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Mass. Man On Trial In Beheading Plot: I Was Living In A 'Fantasy'

In this courtroom sketch, David Wright, second from left, is depicted standing with his attorney during a 2015 hearing in federal court in Boston. (Jane Flavell Collins/AP)
In this courtroom sketch, David Wright, second from left, is depicted standing with his attorney during a 2015 hearing in federal court in Boston. (Jane Flavell Collins/AP)

A Massachusetts man on trial for participating in a plot to behead conservative blogger Pamela Geller said Wednesday that he was living in a "fantasy" world and never wanted to hurt anyone.

David Wright admitted sharing Islamic State propaganda online and discussing an attack against Geller. But he insisted he didn't actually support the terror group and that his conversations about violence were just "trash talk" fueled by a desperate desire for attention.

"I said a lot of fantastical things about what I intended, where I wanted to go and where I wanted to travel, and it was never real," said Wright, who was wearing a plaid shirt and black sweater vest when he took the stand in the Boston's federal courthouse. "It was fantasy," he said.

Wright, 28, is charged with obstruction of justice, conspiring to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization and conspiring to commit acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries. He could face up to life in prison if convicted.

Prosecutors say Wright, his uncle and a third man agreed to kill Geller after she planned a Prophet Muhammad cartoon contest in Texas in 2015. During the contest, two other men opened fire outside and wounded a security guard before they were killed in a shootout with law enforcement assigned to guard the event. The beheading plot against Geller was never carried out.

Days later, Wright's uncle, Ussamah Rahim, told Wright in a phone call that he couldn't wait to attack Geller and decided instead to go after "those boys in blue." Hours later, Rahim was approached by officers in a Boston parking lot and was fatally shot after he pulled out a knife and moved toward them, officials say.

Wright said he didn't believe his uncle was serious about the attack on police and broke down in tears on the stand as he discussed his death.

"I lost someone who was very close to me because I was so diluted and self-centered that I couldn't see beyond my own need for attention," Wright said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephanie Siegmann asked Wright pointed questions about documents found on his computer, including one that encouraged Islamic State followers to kill Americans when they are walking in the streets, "thinking they are safe." Wright also had a folder on his computer that included tweets sent by Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who was convicted in the Boston Marathon bombing.

Siegmann pulled out the three large hunting knives Wright's uncle bought and asked Wright whether the weapons were real. She also pressed Wright about videos on his computer, including ones that showed Islamic State members beheading people on a beach.

"It was not fantasy to you that they were dying, was it?" Siegmann asked.

Wright acknowledged telling his uncle that it was a "beautiful moment" when he heard of his plan to attack police. He also admitted to wiping the documents from his computer, transferring all of his Islamic State materials to a thumb drive after learning his uncle had been killed.

The third man accused in the plot, Nicholas Rovinski, pleaded guilty last year to conspiracy charges and faces between 15 and 22 years in prison. Rovinski, of Warwick, Rhode Island, testified against Wright.

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