First Published 2009-10-30, Last Updated 2009-10-30 08:03:09


'My assistance (to Al-Qaeda) did not cause any bloodshed'

 
Al-Qaeda agent sentenced to more than 8 years

 
Saudi-Qatari national convicted of charges of providing support to Al-Qaeda, conspiring.

 
PEORIA - A US judge sentenced Al-Qaeda sleeper agent Ali al-Marri to more than eight years in prison on Thursday, rejecting pleas from prosecutors for a much longer jail term.

Judge Michael Mihm expressed fears Marri could re-offend but said a "just sentence" must reflect the fact he was designated an "enemy combatant" and forced to spend more than six years in a US Navy brig without charge.

Marri, a 44-year-old dual Saudi-Qatari national, confessed in April to having trained in terrorist camps in Pakistan before being sent to the United States on a mission.

"We are defined as a people by how we deal with difficult and unpopular legal issues," Mihm said, before handing down a sentence of eight years and four months at the court in Peoria in the US state of Illinois.

Under a plea bargain with federal prosecutors in April, Marri faced up to 15 years in jail.

With credit for about two years already served in civilian jails, and given the 54 days he could earn each year for good behavior, Marri might be released as early as 2015 after serving less than six years.

Initially arrested in Illinois on credit card fraud charges, Marri was declared an enemy combatant in 2003 and spent nearly six years in solitary confinement in a military brig in South Carolina without charge.

His case was transferred to civil court on February 26 when he was formally indicted on charges of providing support to Al-Qaeda and conspiring with others to do the same.

In a tearful and emotional statement before sentencing, Marri said he had changed.

"I am glad I have no blood on my hand and my assistance did not cause any bloodshed or lead to that either, nor would I have ever agreed to that and I will never agree to that in the future, but I am sorry for providing assistance for those who would do this country harm," Marri said, according to a text of his statement published by the Peoria Journal Star.

"Even though I am a changed person from the 2001 al-Marri, I hope you would look with an eye of mercy on me today."

During Thursday's sentencing the judge was clear about the fact that Marri was likely to re-offend.

"I believe that you have not totally rejected what you did and that you would do it again after you go home, whether here or somewhere else," Mihm said.

Marri's case has reignited debate over whether an American president should have the authority to detain terror suspects -- including legal US residents -- indefinitely without charge.

Unlike detainees held at the American naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, Marri was a legal US resident when he was arrested in December 2001 in connection with the 9/11 attacks.

President Barack Obama has eliminated the "enemy combatant" designation and vowed to shut down Guantanamo by January.

Marri admitted in April that he attended several terrorist training camps in Pakistan from 1998 to 2001, according to his plea agreement.
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