John Maguire, Ottawa man fighting for ISIS, urges attacks on Canadian targets in video
Identified as Abu Anwar al-Canadi, Maguire calls for lone-wolf attacks
ISIS has released a video featuring an Ottawa man calling on his fellow Muslim countrymen to carry out lone-wolf attacks on Canadian targets.
John Maguire, who was already reportedly under investigation by the RCMP after travelling to Syria to join ISIS as a foreign fighter in January 2013, appears in the slickly produced six-minute, 13-second video. The 23-year-old is identified in the video as Abu Anwar al-Canadi and speaks in English.
CBC News has learned that Maguire is not alone. He is part of a circle of people from Ottawa who have either left Canada to fight with extremist groups or have social media profiles dripping in ISIS propaganda.
In the video, standing in the ruins of an unidentified area in Iraq or Syria, Abu Anwar warns Canadians that the country's participation in the U.S.-led coalition fighting the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria group will lead to revenge attacks.
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He urges his Muslim countrymen to follow the example of Martin Couture-Rouleau, who killed warrant officer Patrice Vincent and injured another soldier when he ran them down with a car in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., in October.
The video also references Michael Zehaf-Bibeau's October attack in which he killed an honour guard at the National War Memorial in Ottawa before storming Parliament Hill.
Abu Anwar does not appear to be under duress. CBC News does not know if he made the statement of his own free will.
"This young man is definitely John Douglas...but not the John Douglas that we knew, loved and remember," said a family member who spoke on condition of anonymity, referring to Maguire by his first and middle name. "You cannot imagine how badly I feel that I did not realize or understand what was going on at the time."
Converted while in U.S., friend says
Maguire is a native of Kemptville, in Eastern Ontario, and moved to Ottawa during high school, a former friend said.
He played guitar in several bands, including a dance band and a punk band — which Maguire refers to in his video statement.
After high school, he attended university in Los Angeles on a scholarship, having scored highly on the SATs, the friend said. He said it was on Maguire's return from L.A. that friends noted he was starting to identify as a Muslim.
Maguire also mentions in the video that he played hockey growing up, which CBC News senior correspondent Adrienne Arsenault said is a line ISIS has been using in its attempts to appeal to Canadians.
"We first saw it when André Poulin, the Canadian jihadi, appeared in a recruitment video for ISIS [that is] said to be very effective,"