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Benghazi attack suspect pleads not guilty

Published: 30 Jun 2014 - 02:31 am | Last Updated: 23 Jan 2022 - 05:21 pm

WASHINGTON: A Libyan militia leader pleaded not guilty in a US federal court to a terrorism charge in the 2012 attack on the US diplomatic compound in Benghazi that killed four Americans.
Ahmed Abu Khatallah was transferred to the US District Court in Washington  from a Navy warship where he had been held since his June 15 capture by US special operations forces in Libya.
He was charged at an afternoon hearing with conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists resulting in death in the attack that killed US Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans in Benghazi.
The September 11, 2012, attack triggered a political firestorm for President Barack Obama, with Republicans accusing his administration of misrepresenting the circumstances and of lax protection for diplomats.
The charge against Khatallah includes malicious damage to and destruction of US property by fires and explosives. It carries a maximum penalty of life in prison, the Justice Department said. The department said it intended to file additional charges shortly.
Khatallah was not shackled when he appeared before Magistrate Judge John Facciola and kept his hands behind him as he gave answers through an interpreter. He wore a dark hoodie and black trousers and had long gray hair and a gray beard.
“You conspired, that is to say, you agreed with other people, to provide material support and resources to terrorists, including yourself, knowing that support and those resources would be used in killing a person in the course of an attack on a federal facility involving the use of firearms and dangerous weapons,” Facciola told the defendant.
The judge appointed a public defender and Khatallah was taken out of the courthouse in a motorcade after the 10-minute hearing. US officials did not say where he would be held.
Federal charges filed against him in July 2013 but kept under court seal until this month also included killing a person on US property and a firearms violation.
There was heightened security around the federal courthouse building, which is blocks from the US Capitol and across the street from the National Gallery of Art, prime tourist destinations in Washington. Two or three armed US marshals patrolled the perimeter of the building.
Khatallah was taken aboard the USS New York, an amphibious transport ship, after his seizure in a raid on the outskirts of Benghazi. At the time of Khatallah’s capture, a US official said he was expected to be questioned by an interrogation team at sea. The unit seeks information from suspects that might prevent future attacks.
Reuters