Moussaoui formally sentenced, still defiant
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Drama at Moussaoui sentencing May 4: Zacarias Moussaoui was formally sentenced to life in prison Thursday, but not before a dramatic confrontation in the courtroom. NBC's Pete Williams reports. |
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Reaction to verdict
After seven days of deliberation, the nine men and three women rebuffed the government’s appeal for death for the only person charged in this country in the suicide hijackings of four commercial jetliners that killed nearly 3,000 people on Sept. 11, 2001.
From the White House, President Bush said Wednesday the verdict “represents the end of this case but not an end to the fight against terror.” He said Moussaoui got a fair trial and the jury spared his life, “which is something that he evidently wasn’t willing to do for innocent American citizens.”
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, attending a European Union security conference in Vienna, told reporters Thursday: “There are challenges that exist with respect to prosecuting terrorist cases in our system. I think justice was served in this case.”
No details if jury split
It is not known how many jurors wanted Moussaoui sentenced to life and how many wanted a death sentence. Under federal law, a defendant automatically receives life in prison when a jury is split. The 42-page verdict form gives no indication on how, or if, the jury split.
The jury rejected two key defense arguments — that Moussaoui suffers a mental illness and that executing him would make him a martyr. No jurors indicated on the verdict form that they gave any weight to those arguments.
Nine jurors found that Moussaoui suffered a difficult childhood in a dysfunctional family where he spent many of his early years in and out of orphanages. Three found that Moussaoui only played a minor role in the attacks.
In their successful defense of Moussaoui, defense lawyers overcame the impact of two dramatic appearances by Moussaoui himself — first to renounce his four years of denying any involvement in the attacks and then to gloat over the pain of those who lost loved ones.
He was still belittling that pain Thursday. Referring to Dillard, who lost her husband Eddie in the Pentagon attack, he said: “I destroyed a life and she lost a husband. Maybe one day she can think about how many people the CIA has destroyed.”
“You have a hypocrisy beyond belief,” he said. “Your humanity is a selective humanity.”
Using evidence gathered in the largest investigation in U.S. history, prosecutors achieved a preliminary victory last month when the jury ruled Moussaoui’s lies to federal agents a month before the attacks made him eligible for the death penalty because they kept agents from discovering some of the hijackers.
But even with heart-rending testimony from nearly four dozen victims and their relatives — testimony that forced some jurors to wipe tears from their eyes — the jury was not convinced that Moussaoui deserved to die.
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