A Muslim convert accused of plotting to bomb targets in New York and kill US soldiers pleaded guilty today to one charge and faces 16 years in jail, the city attorney's office said.
Jose Pimentel, 29, a US citizen born in the Dominican Republic, was arrested by New York police in November 2011 and has been portrayed by officials as a "lone wolf" terrorist inspired by Al-Qaeda.
He was initially indicted on five counts and could have been jailed for life if convicted faced. He is now expected to face 16 years behind bars when sentenced on March 25.
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Pimentel, today pleaded guilty in the New York state supreme court to attempted criminal possession of a weapon in the first degree as a crime of terrorism.
In part of a plea agreement in which he forfeits the rights of appeal or review Pimentel said that he tried to make a pipe bomb in an attempt to force US troops out of Arab countries.
He was accused of plotting to bomb police cars and post offices and kill US servicemen returning from Afghanistan and Iraq to protest the American military intervention in those countries.
Pimentel, who allegedly was building a pipe bomb at the time of his arrest, had been under surveillance by New York police for about two years.
He initially pleaded not guilty to the charges. Terrorism cases are usually prosecuted in federal courts in the United States.
However federal authorities declined to take on Pimentel's prosecution, leaving it to the New York district attorney's office to pursue.
Pimentel's attorneys Susan Walsh and Lori Cohen had earlier described the case as "overreaching" and an example of an overzealous and wrongheaded effort to stamp out terror.
According to documents filed in court, Pimentel collected spare parts such as incendiary powder, pipes with drilled holes, electronic circuits, clocks and nails to build pipe bombs.
The prosecution says each of the components was proscribed in a step-by-step guide in Al-Qaeda's English-language Inspire Magazine on how to make a bomb designed to maximize casualties.