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Oregon man gets 30 years in Christmas bomb plot


By Nigel Duara, Associated Press
Thursday, October 2, 2014

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PORTLAND, Ore. — A young Somali American was sentenced Wednesday to 30 years in prison for plotting to detonate a bomb in Portland’s downtown square while 10,000 revelers gathered to watch the mayor light a towering Christmas tree.

Prosecutors had sought a 40-year term for Mohamed Mohamud, 23, in the 2010 plot that was actually an FBI sting. But US District Court Judge Garr King said Mohamud’s youth and remorse for his actions helped lower his sentence.

King said he believed the actions of undercover FBI agents edged into ‘‘imperfect entrapment,’’ the idea that while they did not fully entrap Mohamud in a legal sense, their actions nonetheless encouraged him to commit wrongdoing.

‘‘This is a sad case,’’ King said.

Mohamud was arrested Nov. 26, 2010, after pressing a keypad button on a cellphone that he believed would trigger a massive truck bomb and kill people gathered for the annual holiday event. But the bomb was a fake, provided by FBI agents posing as terrorists.

The undercover agents made friends with Mohamud after learning he had written for an online jihadi magazine and exchanged e-mails with accused terrorists.

King disagreed with Mohamud’s defense lawyers, who portrayed their client’s actions as those of a confused teenager who just had his braces removed when contacted by an FBI agent posing as a member of a terrorist cell. Mohamud chose the location and timing of the bomb, King said, and when offered the choice to commit peaceful acts of resistance, he instead told the undercover agents he wanted to ‘‘become operational.’’

Mohamud’s defense team said he will appeal the sentence.

The former Oregon State University student and his parents spoke before he was sentenced.

‘‘The things I said and did were terrible,’’ Mohamud said. ‘‘The hardest thing is to go over the [undercover agents’] tapes, to see myself, to hear what I was saying.’’

His mother, Mariam Barre, begged the judge for leniency.

‘‘Give him another chance,’’ she said through tears.

His father, Osman Barre, said he has watched his waifish teenage son become an adult in prison and mature in the process. But King said Mohamud’s youth aside, the sentence had to both punish him for his actions and serve as a warning for anyone planning similar acts.

FBI director James Comey said Wednesday that King’s remarks about ‘‘imperfect entrapment’’ will have no effect on the agency’s sting operations.



 





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