Colorado Teen Accused of Trying to Go to Iraq to Fight for ISIS Terrorist Group

Colorado Teen Accused of Trying to Go to Iraq to Fight for ISIS Terrorist Group
Police tape in a file photo. (Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images)

DENVER—An 18-year-old from suburban Denver who allegedly planned to go to Iraq to fight for the ISIS terrorist group was arrested last week as he tried to board a flight to Turkey.

Davin Daniel Meyer of Castle Rock, who was arrested Friday, has been charged with attempting to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for Colorado announced late Monday.

Mr. Meyer’s lawyer did not immediately return a telephone message or email seeking comment.

According to his arrest affidavit, law enforcement began investigating him in June 2022 when someone who knew him contacted the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office. The person said they were concerned because, after following white supremacist ideology, Mr. Meyer, then 17, had turned to Islam and was frequently watching and listening to “radical Islamic sermons online.” The FBI was notified by the sheriff’s office, it said.

The person, who was not identified in the document, said Mr. Meyer said “he wanted to die in his early twenties for Allah.”

“In October 2022, the individual informed the FBI that Mr. Meyer had stated that if he could not go to the Middle East, he planned to get fertilizer and build a bomb in the United States,” the arrest affidavit said.

The document noted that Mr. Meyer had previously undergone mental health treatment and has been diagnosed with conditions including autism spectrum disorder and major depressive disorder.

Soon after he turned 18 in November, Mr. Meyer began communicating online with someone he thought was an ISIS facilitator but was actually a paid FBI informant, the document said. The following month, that person introduced Mr. Meyer to another informant who claimed to be an ISIS travel facilitator, who met with Mr. Meyer three times to talk about his plan to pay and prepare for traveling to join ISIS.

Mr. Meyer talked about problems finding a job that would allow him to follow his religious practices, such as not having to interact with women or listen to music, it said. After his mother offered to pay for an apartment for him and cover some living expenses for him, he decided to use that money to pay for his trip and buy gear that he needed to become a fighter, the document said.

Concerned that his mother would worry about him, he talked about leaving a note on the counter saying he had left by his own choice.

Mr. Meyer bought a ticket for July 14 to travel to Ankara, Turkey, where he believed he would meet with ISIS members and travel on to Iraq to become a fighter, the arrest affidavit said.

That day, he “repeatedly expressed anxiety and hesitation” to one of the informants, but he also “repeatedly expressed determination to go through with his plans,” it said.

Mr. Meyer was arrested after showing his boarding pass to the gate agent and walking down the jet bridge to the plane, the arrest affidavit said.

By Colleen Slevin