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Muslim Enclave That Escaped Foiled Attack Urges Justice

(ASSOCIATED PRESS)  A Muslim group called Wednesday for full prosecutions against the four people accused of plotting an attack on the group's rural enclave named Islamberg in Delaware County.

The arrests of three Rochester-area men and a 16-year-old who had access to homemade explosives and firearms sent shockwaves through the family-centered community, leaders of The Muslims of America said. The community of about 200 residents has been dogged by allegations on right-wing websites that it is a terrorist training camp, and it was the target of a similar plot in 2015.

"Let us be clear, the terrorist threat against Islamberg by the four current suspects is about hatred toward Islam and hatred toward American Muslims," Hussein Adams, chief executive of The Muslims of America, told reporters at a news conference in Binghamton.

Authorities in the Town of Greece on Tuesday announced weapons possession and conspiracy charges against Brian Colaneri, 20; Andrew Crysel, 18; and Vincent Vetromile, 19. A 16-year-old student at Odyssey Academy in Greece, was charged as an adolescent offender.

The three adult suspects were due back in court Feb. 5.

Their lawyers did not immediately return telephone messages seeking comment Wednesday, and attempts to reach relatives weren't successful.

At the time of their weekend arrests, the men, three of whom were in Boy Scouts together, had access to 23 rifles and shotguns and three homemade explosives, Greece police said. Investigators uncovered the plot after a student reported a suspicious comment in a lunchroom Friday.

The Muslims of America are followers of Sheikh Mubarik Gilani and run 22 communities in North America. The mostly African-American settlers of Islamberg first came to upstate New York in the 1980s to escape crime and crowding in New York City.

Police and analysts have dismissed accusations that the community  is a terrorist training ground. But the claims have persisted for decades .

"The lies about Islamberg have been proven wrong countless times," Adams said. "But what speaks volumes is that after 30 years there have been no instances where members of our community have done anything related to these accusations."