US court rejects Farouk Abdulmutallab’s appeal of life sentence
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab is shown in this booking
photograph on Dec. 28, 2009. Abdulmutallab, a Nigerian man who tried to set off
an explosive hidden in his underwear while aboard a U.S. airliner on Christmas
Day in 2009, had his life sentence upheld by a federal appeals court.
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab — a Nigerian who tried to set off
a bomb hidden under his pants aboard a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit on
Christmas Day in 2009 — had filed an appeal calling for a review of the
sentence.
Abdulmatallab, who had called the bombing attempt his
“religious duty” to avenge American attacks against Muslims, pleaded guilty to
eight counts in October 2011, a day after his trial began.
But he later argued life in prison was cruel and unusual punishment,
that the trial judge had erred in allowing him to represent himself despite
doubts about his competence, and that statements he made in the hospital were
admitted as evidence without a warning he could have an attorney present.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected all of the
27-year-old’s challenges to the sentence, concluding “none of these claims have
merit.”
The court said Abdulmutallab had been represented by a
public defender but then in a pretrial hearing insisted he wanted to represent
himself. A judge warned him of the consequences and even appointed him a
standby attorney who consulted with the defendant.
Circuit Judge David McKeague, who wrote the opinion for the
three-judge appeals court panel, called Abdulmutallab an “educated and adept
individual” who made “numerous calculated decisions” in the name of martyrdom.
He said a life sentence was appropriate given the crime, and
the defendant’s having committed an act of terrorism and “communicated a
desire” to undertake more.
McKeague also found no reason to question Abdulmutallab’s
competence, and said statements were admissible under a public safety exception
to the “Miranda” warning against self-incrimination.
Abdulmutallab’s bomb sparked a fireball but did not explode
on Northwest Airlines Flight 253, which had 289 people on board.
Adbdulmutallab had trained at an al Qaeda camp in Yemen
under the direction of U.S.-born Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awlaki. He then
traveled to Ghana to conceal his time in Yemen, before going on to Amsterdam.
There, he managed to get past airport screeners when questioned about reasons
for his travel to the United States.
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