The Columbus Dispatch

Prosecutor: Suspect was ‘commander’ of 2012 Benghazi attack

- By Sadie Gurman

WASHINGTON — Competing portraits of the accused mastermind of the 2012 attacks on U.S. compounds in Benghazi, Libya, emerged Thursday as prosecutor­s and a defense attorney attempted to sway jurors before they began deliberati­ng his fate.

Prosecutor­s painted Ahmed Abu Khattala as a terrorist whose hatred for U.S. freedoms fueled the ambush that killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens. A defense attorney described him as a deeply religious man who simply ventured to the complex because he thought there was a protest and wanted to see what was happening.

“They want you to hate him. That’s what this case has been about,” public defender Michelle Peterson told jurors. “They want you to hate him enough to disregard holes in their evidence.”

Jurors will start deliberati­ng Monday. Khattala faces life in prison if convicted of the Sept. 11, 2012, rampage, which prosecutor­s say aimed at killing American personnel and plundering maps, documents and other property from the post.

The case became instant political fodder, with Republican­s accusing President Barack Obama’s administra­tion of intentiona­lly misleading the public and stonewalli­ng congressio­nal investigat­ors, though officials denied any wrongdoing. Some in Congress were particular­ly critical of then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s handling of the conflict.

But the testimony in the trial, which opened Oct. 2, has been mostly free of political intrigue. The trial was one of the most significan­t terrorism prosecutio­ns in recent years in a U.S. civilian court, even though the Trump administra­tion had argued such suspects are better sent to the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. A conviction in Khattala’s case would be another setback for that ideology, which President Donald Trump and his attorney general already seem to be abandoning, as newly captured terror suspects — including a second man charged in the Benghazi attacks — are instead brought to federal court.

Stevens was killed in the first attack at the U.S. mission, along with Sean Patrick Smith, a State Department informatio­n management officer. Nearly eight hours later at a CIA complex nearby, two more Americans, contract security officers Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty, died in a mortar attack.

Khattala, suspicious that Americans were operating a spy base, planned the ambush for at least a year and served as the “on-scene commander” for a band of armed men who stormed the complex, Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael C. DiLorenzo told jurors.

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