FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — A U.S.-citizen Afghan national whose family was among those resettled by the Biden administration has been charged with making a terroristic threat after posting on social media about planning an attack.

Mohammad Dawood Alokozay faces charges including making threatening statements and constructive discharges from military service. According to court documents, he posted videos online where he discussed plans to detonate explosives in Fort Worth or Dallas “on anyone,” referred to killing as his mission, and talked specifically of building a car bomb with himself inside.

He was arrested Tuesday by the Texas Department of Public Safety and FBI agents during an ongoing investigation targeting individuals who may pose national security threats while residing under the Afghan Adjustment Exception program established since August 2021. This administration-provided pathway allowed tens of thousands to resettle here based on family relationships already approved before the Taliban takeover.

Alokozay, according to court filings and official statements released Tuesday, was identified as a U.S.-citizen after arriving under that program but expressed radicalized views about harming civilians in America. In one video, he said: “I will commit suicide… I am going to kill the infidels.” He also told an interviewer: “Ok, so you are going to build a car bomb? Good for you.”

His lawyer declined comment Tuesday night on the charges.

The case is part of ongoing national scrutiny over whether individuals resettled under this emergency program could pose security risks.