Benghazi
suspect expected to arrive in U.S. this weekend: sources
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[June 27, 2014]
By Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A suspected leader
of the 2012 attack on the U.S. compound in Benghazi, captured by U.S.
forces and spirited out of Libya, is expected to arrive in the United
States this weekend after his journey at sea, U.S. officials told
Reuters on Thursday.
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Libyan militant Ahmed Abu Khatallah was taken aboard the USS New
York, an amphibious transport ship, after his seizure in a raid on
the outskirts of Benghazi on June 15. He is expected to be
prosecuted in the U.S. criminal justice system.
Two U.S. officials told Reuters that Khatallah was due back in the
United States in a couple of days. A third specified it would be
this weekend.
No further details on Khatallah were immediately available.
U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans died
in the Benghazi attack. Khatallah is charged with killing a person
on U.S. property, a firearms violation and providing material
support to terrorism.
The charges were filed in July 2013 but kept under a court seal
until last week.
The U.S. Justice Department filed the charges against Khatallah in
U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., a venue that prosecutors
have only rarely used for criminal cases involving those suspected
of terrorism.
The courthouse is three blocks from where Congress meets. The White
House is 12 blocks in the opposite direction.
Khatallah told Reuters in a 2012 interview that he was present
during the Benghazi attack but was not one of the ringleaders.
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Khatallah's capture was seen as a victory for President Barack
Obama, who has been accused by Republicans of playing down the role
of al Qaeda in the 2012 attacks for political reasons and being slow
to deliver on promises of justice.
The United States has publicly given few details of the operation
near Benghazi, an area where Tripoli struggles to assert its rule -
a reflection of the chaos in the oil producer three years after the
ouster of Muammar Gaddafi.
Khatallah's brother Abu Bakr told Reuters in an interview last week
that he was told "he drove away with a friend on Sunday and that was
the last we heard of him."
(Reporting by Phil Stewart; additional reporting by Mark Hosenball;
Editing by Sandra Maler and Eric Beech)
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