Brutal ex-rebel boss from Liberia gets prison term
PHILADELPHIA » A Liberian man who lived in East Lansdowne, accused of committing gruesome war crimes when he was a rebel commander called Jungle Jabbah, was sentenced Thursday to 30 years in prison for immigration fraud and perjury offenses, the U.S. Attorney’s office announced.
Mohammed Jabbetah, 51, was found guilty in October of two counts of fraud in immigration documents and two counts of perjury. He was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Paul S. Diamond, capping a case that began with Jabbateh’s arrest in 2016.
During the height of Liberia’s first civil war from 1992 to 1995, Jabbateh, while serving as commander of a warring faction known as the United Liberation Movement of Liberia for Democracy, committed various acts of shocking brutality including rapes, sexual enslavement, slave labor, murder, mutilation and ritual cannibalism. He also used children as soldiers.
“This defendant committed acts of such violence and depravity that they are almost beyond belief,” U.S. Attorney William M. McSwain said. “This man is responsible for atrocities that will ripple for generations in Liberia. He thought he could hide here but thanks to the determination and creativity of our prosecutors and investigators, he couldn’t. This prosecution was our only option under the law and his sentence achieves at least some measure of justice for his victims.”
According to trial testimony, in one instance Jabbateh ordered the heart of a captive be cooked and fed to his fighters. In another, fighters under the defendant’s command murdered a villager, removed his heart and ordered the town chief’s wife to cook it. Jabbateh later had the town chief himself murdered and ordered his widow to cook her husband’s heart.
In December 1998, when making application for asylum, and later for permanent legal residency, the defendant was not truthful about his activities in Liberia, while he was a member of the ULIMO and later ULIMO-K rebel groups that battled for control of Liberia.
At his trial, during two weeks of testimony from some two dozen witnesses including 17 Liberian victims, the jury heard evidence that Jabbateh, as a ULIMO commander, either personally committed or ordered ULIMO fighters under his command to commit the following offenses: The murder of civilian noncombatants; the sexual enslavement of women; the maiming of civilian noncombatants; the torturing of civilian noncombatants; the enslavement of civilian noncombatants; the conscription of child soldiers; the execution of prisoners of war; the desecration of corpses and ritual consumption of human flesh; and the killing of persons because of race, religion, nationality, ethnic origin or political opinion.
“Let today’s sentence serve as an example of Homeland Security Investigations’ commitment to bring to justice individuals such as Mr. Jabbateh,” said Marlon Miller, special agent in charge of HSI’s Philadelphia office. “Human rights violators will not evade justice and will be held accountable for these crimes committed abroad, nor will they find refuge here in the United States.”
The case was investigated by Homeland Security Investigations special agents Mark Gilland, Tom Eyre and Al Cabrelli, along with HIS Supervisory Special Agent Brian Jones. Also aiding in the investigation were Africa research specialist Marian Drake and victim assistance specialist Jackie Goldstein.
The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Linwood C. Wright Jr. and Nelson S.T. Thayer Jr.