A Reston, Va. woman was one of three arrested today for allegedly funding a terrorist group with ties to al-Qa’ida, according to the Department of Justice.

In a release, the DOJ says 34-year-old Muna Osman Jama was arrested in her home in Reston, charged with “providing material support to al-Shabaab, a designated foreign terrorist organization that is conducting a violent insurgency campaign in Somalia.” According to court records, Jama, along with two other women, were the heads of a fundraising conspiracy for al-Shabaab in the U.S., Kenya, the Netherlands, and Somalia.

They “directed a network composed primarily of women who provided monthly payments that were coordinated, facilitated and tracked by the defendants to their conduits in Kenya and Somalia.”

The al-Shabaab terrorist group—whose full name is the Harakat Shabaab al-Mujahidin—is the group responsible for the violent insurgency campaign in Somalia, and, in 2012, merged with al-Qa’ida.

Court records allege that Jama, along with the two other defendents, were sending money to al-Shabaab as “living expenses,” using different code words to disguise their activities. An indictment was issued on June 26 by a federal grand jury, charging Jama and four other defendants—44-year-old Hinda Osman Dhirane of Kent, Washington; Farhia Hassan of the Netherlands; Fardowsa Jama Mohamed, a fugitive in Kenya; and Barira Hassan Abdullahi; a fugitive in Somalia—with one count of conspiracy to provide material support to a terrorist organization and 20 counts of providing material support to a terrorist organization. Dhirane and Hassan were also arrested today at their respective homes.

If convicted, each woman faces a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison for each count.