On 17 February 2010, Mohammad was arrested and briefly detained by police in connection with alleged threats against journalists from the daily
Dagbladet. He was questioned and formally charged before being released. Approximately 18 months after being deported from Saudi Arabia, he travelled to
Tunisia, and was arrested by Tunisian security police at the airport in the capital
Tunis, and after a three-hour interrogation, he was again deported. Mohammad was arrested by the
Norwegian Police Security Service (PST) on 1 February 2012. The background was a hate video published on
YouTube, in connection with an Islamist demonstration outside the
Norwegian Parliament two weeks earlier, in which Mohammad participated together with
Arfan Qadeer Bhatti. Mohammad and another 21-year-old Islamist were released on 3 February, although they were still under investigation. He was again arrested by heavily armed security police in May 2013, on suspicion of carrying a gun. He was later fined and released after signing a written promise to stay away from the capital Oslo during the
Norwegian Constitution Day celebrations. After failing to pay the fine of NOK 12.000, the case subsequently went to court. On 21 August 2014, Mohammad along with
Ubaydullah Hussain was named in a criminal complaint filed to the police prosecutor in Oslo by The Iraqi Society in Norway, an organisation representing
Iraqis in Norway. The complaint was filed after Mohammad, on social media had praised the beheading of American journalist
James Foley. In 2019, the Supreme Court sentenced him to 2 years and 6 months in prison. ==Personal life==