Daily News (Los Angeles)

`Beatle' gets life for IS beheadings

About a dozen Westerners were kidnapped, four Americans killed

- By Matthew Barakat

ALEXANDRIA, VA. >> As people in a packed courtroom wept, Lucy Henning talked about her own guilt at the death of her father, Alan Henning, who was tortured and beheaded by the Islamic State a decade ago.

“If I weren't a moody teenager, maybe he wouldn't have gone,” she said through tears at Friday's sentencing hearing for Alexanda Kotey, one of two British nationals — known as the “Beatles by their captives — who was convicted in U.S. District Court in Alexandria for their roles in the hostagetak­ing scheme. Roughly two dozen Westerners were abducted and four Americans were killed.

Lucy said she has many questions about her father that remain unanswered: “Did he want to send us a message? Was he mad that we didn't get him out? Was he buried or cremated? Or was he just left there?”

Kotey was sentenced Friday to life in prison. The sentence was a foregone conclusion under the plea deal he entered last year.

El Shafee Elsheikh, another British national, will be formally sentenced in August and also will receive a life term. The death penalty was not an option under the terms of the agreement that allowed their extraditio­n to the U.S.

Kotey was specifical­ly charged with conspiring

El Shafee Elsheikh is one of two terrorists held in U.S. custody in the brutal killings of four Americans.

in the kidnapping and deaths of four Americans — journalist­s James Foley and Steven Sotloff and aid workers Kayla Mueller and Peter Kassig. Foley, Sotloff and Kassig were all beheaded. Mueller was tortured and raped by Islamic State leader Abu Bakr AlBaghdadi before she was killed. British aid workers Henning and David Haines also were killed by beheading by the Islamic State.

About a dozen family members and survivors spoke at Friday's hearing. Kayla Mueller's father, Carl Mueller, said that during the ordeal, “I lost my faith in God, and I lost my faith in our government.”

He said the trial and prosecutio­n of Elsheikh and Kotey restored his faith in government, prompting tears from Judge T.S. Ellis III.

Kayla's mother, Marsha Mueller, said she and her husband are still desperate for the truth about her daughter's death.

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