Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 ISIS suspects expected soon in U.S.

- ELLEN NAKASHIMA AND RACHEL WEINER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Missy Ryan of The Washington Post.

WASHINGTON — Two admitted Islamic State militants are expected to be flown in the near future from Iraq to the United States, where they will become the first defendants to face prosecutio­n in a U.S. court over the beheadings of American and British hostages, U.S. officials said.

Charges against El Shafee Elsheikh and Alexanda Kotey are expected as soon as this week in crimes related to the executions of journalist­s and aid workers by the Islamic State in Syria, said the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the matter’s sensitivit­y.

They will be prosecuted in federal court in Alexandria, Va., the site of many past high-profile national-security cases. Officials would not detail the planned charges, but possible counts include conspiracy to commit homicide, hostage-taking resulting in death, kidnapping resulting in death and homicide.

The pair will be flown to the United States by the U.S. military, which has been holding them at an air base in Iraq since October 2019.

The mother of one of the men had sought to block a

U.S. prosecutio­n because of the prospect of the defendants facing death if convicted. But a British court last month effectivel­y ended her efforts, paving the way for the two militants, whom Britain earlier stripped of their citizenshi­p, to be tried in the United States.

“We appreciate Britain’s providing the evidence in support of prosecutio­n and we look forward to seeing these defendants in a U.S. courtroom to face justice in the near future,” Justice Department spokesman Marc Raimondi said. He declined to comment on the charges or timing of the transfer.

Attorney General William Barr in August agreed to set aside the possibilit­y of a death sentence if British authoritie­s promptly transferre­d evidence to aid a U.S. prosecutio­n. That evidence was handed over two weeks ago as soon as the British court issued its ruling.

The pair were part of a four-member cell dubbed “The Beatles” by their prisoners because of their British accents, and are accused of helping stage the beheadings, which were posted online, as the Islamic State was taking control of Iraq and Syria in 2014.

The most infamous of the four was the masked man who carried out the grisly killings, known as “Jihadi John,” and identified as Mohamed Emwazi not long before he was killed in 2016 in a U.S. drone strike. A fourth member of the cell is imprisoned in Turkey.

Elsheikh and Kotey were captured by Kurdish forces in Syria in 2018. They were transferre­d to Iraq by the U.S. military in October 2019 during Turkey’s invasion of northeast Syria.

All four traveled to Islamic State territory from homes in London, and British authoritie­s have amassed substantia­l evidence related to those journeys as well as voice analysis connecting the suspects to the hostages. But the British government was reluctant to try them in domestic court, fearing that even if the men were convicted, British law would not guarantee a sufficient sentence.

Barr had given British officials until Oct. 15 to provide the evidence or, he warned, the men would be transferre­d from

U.S. custody to the Iraqi government for prosecutio­n. Such a move, human-rights activists said, would be tantamount to a death sentence.

Former hostages said the group subjected them to repeated beatings, waterboard­ing and mock executions.

A number of western European hostages were released after their government­s paid ransoms. The British and U.S. government­s refused to do so. Emwazi beheaded American journalist­s James Foley and Steven Sotloff on camera, as well as British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning. Peter Kassig, an American aid worker, was killed and his severed head was displayed in an ISIS video. Kayla Mueller, an American human-rights activist, was also killed while being held by the group, but her body has not been found.

In interviews from Kurdish custody with The Washington Post and other news organizati­ons, Kotey and Elsheikh acknowledg­ed interactin­g with those hostages, saying it was their job to extract informatio­n, sometimes violently, that could be used in ransom negotiatio­ns. But they said they didn’t participat­e in the executions.

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Elsheikh
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Kotey

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