America requires the maximum possible penalty for the “ISIS Women’s Battalion Command”

America requires the maximum possible penalty for the “ISIS Women’s Battalion Command”

The 42-year-old Alison Fluk-Ikarn admitted to having headed a “Nusseibeh Battalion” where she taught over 100 women and girls—some of whom were just ten years old—how to operate automatic guns, blast grenades, and activate explosive belts.
One of the Flook-Ecken girls was among those who claimed to have undergone such instruction.
The judge was persuaded to give the worst penalty by Kallock-daughter Ikarn’s and oldest son.

They claimed that their mother had abused them physically and sexually, and they provided the court with horrifying descriptions of the trauma they had endured.
For its part, Fluk-Ekran disputed that the son and daughter had been mistreated.
Fllock-tale Ekran’s stands out among terrorist issues since she was a woman who was born in the United States and who elevated ISIS to a senior position.

The abuse those children suffered since they were young, according to the prosecution, helped to explain how 81 acres in Overbrok, Kansas, got from a farm to an ISIS leader in Syria, with stops in Egypt and Libya along the way.
Fluk-Ekran pleaded with the judge to get only a two-year sentence so she could care for her small children.

She acknowledged responsibility for her acts at the outset of a protracted interview, but she spent the majority of the speech defending it.
“Nusseibeh Battalion” line’s commander.

The “ISIS Women’s Battalion Command” must face the worst punishment conceivable, according to America.

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