Ali Charafe Damache (L) of Algeria arrives with Irish Police to the Waterford District Court in Waterford, Ireland on March 15, 2010, after being charged. Damache was one of two men in custody in connection with an alleged plot to murder cartoonist Lars Vilks over a picture of the Prophet Mohammed with the body of a dog. Peter MUHLEY/AFP/Getty Images

An Algerian-born man who became a naturalized Irish citizen has pleaded guilty to recruiting the infamous “Jihad Jane” as part of a failed plan to kill Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks.

A naturalized Irish man accused of plotting to murder Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks pleaded guilty to a terrorism charge in a federal court in Pennsylvania on Monday.

Algerian-born Ali Charaf Damache, 53, is now expected to face a 15-year sentence after he admitted to acting as an al-Qaeda recruiter and plotting alongside the infamous “Jihad Jane” to assassinate the cartoonist. The 2009 plot was formed after Vilks' work showed the prophet Muhammad's head on the body of a dog.

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"Jihad Jane." (Photo by Tom Green County Jail via Getty Images)

“Jihad Jane” was the nickname given to Pennsburg woman Colleen LaRose who posted jihadist rants to YouTube under this moniker. She was recruited by Damache as a blue-eyed, blond-haired woman, who he believed would not attract the attention of authorities. The 50-year-old also recruited Colorado mother Jamie Paulin-Ramirez for the same reasons, marrying her the day she arrived in Ireland to meet him.

Among the people Damache recruited was also former high school honors student Mohammad Hassan Khalid, who became, at the time of his guilty plea, the youngest person convicted in the U.S. on terrorism charges.

Damache, who moved to Ireland in 2000, convinced LaRose and Paulin-Ramirez to join him in Ireland where their 2009 plan to kill Vilks eventually fizzled out and the women, as well as teenager Khalid, were arrested.

On Monday, the accused terrorist recruiter, known online as the “Black Flag,” entered a guilty plea before U.S. District Court Judge Petrese B. Tucker after being was extradited from Spain last year. An Irish High Court judge has previously ruled against an extradition to the US in 2015 after he deemed that Damache was at risk of “inhuman and degrading treatment” in the US. He was handed over to US authorities in July 2017, however, after being arrested on the same warrant in Barcelona.

Damache could have faced 45 years in prison but his guilty plea has seen his sentence drastically reduced, now expected just to spend 15 years behind bars before being deported.

Living in Cork and in Waterford, he was first arrested in Ireland in 2013 after ringing the ­organiser of a Muslim anti-terror protest in Detroit and issuing a death threat.

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