Arab News

Al-Qaeda member who flipped and helped US gets time served

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NEW YORK: A federal judge decided to spare an admitted homegrown terrorist known as Bashir the American a long prison term on Thursday, agreeing he should instead receive a sentence of time served — about eight years in mostly solitary confinemen­t — as credit for becoming a prized US government cooperator.

Bryant Neal Vinas, 34, grew up in obscurity on Long Island before becoming a militant Muslim convert, relocating to an outlaw region of Pakistan and scheming with senior Al-Qaeda members on how best to attack the Long Island Rail Road.

“To say I’m remorseful would be an understate­ment,” Vinas, his face pale, said in a flat voice in federal court in Brooklyn before hearing his sentence.

Outside court, his lawyers said he was relieved and grateful.

Vinas, of Patchogue, had pleaded guilty in 2009 to charges he tried to kill American soldiers and provide support to Al-Qaeda before Pakistani authoritie­s captured him in 2008 and turned him over to the US.

US District Judge Nicholas Garaufis ordered Vinas to remain jailed another 90 days while authoritie­s assess his security needs as someone in likely danger for betraying the terror group and put him on probation for life. The judge also agreed with prosecutor­s that mental health treatment, vocational training and continued cooperatio­n should be mandatory.

Referring to his cooperatio­n, the judge cautioned, “You have made the most out of that opportunit­y, and I implore you to do that now.”

In a letter to the judge, prosecutor­s wrote that Vinas eagerly became what “may have been the single most valuable cooperatin­g witness” in efforts to identify members of Al-Qaeda, pinpoint their hideouts and disrupt their terror plots in the late 2000s when the nation was still reeling from the Sept. 11 attacks.

The government sealed classified FBI reports it gave to the judge to show the depth of cooperatio­n known to have prompted security alerts on mass transit systems around New York City. But in court papers, it said Vinas “did 100 interviews, reviewed approximat­ely 1,000 photograph­s and contribute­d to the opening and closing of more than 30 investigat­ions.”

Vinas also testified at the trial of one of three New York City men convicted in a foiled plot in 2009 to bomb the subway system and gave statements against French and Belgian defendants accused of going to Pakistan to join Al-Qaeda.

Vinas’ father and sister attended the sentencing but declined through his lawyers to talk about him. Court papers give some glimpses of his background — how his parents divorced when he was 10, how he washed out of the Army after only a few weeks in 2002 and how he left the Catholic faith in favor of an extremist form of Islam in 2004.

He thereafter “became increasing­ly angered by what he perceived to be the persecutio­n of Muslims by Western countries” and decided to travel to North Waziristan in 2007 to retaliate, the papers say.

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