Final antifa cell associate sentenced in federal terrorism case
Kent’s 15 other incarcerated cell operatives received as little as 22 months to as much as 100 years each. Had she been convicted at trial, Kent could have spent decades in prison as opposed to the 15-year statutory maximum that the material support conviction carries. Song, codename “Delete,” was the subject of a weeklong, multistate manhunt involving the FBI and ended up with the cell’s lengthiest prison sentence of one century, or life in prison, for the attempted murder of a police officer.
- ▪Kent’s 15 other incarcerated cell operatives received as little as 22 months to as much as 100 years each.
- ▪Had she been convicted at trial, Kent could have spent decades in prison as opposed to the 15-year statutory maximum that the material support conviction carries.
- ▪Song, codename “Delete,” was the subject of a weeklong, multistate manhunt involving the FBI and ended up with the cell’s lengthiest prison sentence of one century, or life in prison, for the attempted murder of a police officer.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
The final federally convicted associate of a Texas antifa cell received a six-year prison term on Monday, bringing the cell’s total sentence to a combined 562 years behind bars for their roles in carrying out a July 2025 terrorist attack on an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility.Susan Elaine Kent, the last remaining defendant in the first-ever case to convict admitted antifa members on terrorism-related charges, was ordered on Monday to spend 72 months in federal prison for the sole count of providing material support to terrorists. Kent’s 15 other incarcerated cell operatives received as little as 22 months to as much as 100 years each.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Washington Examiner.