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Two New Jersey men accused of pledging allegiance to ISIS and planning to pursue violent activities are set to plead guilty after reaching agreements with prosecutors, with one defense team arguing that social media played a role in the radicalization.

TomasKaan Jimenez-Guzel and Milo Sedarat, both from Montclair, reached deals in their federal cases. Jimenez-Guzel is scheduled to enter a guilty plea on July 9, according to court records.

Sedarat, meanwhile, has not yet been assigned a plea date and is asking to be released from jail to home confinement at his parents’ residence, according to court filings.

Sedarat’s attorneys argued that his exposure to online content following the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack and subsequent war contributed to his radicalization.

After the Oct. 7, 2023 terrorist attacks in Israel, “Milo spiraled” and “his social media algorithms pumped [him] videos of gory war crimes,” his lawyers claimed in the papers.

The lawyers said the material he encountered later escalated into extremist content.

The content he was being fed soon escalated to “antisemitic content and ISIS propaganda videos,” the docs claimed.

Sedarat, the 19-year-old son of Iranian-American poet Roger Sedarat, admitted to making extreme statements online and imagining what it would mean to carry out an attack, according to his attorneys’ filing.

“Milo “said abhorrent things to the people he connected with online and fantasized about what it would mean to take action,” his lawyers admitted in the filing.

His attorneys said that despite the online activity, he never carried out violence or intended to target any specific person or group.

They said he never communicated directly with members of a terrorist organization and did not purchase travel to the Middle East.

“The worst he did was provide money to one friend to purchase a ticket to fly to Turkey,” his lawyers claimed.

His lawyers said most of his conduct remained online and that he now recognizes the severity of what he said.

“The remainder of Milo’s actions stayed online — he talked big, reprehensible talk online that he now understands was completely unacceptable,” the papers said.

Sedarat has remained in federal custody under restrictive conditions since his November arrest, his attorneys said, and is seeking release to his family’s supervision with GPS monitoring and restrictions on internet access.

As part of the proposed conditions, he would be barred from social media use.

Sedarat is expected to plead guilty to one count of concealing material support for a designated foreign terrorist organization. Prosecutors are expected to dismiss two counts involving alleged threats under the plea agreement, according to his attorneys.

The charge carries a possible sentence of up to 20 years in prison, though he is expected to receive a lower sentence due to the plea deal.

Sedarat and Jimenez-Guzel were arrested in November after authorities accused them of planning online to travel to the Middle East and form a group of aspiring jihadists.