Jose Padilla sentenced on terrorism charges
He gets 17 years, four months, in case far removed from ‘dirty bomb’
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‘Dirty Bomb’ suspect sentenced Jan. 22: An American once accused of plotting to blow up a New York City apartment was sentenced to 17 years in prison on terrorism charges. NBC’s Pete Williams reports. Nightly News |
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MIAMI - Jose Padilla, once accused of plotting with al-Qaida to blow up a radioactive “dirty bomb,” was sentenced Tuesday to 17 years and four months on terrorism conspiracy charges that don’t mention those initial allegations.
The sentence imposed by U.S. District Judge Marcia Cooke marks another step in the extraordinary personal and legal odyssey for the 37-year-old Muslim convert, a U.S. citizen who was held for 3½ years as an enemy combatant after his 2002 arrest amid the “dirty bomb” allegations. He had faced up to life in prison.
Cooke said she was giving Padilla some credit — over the objections of federal prosecutors — for his lengthy military detention at a Navy brig in South Carolina. She agreed with defense lawyers that Padilla was subjected to “harsh conditions” and “extreme environmental stresses” while there.
“I do find that the conditions were so harsh for Mr. Padilla ... they warrant consideration in the sentencing in this case,” the judge said. However, he did not get credit for time served.
Padilla’s lawyers claimed his treatment amounted to torture, which U.S. officials have repeatedly denied. His attorneys say he was forced to stand in painful stress positions, given LSD or other drugs as “truth serum,” deprived of sleep and even a mattress for extended periods and subjected to loud noises, extreme heat and cold and noxious odors.
Cooke also imposed prison terms on two other men of Middle Eastern origin who were convicted of conspiracy and material support charges along with Padilla in August. The three were part of a North American support cell for al-Qaida and other Islamic extremists around the world, prosecutors said.
'No evidence' of carrying out terrorism
But Cooke said that as serious as the conspiracy was, there was no evidence linking the men to specific acts of terrorism anywhere.
“There is no evidence that these defendants personally maimed, kidnapped or killed anyone in the United States or elsewhere,” she said.
Padilla was added in 2005 to an existing Miami terrorism support case just as the U.S. Supreme Court was considering his challenge to President Bush’s decision to hold him in custody indefinitely without charge. The “dirty bomb” charges were quietly discarded and were never part of the criminal case.
Cooke sentenced Padilla’s recruiter, 45-year-old Adham Amin Hassoun, to 15 years and eight months in prison and the third defendant, 46-year-old Kifah Wael Jayyousi, to 12 years and eight months. Jayyousi was a financier and propagandist for the cell that assisted Islamic extremists in Chechnya, Afghanistan, Somalia and elsewhere, according to trial testimony. Both also faced life in prison.
Padilla’s mother, Estela Lebron, smiled at reporters in the courtroom when the sentence was announced, and outside the courthouse she questioned whether the Bush administration had misplaced its priorities in prosecuting her son.
“This is the way they are spending our money? Hello?” she said.
But she was also pleased he didn’t get the maximum sentence. “I feel good about everything. This is amazing.”
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