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Lisa Smith found GUILTY of membership of terror organisation ISIS by Special Criminal Court

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LISA Smith has been found guilty of membership of the terrorist organisation Isis by the Special Criminal Court.

Mum-of-one Smith wept as Mr Justice Tony Hunt revealed the verdict of the three-judge, non-jury court and was comforted by her legal team.

Former Irish soldier Lisa Smith, 39, arrives at the Special Criminal Court in Dublin
PA
Lisa Smith poses with a rifle in Tunisia in 2012
Smith had pleaded not guilty to membership of an unlawful terrorist group

Despite objections from gardai, Mr Justice Hunt agreed to allow Smith to remain on bail until her sentencing hearing on July 11.

Mr Justice Hunt spent 90 minutes returning Monday’s judgement, where he rejected Smith’s claims that she had gone to the Islamic State simply out of a sense of religious obligation and for the innocent purpose of living under Sharia law and raising a family in a Muslim state.

The judge noted that religion is “irrelevant to membership of Isis” as criminal activity cannot be justified by religious obligation.

He said that a person would not gain immunity for arson, assault or murder because he believed he had a religious obligation to persecute witches.

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But the court found Smith not guilty of a second charge of funding terrorism, saying that it is reasonably possible that she sent €800 to Isis fighter and propagandist John Georgelas in May 2015 for his personal use or for “humanitarian reasons”, after he had been injured during fighting in Syria.

Mr Justice Hunt then went through the evidence relating to membership and said that the prosecution had established beyond reasonable doubt that Smith travelled to Syria with her “eyes wide open” and pledged allegiance to the organisation led by terrorist leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

He rejected her claims that she had gone simply out of a sense of religious obligation and for the innocent purpose of living under Sharia law and raising a family in a Muslim state.

He said that her reasons for going to Syria were “grounded in allegiance to or agreement with the views espoused by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.”

He said there was no “benign” explanation for her travel and no alternative Islamic State that she could have been traveling to.

He rejected claims that she was naive or that she was unaware of what Isis was doing and said she “knew full well she was not simply adhering to life under Sharia law”.

Smith, 39, from Dundalk, Co Louth had pleaded not guilty to membership of an unlawful terrorist group, Islamic State, between October 28th, 2015 and December 1st, 2019.

She also pleaded not guilty to financing terrorism by sending €800 in assistance, via a Western Union money transfer, to a named man on May 6th, 2015.

TRAVELLED TO SYRIA

In numerous interviews with gardai after she returned to Ireland in December 2019 she said repeatedly that she travelled to Syria because she believed she had a religious obligation to live inside the Islamic State that was announced by terrorist leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in 2014.

Smith left the Defence Forces after she converted to Islam in 2011 and later travelled to IS-controlled territory in Syria.

There, after a previous marriage ended, she married Sajid Aslam, a Briton whom the court was told “had done a snipers course on her advice”.

Smith had a daughter, born in June 2017, before she returned to Ireland in December 2019 after the collapse of Islamic State.

She was arrested at Dublin Airport and charged with terror offences.

She denied that she went to join a terrorist organisation.

WRAPPED IN ISIS FLAG

The prosecution alleged that by travelling in answer to a call by al-Baghdadi for all Muslims to come to Syria, Smith joined a terrorist organisation.

They said that people like Smith were the “life blood” of Isis and critical to its mission to spread its version of Islam by violence and murder.

Prosecuting counsel Sean Gillane said she had enveloped herself in the black flag of Isis.

He said the court could not ignore that Smith travelled thousands of kilometres, knowing about the activities of the terrorist organisation that was “up to its neck in blood”.

Mr Justice Hunt said that the court accepts that Isis is a terrorist organisation that controlled parts of Syria and Iraq when Smith decided to travel to its territory in late 2015.

Mr Justice Hunt said that social media messages between Smith and various Isis hardliners, including Georgelas, supported the prosecution’s assertion that she knew what Isis was doing and supported its aims.

After delivering the verdict Mr Justice Hunt said he was satisfied that Smith has been on bail for more than two years and has complied with all requirements. He extended her bail ahead of sentencing on July 11.

Smith has been found guilty of membership of the terrorist organisation Isis by the Special Criminal Court
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