Repatriated Utahns face U.S. criminal charges relating to failed Congo coup
A criminal complaint was unsealed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Salt Lake City charging Marcel Malanga, 22, Tyler Thompson, 22, Benjamin Zalman-Polun, 37, and Joseph Peter Moesser, 67, all U.S. citizens, with conspiring to provide material support and resources, conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction, conspiracy to bomb places of government facilities and conspiracy to kill or kidnap persons in a foreign country, among other offenses.
Malanga, Thompson and Zalman-Polun are expected to make their initial appearances at the federal courthouse in Brooklyn, New York. Moesser is expected to make an initial appearance Thursday at the federal courthouse in Salt Lake City, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office in Utah.
After their initial appearances in New York, Malanga, Thompson and Zalman-Polun are expected to appear in Salt Lake City for further legal proceedings. If convicted, they face up to 15 years in prison on each count.
The indictment alleges the men conspired to carry out a coup on May 19, 2024, in Congo, including an armed military operation that targeted Congolese President Félix Tshisekedi and Deputy Prime Minister for the Economy Vital Kamerhe.
Men wearing camouflage fatigues and armed with weapons attacked and entered the Palais de la Nation and Kamerhe's private residence, which was riddled with bullet holes after the attack, according to the complaint.
At least six people died during the attack, including two police officers protecting Kamerhe's residence, and at least one civilian.
Christian Malanga, a former Utah car salesman with eight children and a businessman and politician from Congo, led the foiled coup attempt. Malanga livestreamed video from the presidential palace during the coup attempt and was killed while resisting arrest, according to Congolese authorities.
'It was the goal of the rebel forces to topple the DRC and to murder President Félix Tshisekedi and Kamerhe, and others, with the goal of installing Christian as the new president of the DRC. They intended on renaming the DRC to New Zaire,' according to the indictment.
Federal authorities allege Malanga's son identified himself as 'Chief of Staff of the Zaire army' and acted as a leader of the rebel forces. Zalman-Polun was Christian Malanga's chief of staff, Moesser was the explosives maker, explosives technician, and explosives supplier and Thompson was a soldier and drone specialist/operator, according to the complaint.
Christian Malanga moved from Congo to the U.S. as part of a refugee resettlement program in the late 1990s and attended Highland High School in Salt Lake City, according to his Facebook page. He returned to his native country to serve as an officer fighting rebels. Forced into exile in 2012 following an initial coup attempt, he referred to himself as president of the 'New Zaire' government.
Malanga claimed he was the president of the United Congolese Party, which describes itself as an 'opposition political party-in-exile.' He appeared in a 2014 Deseret News story about an Ebola outbreak in Africa.
Marcel Malanga and Thompson played football together at Copper Hills High School in West Jordan, Utah. Thompson flew to Africa from Utah for what his family believed was a free vacation, the AP reported.
The two men, along with Zalman-Polun, faced the death penalty in Congo for participating in the foiled coup but Congolese presidential spokesperson Tina Salama posted Tuesday on X that they were pardoned and their sentences commuted to life in prison. They returned to the U.S. on Tuesday.
State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce said Tuesday that the men are in U.S. custody. She said the U.S. government strongly condemns last year's attack and supports Congolese authorities in holding those responsible appropriately accountable.
'At the same time, we seek consistent, compassionate, humane treatment and a fair legal process on behalf of those U.S. citizens,' she said.
According to the charges, the four men planned, scouted out targets and identified victims for the attack, including high-level Congolese government officials. They recruited others to join the rebel army and, in some cases, paid them. They also procured firearms, ammunition, uniforms, communication equipment and communication-jamming equipment from businesses and private parties, the complaint says.
The pardon and repatriation of the three men came as Congolese authorities aim to sign a minerals deal with the U.S. in exchange for security support that will help Kinshasa fight rebels in the country's conflict-hit east, per The Associated Press.
President Donald Trump's senior adviser for Africa last week confirmed the countries were in talks on the issue and said it could involve 'multibillion-dollar investments,' AP reported. The U.S. has estimated Congo has trillions of dollars in mineral wealth, much of it untapped.
