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Afia Siddiqui sentenced to 86 years

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Pakistani sentenced in NY to 86 years in prison
By TOM HAYS Associated Press Writer
Posted: 09/23/2010 12:22:05 AM PDT
Updated: 09/23/2010 10:00:06 AM PDT

NEW YORK—A Pakistani scientist convicted of trying to kill U.S. agents and military officers has been sentenced to 86 years in prison.

Aafia Siddiqui (ah-FEE'-uh sih-DEE'-kee) was sentenced Thursday in Manhattan.

She was labeled an al-Qaida supporter and was brought to the United States after her July 2008 arrest in Afghanistan. She was convicted of grabbing a rifle and trying to shoot U.S. authorities while yelling, "Death to Americans!"

Her February conviction touched off protests in Pakistan.

Prosecutors say Siddiqui is a cold-blooded radical who deserves life in prison. The defense sought a sentence of about 12 years behind bars.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

NEW YORK (AP)—Aafia Siddiqui's strange legal odyssey began two summers ago in Afghanistan, where she turned up carrying evidence that—depending on the argument—proved she was either a terrorist or a lunatic.

Which portrayal prevails will determine whether the U.S.-trained scientist from Pakistan spends the rest of her life in prison.

A judge is scheduled to sentence Siddiqui on Thursday in federal court in Manhattan. A jury convicted her in February of trying to kill U.S. agents and military officers after Afghan police detained her in 2008.

During Siddiqui's three-week trial, FBI agents and U.S. soldiers testified that when they went to interrogate Siddiqui, she snatched an unattended assault rifle and shot at them while yelling, "Death to Americans!" She was wounded by return fire but recovered and was brought to the United States to face trial.

Her conviction touched off protests in Pakistan. On Thursday, there were more protests as hundreds chanted "Free Aafia!" at a rally in Karachi, Pakistan, while others demonstrated outside the Manhattan courthouse.

Though she was not convicted of terrorism, the government has argued that Siddiqui is a cold-blooded radical who deserves a "terrorism enhancement" under federal sentencing guidelines that would guarantee a life term.

"She made it explicit, through her own words and her conduct, her intention to kill Americans, to cause 'death to Americans,'" prosecutors wrote in court papers.

Prosecutors cited threatening notes Siddiqui was carrying at the time of her detention. They directly quoted one as referencing "a 'mass casualty attack' ... NY CITY monuments: Empire State Building, Statue of Liberty, Brooklyn Bridge," and another musing how a dirty bomb would spread more fear than death. They claimed the notes, along with the fact that she was carrying sodium cyanide, showed she wasn't an accidental menace.

"Her conduct was not senseless or thoughtless," prosecutors wrote. "It was deliberate and premeditated. Siddiqui should be punished accordingly."

The defense has asked the judge for a sentence closer to 12 years behind bars. Her lawyers argued in court papers that their client's outburst inside a cramped Afghan outpost was a spontaneous "freak out," born of mental illness instead of militancy.

"Mentally ill and caught in the crossfire of a war that is no longer fought on conventional battlegrounds, Dr. Siddiqui's self destructive behavior got her shot once in the abdomen, charged with attempted murder and ... convicted of the same," the defense wrote.

Siddiqui's rambling courtroom rants proclaiming her innocence and offering odd solutions for Middle East peace ran counter to the prosecution's portrait of "a cold, calculating jihadist who set out to harm American troops by any means necessary," the defense wrote.

Siddiqui, 38, trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Brandeis University in the early 1990s. Authorities claim she returned to her native Pakistan in 2003 after marrying an al-Qaida operative related to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the admitted mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

Testifying in her own defense while wearing a head scarf at trial, Siddiqui claimed she was tortured at a "secret prison" before her detention. Charges that she purposely shot at soldiers were "crazy," she said. "It's just ridiculous."

Among Saddiqui's possessions at the time of her arrest, the defense says, was a computer disk with an essay she'd written about feminism and her struggles as a Muslim woman living in America.

The title: "I am not a Terrorist."

In Karachi on Thursday, about 400 activists of the Islamist group Jamaat-e-Islami and its allied youth group, Pasban, gathered outside the Karachi Press Club carrying pictures of Siddiqui and chanting slogans against the U.S. government and justice system.

