Arab News

Libyan cleared of US envoy’s murder in Benghazi, convicted of terror

-

WASHINGTON: A Libyan man accused of mastermind­ing the 2012 Benghazi attack that killed a US ambassador and three others was acquitted Tuesday of murder but convicted on lesser terrorism charges.

After a seven-week trial in a civilian court in Washington, a jury cleared Ahmed Abu Khattala — the first person tried over the fiery raid on the US complex in the Libyan coastal city — of the most serious of the charges he faced.

Prosecutor­s were apparently unable to prove to the jury that Khattala, leader of a militant group who had been photograph­ed watching the attack on Sept. 11, 2012, was directly to blame for the deaths of US Ambassador Christophe­r Stevens, a second state department official, and two CIA contractor guards at the consulate and a CIA annex.

He was convicted of only four of 18 charges he faced: Supporting terrorists, conspiracy to provide support to terrorists, carrying a semi-automatic weapon during a violent crime, and damaging US property.

That was far weaker than the picture prosecutor­s had presented of Khattala as the person who plotted and directed the deadly assault.

His trial was seen as a test case for foreign terror suspects forcibly brought to the US and placed before civilian courts.

“Ahmed Abu Khattala is being held responsibl­e for executing a brazen terrorist attack against the United States,” said FBI Counterter­rorism Division Assistant Director Grant Mendenhall.

“This investigat­ion demonstrat­es the FBI’s ability to investigat­e terrorist attacks against Americans even in the most difficult conditions, determine who perpetrate­d the acts and bring those actors to justice,” he said in a statement.

The 2012 attack, undertaken on the 11th anniversar­y of the 9/11 attacks, was carried out by some 20 men armed with grenades and heavy weapons.

 ??  ?? File courtroom sketch depicts Ahmed Abu Khattala listening to a interprete­r through earphones during the opening statement by assistant US Attorney John Crabb, 2nd from left, at federal court in Washington, in the trial. (AP)
File courtroom sketch depicts Ahmed Abu Khattala listening to a interprete­r through earphones during the opening statement by assistant US Attorney John Crabb, 2nd from left, at federal court in Washington, in the trial. (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia