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Defense attorney Peter Quijano argued that Ghailani also deserved credit for his cooperation, saying he had provided U.S. authorities with "intelligence and information that arguably saved lives, and I submit that is not hyperbole." Prosecutors countered that Ghailani was aware of the plan well in advance, chose not to warn authorities and was worried most that one of the men would perish in the suicide attack. According to an FBI summary of his confession, Ghailani said "all he could think about was that Ahmed the driver was going to die and the American embassy was the target." Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Farbiarz called Ghailani "a man who cannot muster a moment of contrition." He said the attacks were "an act of horror and brutality and terror on a scale that is unfathomable, that words don't reach. ... In response to that, you should take away his freedom and take it away forever." Prosecutors said Ghailani fled to Pakistan shortly before the 1998 bombings. After his capture, he was interrogated overseas at the CIA site as part of a now-defunct government program that used harsh techniques, including waterboarding, which evokes the sensation of drowning. Exactly what happened to him there remains classified. He was moved to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 2006 before being transferred to New York for prosecution in 2009. His trial demonstrated some of the challenges of civilian law and rules of evidence: Prosecutors chose not to use any statements Ghailani made to authorities after his arrest because his captors failed to advise him of his rights beforehand and denied him access to an attorney. Before trial, the judge also barred prosecutors from calling as a witness the man who sold Ghailani explosives because the government had learned about him as a result of Ghailani's interrogation at the CIA facility, where defense lawyers said he was subjected to enhanced interrogation for 14 hours over five days. After he fled, Ghailani ended up in Afghanistan, where he became both a bodyguard and a cook for Osama bin Laden. He told the military tribunal he also encountered Khalid Sheik Mohammed. "In Afghanistan, I met them all," he said. Ghailani is the fifth person to be sentenced for the embassy bombings. Four others were sentenced to life in prison after a 2001 trial in Manhattan federal court. Ghailani was ordered to pay $33 million in restitution.
[Associated
Press;
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