14 with ties to deadly 2015 attacks in Paris found guilty
PARIS — A French court Wednesday found all 14 defendants guilty in a landmark trial for the terrorist attacks that killed 17 people in January 2015, including 10 staff members of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo that had published cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad.
In a separate but coordinated attack two days later, four people were killed at a kosher Paris supermarket. The perpetrator, AmédyCoulibaly, identified customers as Jews before shooting them. Coulibaly, whowas killed inashootout with police, declared he was murdering the people he hated most in theworld: “the Jewsand the French.”
Régis de Jorna, the presiding magistrate, read the verdict to a hushed courtroom in northern Paris, where the masked defendants sat boxed in a glass enclosure. Six of the 11 accused who were present in court were acquitted of the charge of terrorist association but found guilty of lesser crimes.
Three other defendants were tried in absentia.
Two are presumed dead. Another, Hayat Boumeddiene, Coulibaly’s partner at the time, was sentenced to 30 years in prison for being part of a criminal terrorist network. Terrorist trials in France are judged not by jury but by five magistrates.
The sentences handed out ranged from four years to life imprisonment, slightly lessonaverage than theprosecutionhadsought.
Mohamed Belhoucine, who is presumed dead in Syria, was handed the heaviest sentence for his role in “mentoring” Coulibaly. His brother, Mehdi, was not sentenced because, the court said, the evidence he is dead is overwhelming.
One other defendant, Ali Riza Polat, was sentenced to 30 years for playing “an essential role” in the preparation of the attacks. His lawyersaidhewouldappeal.
With the three perpetrators all dead — Said and Chérif Kouachi, the brotherswhomassacred the staff of CharlieHebdo, were also killed in a shootout with police in 2015 — the trial focused on people charged with providing logistical support, including cash, weaponsandvehicles. They all proclaimed their innocenceduringthetrial, sometimesinvehementoutbursts suggesting the outcome of the proceedingswas preordained.
The trial, which opened more than three months ago, was delayed by a coronavirus outbreak among the accused. It began life in September with the hope that it might assuage the pain of 2015, when 130 people were killed in and aroundParis ina succession of jihadi attacks. That hope proved vain.
Instead, the trial served as a backdrop to renewed terrorism. Three weeks into the trial, on Sept. 25, a Pakistani man armed with a butcher’s knife attacked two people outside Charlie Hebdo’s vacated offices.
On Oct. 16, a French schoolteacher who opened a debate on free speech by showing students the Muhammad caricatures wasbeheadedbyan18-yearold Chechen refugee. Two weeks later, aTunisianman armed with a knife and carryingacopyof theQuran attacked worshippers in a church in the southern city ofNice, killing three.