano in his eyes,” the affidavit said.
Kang enlisted in the Army in December 2001, just months after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. He served in Iraq from March 2010-February 2011 and Afghanistan from July 2013-April 2014. Kang was assigned to the headquarters of the 25th Combat Aviation Brigade.
At Kang’s home, there was red “evidence” tape on his door and on his water heater storage door.
Pua Edayan, the office manager at Kang’s condo complex in Waipahu, described Kang as “a quiet person.”
“He gave me no trouble,” she said.
He has one roommate and purchased the unit less than a year ago.
Kulana Knolls is popular with soldiers because it is near Schofield.
“I’m very shocked,” Edayan said. “This is surprise news to me.”