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Canadian Police Charge Man With Faking Terrorist Activity

The man, Shehroze Chaudhry, created a political storm in Canada with his assertions that he participated in atrocities by ISIS in Syria.

An Islamic State flag in a bombed-out militant headquarters in Mosul, Iraq.Credit...Ivor Prickett for The New York Times

OTTAWA — The police in Canada have arrested a Toronto-area man who asserted he was an ISIS executioner, accusing him of perpetrating a hoax that he was involved in terrorist activities.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said the man, Shehroze Chaudhry, 25, “claimed he traveled to Syria in 2016 to join the terrorist group ISIS and committed acts of terrorism.” The interviews he gave to media outlets, the national police force said, raised “public safety concerns amongst Canadians.”

Sgt. Lucie Lapointe, a spokeswoman for the Mounted Police, said that Mr. Chaudry was the person featured extensively in “Caliphate,” a podcast by The New York Times, under the name Abu Huzayfah. In the podcast, he described in harrowing detail his role in executions. The Times declined to discuss its sourcing.

“The uncertainty about Abu Huzayfah’s story is central to every episode of Caliphate that featured him,” Danielle Rhoades Ha, a Times spokeswoman, said in a statement. She noted that one episode confirmed that Abu Huzayfah had misled The Times about the dates of his travel to Syria and the timeline of his radicalization.

“The episode tells listeners what our journalists knew for sure and what was still unknown,” she said.

But she said that The Times had used geolocation to place Mr. Huzayfah on the banks of the Euphrates river in Syria.

Mr. Chaudry’s description of his terrorist activities created a political storm in Canada. Opposition members of Parliament pressed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government to explain why Mr. Chaudry had not been arrested upon his return to Canada. Under Canadian law, leaving the country to participate in terrorist activities is a crime.

Until Friday’s announcement of the arrest, however, the police had said little about their investigation, which involved several other agencies.

The terrorism hoax charge that Mr. Chaudry faces is normally used to prosecute people accused of making false bomb threats rather than fabricating terrorist pasts.

Mr. Chaudry, who lives in the Toronto suburb of Burlington, Ontario, is scheduled to appear in court in November.

The Canadian police did not immediately respond to questions about what led to the charges. The force generally does not comment on its investigations.

Mr. Chaudry had been enrolled as a student in environmental studies at York University in Toronto and the University of Lahore in Pakistan, according to his LinkedIn profile. He also indicated that he was working as an intern for Parallel Networks, a company based in Alexandria, Va., and at a restaurant in Oakville, Ontario, that several Canadian news outlets reported as being owned by his parents.

A native of Windsor, Ontario, Ian Austen was educated in Toronto and currently lives in Ottawa. He has reported for The Times about Canada for more than a decade. More about Ian Austen

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