"Free Aafia," "We want Aafia, not dollars!" the activists chanted, a reference to U.S. aid funds given in return for Pakistan's cooperation in battling Islamist militancy.

The group tried to march toward the U.S. Consulate, but the police stopped them before they got too close. Aafia's sister, Fauzia Siddiqui, later went to the consulate to submit a written message, which said, "Free Aafia Now."

"I have no good expectations from Judge Richard Berman," Fauzia Siddiqui told reporters. "He has time and again shown his bias and he has shown his discrimination and he has shown how he has tortured the justice system of the U.S."

http://www.mercurynews.com/nation-world/ci_16151195?nclick_check=1
 
She is a American Citizen so none of our Business.Daughter of East etc is all BS.She broke Americans Laws and Well paid for it.Although i think punishment is quite brutal.Should have less then 20 years.
 
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As far as the judicial system in the U.S is concerned .....there is a strong racial element against blacks and south Asians prevalent even today......however if the woman is indeed mentally ill ( given her details it is more than likely)....then she should be freed and placed at a suitable institution and not prosecuted.....
 
She is a American Citizen so none of our Business.Daughter of East etc is all BS.She broke Americans Laws and Well paid for it.Although i think punishment is quite brutal.Should have less then 20 years.

Oh yes, every American,European will think : "Dr. Afia Siddiqui, oh wht a dangerous american woman" Come on, she is from Pakistan dude
 
If true this is going to be the PR disaster for americans, as far as pakistani peoples on street r concerend, and it will be a recruting bonanza for all jihadi organisations. :tdown:
 
Pakistani sentenced in NY to 86 years in prison

Why is that an excuse is always dug up to re-label criminals as something else..having willfully left the country and accquired american citizenship how can she be a Pakistani??
 
Oh yes, every American,European will think : "Dr. Afia Siddiqui, oh wht a dangerous american woman" Come on, she is from Pakistan dude
So we have another Indian here with identity crisis.
 
Why is that an excuse is always dug up to re-label criminals as something else..having willfully left the country and accquired american citizenship how can she be a Pakistani??
jab koi apna madad maangay to deni chaahiye......
 
So we have another Indian here with identity crisis.

I don't get why you think I am Indian. Actually I am shocked that you don't care because she is "American". Guess how many Pakistanis in the world got another nationality than Pakistani, are they no Pakistanis any more? Genetically and by roots, they are.
 
I don't get why you think I am Indian. Actually I am shocked that you don't care because she is "American". Guess how many Pakistanis in the world got another nationality than Pakistani, are they no Pakistanis any more? Genetically and by roots, they are.
We just banned one with dual ID.....Please introduce yourself in Members Introduction section....
 
She is a American Citizen so none of our Business.Daughter of East etc is all BS.She broke Americans Laws and Well paid for it.Although i think punishment is quite brutal.Should have less then 20 years.

it's still a bunch of political B.S.

I would really like the evidence to come out in public, that she did indeed break U.S. laws (there were a lot of shady details surrounding her alleged use of U.S. serviceman's weapon against U.S. personnel during her detention in Bagram base)

86 years to me sounds very extreme. Is she eligible for parole? Will any of the years be suspended sentence?


it is a huge irritant between the U.S. and the people of PAKISTAN (I left ''government'' out for obvious reasons)

We should respect their courts, but at least there should have been more transparency --no matter how sensitive it was.

I'm disappointed...
 
I don't get why you think I am Indian. Actually I am shocked that you don't care because she is "American". Guess how many Pakistanis in the world got another nationality than Pakistani, are they no Pakistanis any more? Genetically and by roots, they are.
Of course they are but they should not expect any sympathy from Government of Pakistan if they commit crime somewhere in the world.Besides if some Pakistani Origin Briton or any other American wins any sports game or anything along those lines you'd think they will say Pakistani won this?Of course not.
 
Of course they are but they should not expect any sympathy from Government of Pakistan if they commit crime somewhere in the world.Besides if some Pakistani Origin Briton or any other American wins any sports game or anything along those lines you'd think they will say Pakistani won this?Of course not.

What if she didn't do anything like the US tells you and is not guilty?
 
Anyone know what happend to that 4 americans story arrested in Pakistan few months ago?
 

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