Man pleads guilty to plotting attack on Taylor Swift concert
US singer Taylor Swift performs on stage during "The Eras Tour" at the Hard Rock stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, October 18, 2024. Taylor Swift filed applications on April 24, 2026 with the US intellectual property office to trademark her voice, a move similar to one made by actor Matthew McConaughey, as AI-generated content surges. The singer submitted two sound recordings to the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
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A 21-year-old man pleaded guilty on Tuesday in an Austrian
court over a jihadist plot to attack a Taylor Swift concert, which led to the
cancellation of the Vienna leg of the US megastar's "Eras" tour.
Three dates in Swift's record-breaking tour were cancelled
in the summer of 2024 after authorities warned of the alleged Islamic State
group plot.
The accused, named as Beran A., was led into the courtroom
by masked police personnel at the start of his trial on terror offences and
other charges in a court in Wiener Neustadt, outside Vienna.
"He pleads guilty to all except attempted murder,"
his lawyer Anna Mair told AFP.
Another 21-year-old, Arda K., is standing trial together
with Beran A., according to Austrian news agency APA.
The duo, together with a third Austrian, Hasan E.,
imprisoned in Saudi Arabia, are accused of forming a "highly dangerous IS terror
cell" planning to carry out several attacks in the name of IS, prosecutors
say.
Beran A. was allegedly planning an attack at the packed
Ernst Happel Stadium in Vienna during Swift's concert.
He testified in court that he had not yet devised a clear plan
for the attack before he was arrested in August 2024, two days before the show.
Planning the attack on the concert, he allegedly tried to
get weapons and worked on making a shrapnel bomb "specific to IS
attacks", and received instructions from other IS members on handling
explosives, according to prosecutors.
In his testimony, Beran A. said he had become convinced that
he "had to wage jihad", but was "afraid to die", according
to APA.
He said he failed to make a bomb, but communicated in
several chat groups, including with a high-ranking IS member ahead of the
concert.
"I was looking for encouragement. I liked getting
attention," he said.
Beran A. is accused of having been a member of a terror
organisation from May 2023 "by planning and preparing a terrorist
attack" on Swift's concert, prosecutors have said.
By sharing IS propaganda through various messaging services
and other offences, he participated and "openly aligned himself" with
IS, they added.
He is also alleged to have been involved in other attack
plans abroad.
In court, he testified how he travelled to Dubai and bought
two knifes to target security officials in March 2024.
But when he looked for a police officer or soldier to stab,
he suffered a "panic attack" and finally "retreated",
feeling a "sense of failure", he said.
Hasan E., the suspect jailed in Saudi Arabia, is accused of
stabbing a security official in Mecca in 2024 and injuring four others before
he was overpowered.
Austria's embassy is in contact with him and following
ongoing judicial proceedings, according to the foreign ministry.
Beran A. and Arda K. are accused of encouraging Hasan E.
ahead of the attack -- an accusation Beran A. denies, his lawyer said.
She said in court that Hasan E. "manipulated"
Beran A. The two became friends during their studies in a Vienna business
academy.
The trial of the two defendants has been scheduled across
four court dates, until May 21.
Beran A., who was arrested two days before the first Swift
concert was to take place, faces up to 20 years in prison on the charges.
The concert plot was thwarted with the help of US
intelligence.
Swift later wrote on social media that "the reason for
the cancellations filled me with a new sense of fear, and a tremendous amount
of guilt because so many had planned on coming to those shows".
Last year, a Berlin court convicted a Syrian teenager of
contributing to the plot to attack the Swift concert.

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