'This decision is part of a dynamic of strengthening judicial diplomacy and international cooperation in matters of justice and human rights between the two countries,' according to a statement from Congo's presidency.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
14 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
California man sent funds to Islamic State terrorists, feds say: ‘I'll be joining'
A California man was arrested on suspicion of sending a dozen payments to the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, telling a fighter that he would be joining the terrorist organization, federal investigators said. Mark Lorenzo Villanueva, 28, of Long Beach was charged Friday with attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization, a felony that carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office Central District of California. Villanueva sent 12 payments totaling $1,615 over a five-month period to two Islamic state intermediaries who accessed the funds overseas, according to an affidavit filed with the federal complaint, citing Western Union records. Villanueva, a documented permanent U.S. resident from the Philippines, had asked a self-identified Islamic State fighter via social media whether the funds would 'cover your equipment and your weapons,' the federal complaint says. 'It's an honor to fight and die for our faith. It's the best way to go to heaven,' he told the self-identified fighter, the complaint says. 'Someday soon, I'll be joining.' Villanueva told another self-identified Islamic State fighter that he possessed a bomb and knives, and the FBI recovered an apparent explosive device during a search of his bedroom, investigators said. 'Supporting a terrorist group, whether at home or abroad, is a serious risk to our national security,' said acting U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli. 'We will aggressively hunt down and prosecute anyone who provides support or comfort to our enemies.'
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Columbia Sportswear sues Columbia University claiming merchandise is too similar and causes confusion
Columbia Sportswear is suing Columbia University, accusing the university of copyright infringement and breach of contract. The retailer claims the university's clothing and merchandise are too similar to its own offerings and that those similarities may confuse shoppers. The lawsuit was filed on July 23 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon. Columbia Sportswear has been using the name "Columbia" since 1938. The university and the retailer reportedly signed a deal in 2023 dictating the ways in which the university can use the word "Columbia" on its own apparel and merchandise. The pact stipulated that the university could use the name "Columbia" on merchandise so long as a school logo or mascot, the word "university", or an academic department of the founding year of the school — which dates back to 1754 — were present alongside the word. Columbia Sportswear claims in its lawsuit that the university breached those terms in 2024 when it allegedly began offering merchandise that used the name "Columbia" without any of the school signifiers established in the pact. The retailer also noted in the filing that the university was offering garments with bright blue colors that were "confusingly similar" to the blue used by Columbia Sportswear. 'The likelihood of deception, confusion, and mistake engendered by the university's misappropriation and misuse of the Columbia name is causing irreparable harm to the brand and goodwill symbolized by Columbia Sportswear's registered mark Columbia and the reputation for quality it embodies,' the lawsuit argues. Columbia Sportswear wants to stop all sales of the university's clothing that allegedly violate the 2023 agreement. It further wants a recall of all previously sold items and all the remaining stock to be donated to charity. The retailer is also seeking three times the amount of actual damages determined by a jury if its litigation is successful. The lawsuit comes at a time when Columbia University is preparing to pay a settlement of more than $220 million to the Trump administration in order to restore its federal research money that the president cancelled earlier this year. Under the settlement, the college will pay $200 million to the federal government over the next three years.


Miami Herald
a day ago
- Miami Herald
Fake immigration lawyer cashed in, put clients at risk of deportation, feds say
A woman posing as an immigration attorney in Pennsylvania lied on clients' asylum forms, putting them at risk of deportation, federal officials said. Fatima DeMaria, the 65-year-old owner of Immigration Matters Legal Services in Oxford, was arrested and charged with eight counts of asylum fraud and eight counts of mail fraud, the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania said in a July 31 news release. McClatchy News reached out to the woman's attorney but did not immediately receive a response. DeMaria is accused of filling out asylum applications for her clients, form I-589, but falsely claiming why they were seeking asylum in the U.S., prosecutors said. She did so between 2021 and 2024, prosecutors said. The form is meant for those who are in the United States but who are not citizens, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. She stated applicants were seeking to stay in the country due to 'political opinion' and 'Torture Convention,' federal officials said. However, this was not the reason her clients were seeking permission to stay in the U.S.. DeMaria did not tell her clients she was filing 'frivolous' forms as a way to help them obtain work permits, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office, but had them sign the documents. If those applications were denied, her clients could face deportation proceedings and the 'baseless asylum application' could jeopardize those people if they ever needed immigration benefits in the future, prosecutors said. She charged thousands for the immigration tasks she was not licensed to do, charging between up to $9,000 per individual or up to $15,000 per couple, federal officials said. Prosecutors say they believe she made up to $1 million fraudulently. DeMaria often asked her clients to pay her in cash or in transactions that were deposited into her personal bank accounts, officials said. 'Hundreds of thousands of dollars' were eventually withdrawn at casinos, prosecutors said. If convicted, DeMaria faces up to 240 years in prison and a $4 million fine. The FBI in Philadelphia is looking to identify any victims of DeMaria/s through this form /vailable/in English and Spanish. Oxford is about a 55-mile drive southwest from Philadelphia.