Sunday, October 12, 2025
Nordic Monitor
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
Nordic Monitor
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

Turkish prosecutor released ISIS suspect caught in stolen car with fake license plate, signal jammer

December 23, 2019
A A
Turkish prosecutor released ISIS suspect caught in stolen car with fake license plate, signal jammer
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Levent Kenez

 

A prosecutor ordered the release of a wanted Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) suspect and his accomplice who were detained by the police in a stolen car with a signal jammer and fake license plate.

The incident took place on December 3, 2019 in İstanbul after the police had stopped a suspicious car in the Bakırköy district during a regular security check, determining that one of the two passengers was a wanted ISIS suspect and that the stolen car had a fake license plate. The police immediately detained the two men, identified as Mehmet B. (37) and Selahattin D. (47), and took them to the police station.

The police also found a mini high-tech signal jammer in the car used by auto thieves to prevent the driver from locking the doors, one of the ways terrorist groups also steal cars for nefarious purposes.

Once the police officers discovered that Mehmet B. was a wanted ISIS suspect, they contacted the prosecutor’s office. A prosecutor from the İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court called the police and ordered them to release the detainees without even bringing them to the courthouse for questioning, Nordic Monitor has learned.

It is still unknown why the prosecutor ordered the release of suspects linked to ISIS who were driving a stolen car and were apparently suspected of preparing to carry out terrorist acts. 

The Turkish judiciary, which is controlled by Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, is lenient when it comes to investigating and prosecuting jihadist groups. The Erdoğan government drew criticism for its forgiving attitude towards ISIS given the fact that hundreds of local and foreign fighters are believed to have returned to Turkey following its military incursion into Syria in October.

In another incident on October 29, 2019 the police reportedly detained three ISIS suspects in İstanbul who were planing to explode a car bomb against a foreign target in retaliation for the death of former ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

ISIS has carried out out numerous terrorist acts with cars bombs in northern Syria and Iraq against Kurdish and Syrian government forces thanks to its “car bomb factories” located in the region. According to reports in the Turkish media, thousands of vehicles, in particular pick-up trucks, stolen in Turkey have been smuggled into the region by ISIS since 2014.

ISIS has mostly used suicide bombers in Turkey, killing more than 200 people since 2014. However, three police officers were killed and 18 people wounded in a car bomb attack by ISIS on May 1, 2016 in Gaziantep, in southeastern Turkey, close to the Syrian border.

Turkey has released hundreds of ISIS prisoners from Turkish jails in the last year and a half, according to Nordic Monitor’s review of various official figures provided by Turkish leaders

According to the latest figures, only 95 Turks have thus far been convicted on ISIS charges despite the fact that thousands have been detained in nationwide sweeps every year, suggesting that most were quickly released and charges dropped after brief detentions.

From January to November of this year alone, 2,782 suspected members of ISIS were detained by authorities, but only 843 were arrested and put in pretrial detention. Most are expected to be freed and the charges dropped, resulting in a dismal conviction rate.

In fact, according to Justice Ministry data, only 422 Turks are currently imprisoned in Turkey on ISIS charges. Of these, 95 were convicted, and their convictions were successfully upheld on appeal. One hundred thirty-eight suspects who were sentenced by courts of first instance are still awaiting the outcome of their appeals. The trials of 138 ISIS suspects are still ongoing.

ShareTweet
Previous Post

Security agreement is aimed at expanding Turkey’s crackdown on gov’t critics in Zambia

Next Post

Top Turkish general’s aide was tortured at a secret location

Levent Kenez

Levent Kenez

[email protected]

Next Post
Turkish spy agency abducted former NATO intel officer, tortured him for days

Top Turkish general’s aide was tortured at a secret location

Erdogan’s family-linked drone exports spark tensions with Serbia

Erdogan’s family-linked drone exports spark tensions with Serbia

October 10, 2025
Germany struggles with the prosecution of never-ending Turkish espionage cases

Germany struggles with the prosecution of never-ending Turkish espionage cases

October 9, 2025
Turkey shifts to US partnership for second nuclear plant once promised to Russia

Turkey shifts to US partnership for second nuclear plant once promised to Russia

October 8, 2025
Murder raises new questions about Turkey’s fight against ISIS

Murder raises new questions about Turkey’s fight against ISIS

October 7, 2025
Turkey’s release of ISIS detainees fuels European terrorism threat, Dutch court case shows

Turkey’s release of ISIS detainees fuels European terrorism threat, Dutch court case shows

October 6, 2025
Erdogan pushes for northern Cyprus election win amid allegations of interference and mafia links

Erdogan pushes for northern Cyprus election win amid allegations of interference and mafia links

October 3, 2025
Erdoğan government believed Muslim Brotherhood would make a huge comeback in Egypt in few years

Turkey’s top court quashes terrorism conviction of 2 Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood members

October 2, 2025
Turkey emerges as key haven for Iranian who launched $88M Bittrex crypto case

Turkey emerges as key haven for Iranian who launched $88M Bittrex crypto case

October 1, 2025
Turkish military journal claims NATO is using Ankara without giving it a voice

Turkish military journal claims NATO is using Ankara without giving it a voice

September 30, 2025
$100 billion OmegaPro scandal highlights Turkey’s role as a haven for global fraudsters

$100 billion OmegaPro scandal highlights Turkey’s role as a haven for global fraudsters

September 29, 2025

Nordic Monitor

Nordic Monitor is a news web site and tracking site that is run by the Stockholm-based Nordic Research and Monitoring Network. It covers religious, ideological and ethnic extremist movements and radical groups, with a special focus on Turkey.

Tags

al-Qaeda Andrei Karlov China Cyprus Diyanet Egypt Erdogan espionage Germany Greece Gülen Movement Hakan Fidan Hamas Hulusi Akar Ibrahim Kalın IHH Iran IRGC Quds Force ISIL ISIS Isis al-qaida Israel Libya Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu Milli İstihbarat Teşkilatı MIT Muslim Brotherhood NATO President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Profiling Qatar Recep Tayyip Erdoğan Russia SADAT spying Spying Activities Suleyman Soylu Sweden Syria Torture Turkey Turkish Intelligence Agency Turkish intelligence agency MIT Ukraine United States

Recent News

Erdogan’s family-linked drone exports spark tensions with Serbia

Erdogan’s family-linked drone exports spark tensions with Serbia

October 10, 2025
Germany struggles with the prosecution of never-ending Turkish espionage cases

Germany struggles with the prosecution of never-ending Turkish espionage cases

October 9, 2025
Turkey shifts to US partnership for second nuclear plant once promised to Russia

Turkey shifts to US partnership for second nuclear plant once promised to Russia

October 8, 2025

Copyright © Nordic Research and Monitoring Network All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Extremism
  • Military
  • Terrorism and Crime
  • Intelligence
  • Foreign Policy
  • Contact Us
    • Give us a tip!
  • About Us

Copyright © Nordic Research and Monitoring Network All rights reserved.