Al-Qaida agent sentenced to 8 years in prison

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PEORIA (AP) — An al-Qaida sleeper agent who admitted having contact with the alleged mastermind behind the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks was sentenced to more than eight years in prison on Thursday.

U.S. District Judge Michael Mihm could have sentenced Ali al-Marri to as much as 15 years. But he handed down the lighter sentence of eight years and four months in consideration of what defense attorneys' called harsh treatment during the almost six years al-Marri was held without charges in a U.S. Navy brig.

The judge's decision could have far-reaching consequences because the United States still holds more than 200 people without charge at Guantanamo Bay. If convicted, those detainees also could argue their time in custody should be considered at sentencing.

Al-Marri, a 44-year-old Qatar native, pleaded guilty in May to conspiring to provide material support or resources to a foreign terrorist organization.

He wept through his 10-minute testimony Thursday, telling Mihm he was sorry he ever helped the terrorist organization and glad his actions never led to any harm.

Mihm told al-Marri he didn't believe he'd renounced al-Qaida and thought he was likely to attack the U.S. if given the chance. But he also said al-Marri deserved credit for the time he'd spent in isolation in the Navy brig in South Carolina.

Al-Marri quietly thanked Allah in Arabic when Mihm delivered the sentence.

Al-Marri's relatives heard the news at about 11:20 p.m. in Saudi Arabia. They had been hoping al-Marri would receive probation, and his brother said previously he hoped to see al-Marri soon.

"I don't know what to say," Naji al-Marri, al-Marri's brother, said by telephone. "Did they count the years he spend in prison?"

During the two-day sentencing hearing, defense attorneys showed videos and presented testimony to show al-Marri had endured cruel treatment — including sensory deprivation, lengthy interrogations and threats to harm his family — during almost six years in the Navy brig. In court documents, they argued that amounted to a sentence "beyond what our nation stands for and tolerates as a matter of respect for the law."

Prosecutors had argued for the maximum sentence, presenting testimony to try to prove al-Marri would still tryto inflict harm on the U.S. if he had a chance.

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