SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- A former FBI translator who went rogue and married an ISIS terrorist in Syria is living in Syracuse, according to the New York Post.

Daniela Greene, 38, pleaded guilty two years ago to making false statements involving international terrorism to the FBI. She falsely told her superiors in 2014 that she was traveling to Germany to visit her family, court records show.

Instead, Greene flew to Turkey then traveled to Syria, where she met and married Denis "Deso Dogg" Cuspert, a German national and rapper-turned-ISIS recruiter, according to the Post.

The Post reported that Greene "hid her face in shame and refused to discuss her treasonous affair as she scurried" from her home in Syracuse on Wednesday.

Denis Cuspert

Greene was sentenced to two years in prison for her crime three years ago. But the case wasn't reported in the media until this week, when CNN disclosed it.

The Post reported that Greene lives on a "rundown block in a Syracuse neighborhood that's home to a large population of Muslim immigrants." She wore a hooded olive field jacket and pulled down the brim of a white cap before driving off in a brand-new Subaru, the Post reported.

Greene was working as a contract linguist with a top secret security clearance for the FBI out of Detroit when she was assigned to investigate Cuspert, court papers said. She was already married to an American soldier in Germany, where she was raised after being born in the former Czechoslovakia, CNN reported.

Once she was in Syria, Greene apparently realized she'd made a grave mistake, according to an email cited in federal papers.

"I am gone and I can't come back," Greene wrote in an email to someone whose name is blacked out in court papers. "I am in Syria. Sometimes I wish I could just come back... I am in a very harsh environment and I don't know how long I will last here, but it doesn't matter. It's all a little late now."

Greene did make it out of Syria in August 2014, a month after she arrived, court papers said. She was arrested as soon as she got back to the United States.

Greene faced up to eight years in prison for her crime. But federal prosecutors asked her judge to impose only two years imprisonment because she cooperated with investigators, court papers said.

Greene appeared to "have done all within her power to assist the government since her arrest," federal prosecutors wrote in court papers before her sentencing.

"She endangered our national security by exposing herself and her knowledge of sensitive matters to those terrorist organizations," Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Gillice wrote. "Her escape from the area unscathed, and with apparently much knowledge undisclosed, appears a stroke of luck or a measure of the lack of savvy on the part of the terrorists with whom she interacted."

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