Benghazi militant convicted

Libyan guilty of terrorism but acquitted of murder in attack

WASHINGTON -- A Libyan militant accused of being a ringleader of the 2012 Benghazi attacks on U.S. facilities was convicted on terrorism charges Tuesday in the assaults that killed U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans. But the jury found the militant innocent of the most serious of the charges, including murder.

The case was seen as a test of detention and interrogation policies developed under former President Barack Obama's administration to capture terror suspects overseas for criminal trial, with the result likely to factor into assessments of the suitability of civilian courts for terrorism prosecutions.

The jury in Washington deliberated for five days after a seven-week trial before convicting Ahmed Abu Khattala, 46, in the attack the night of Sept. 11 at a U.S. diplomatic mission that killed Stevens and State Department employee Sean Smith in a fire, and in a second attack that took place before dawn Sept. 12 on a nearby CIA annex, where CIA contractors Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty were killed by mortar strikes.

The jury acquitted Abu Khattala of all but four of the 18 charges against him.

At trial, his defense team said Abu Khattala was drawn to the fiery scene in his hometown as a bystander. They questioned the credibility of three Libyan witnesses who testified that they saw or heard Abu Khattala take steps to plan, execute or claim responsibility for the attacks.

Prosecutors presented what they called "indisputable" records linking the times of calls on Abu Khattala's cellphone and surveillance video from the diplomatic mission attack that they said showed he was at least a key plotter.

Abu Khattala was a leader in an extremist brigade that was part of a militia that sought to establish strict Islamist rule in post-revolutionary Libya. U.S. intelligence assessments have reported that several groups were involved in the attacks, including Abu Khattala's brigade and the militia.

Stevens and Smith died of smoke inhalation after militants overran the diplomatic compound and set fire to the diplomatic villa. Woods and Doherty were killed on a rooftop at the CIA annex in the predawn mortar strikes.

Abu Khattala was captured in June 2014 by U.S. commandos and interrogated and transported for 13 days aboard a Navy warship to the United States.

On board, he was questioned by two teams, the first working in a classified operation to extract intelligence and the second a separate FBI team that collected evidence for his trial under the legal safeguards provided defendants in civilian court.

He was charged with aiding or abetting the killing of the four Americans and wounding two other Americans, providing or conspiring to provide material support and resources to terrorists that resulted in death, destruction of government buildings and property, and a firearms violation.

Abu Khattala has been the only person taken to court in attacks that saw the compound overrun. However, on Oct. 29, during his trial, U.S. authorities snatched a second suspect from Misrata, Libya, for prosecution in Washington. The suspect, Mustafa Al-Imam, has pleaded innocent.

Abu Khattala's trial moved the Benghazi inquiry from the partisan political realm, where Republican claims of a Democratic cover-up continued throughout the 2016 presidential contest, into a courthouse where the jury of 12 Washington residents sorted through six binders of exhibits and hours of video evidence.

President Donald Trump's administration recently showed a willingness to continue bringing terrorism cases in civilian courts, including additional Benghazi suspects. Trump on Oct. 30 personally announced that "on my orders," U.S. forces captured the second Benghazi suspect, Al-Imam, to "face justice in the United States."

Although several Republicans in Congress and conservative analysts called for a military tribunal for Abu Khattala, there were no such calls in Al-Imam's case.

Brian Egan, a senior White House and State Department legal adviser during the Obama administration, said the trial affirmed the integrity of the U.S. justice system even under extraordinary circumstances.

"That's important for the rest of the world to see, given the amount of respect our criminal justice system has internationally and the fact that the Guantanamo Bay military commission system has been so heavily criticized," Egan said. "This case is really a good barometer for whether procedures the U.S. government put in place will prove to be useful."

Before the trial began Oct. 2, Abu Khattala's defense moved to toss out his statements in military and FBI custody, arguing the 13-day detention without a lawyer present violated his legal rights and that the circumstances were so coercive they negated his signed waivers to a right to an attorney and against self-incrimination.

The government won a critical ruling from U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper denying the motion and upholding the government's flexibility in handling overseas terrorism suspects.

The trial featured testimony from surviving State Department and CIA operators, some of them taking the stand under fake names and disguised with wigs and mustaches to protect their identities.

Prosecutors also relied heavily on surveillance video taken by overhead drones and diplomatic compound cameras, as well as cellphone records the government obtained from Libyan authorities that listed call times and numbers but not the call contents.

Key testimony came from three paid Libyan informants, all testifying under pseudonyms.

They included an undercover Libyan businessman who received $7 million for aiding the U.S. by approaching Abu Khattala as a financial supporter after the attacks, collecting incriminating statements from him and luring him to his capture.

A Section on 11/29/2017

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