New York Daily News

Justice for Lockerbie

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Monday, 32 years to the day after 270 people were murdered in the bombing of a jet traveling from London to New York, federal prosecutor­s charged the man who copped to building the explosive device that brought down Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. Credit the Justice Department under Attorney General Bill Barr, who kicked off his first stint as AG in 1991 by charging two other plotters, for seeing through the investigat­ion on behalf of 190 Americans killed.

That Abu Agela Mas’ud Kheir Al-Marimi, a Libyan intelligen­ce official, now stands accused of a capital crime is due to federal authoritie­s who made a specific, concerted effort last year to close the loop on long-languishin­g counterter­rorism investigat­ions; that push uncovered a 2012 confession to Libyan law enforcemen­t by Mas’ud.

It is also a tribute to the aching heart and exhaustive work of Ken Dornstein, a college student in 1988 when his older brother David was among the murder victims. Dornstein, who went on to become a documentar­ian, plunged himself into the facts of the case — zeroing in on Mas’ud and discoverin­g that he was being held in a Libyan prison.

The urgent imperative now is extraditin­g Mas’ud here to face swift and sure justice. The two men who earlier stood trial for the murders — in the Netherland­s, under Scottish law — escaped full punishment. One was acquitted. The other, Abdelbasse­t Al-Megrahi, was convicted in 2001, then in 2009 shamefully granted compassion­ate release before his death in 2012.

Today is the final day of Barr’s second act leading the DOJ. To say the least, he has not always behaved honorably in the position. But his final acts — flatly rebutting Donald Trump’s anti-democratic nonsense and bringing a terrorist who long evaded consequenc­es to justice — have been his noblest ones.

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