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16 April 2010

Imam who lied to FBI must leave US

bilde.jpgNEW YORK —  An Afghanistan-born imam who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI during the investigation into a suicide bomb plot against New York City subway stations will not go to prison but must leave the country within 90 days, a judge ruled Thursday.


NEW YORK —  An Afghanistan-born imam who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI during the investigation into a suicide bomb plot against New York City subway stations will not go to prison but must leave the country within 90 days, a judge ruled Thursday.

Ahmad Afzali was sentenced to time served: four days from Sept. 20 to Sept. 24. He faced up to six months behind bars after pleading guilty last month in federal court in Brooklyn.

The imam said he had wanted to help authorities in the investigation of the threat but lied under grilling by the FBI about his phone conversations with admitted al-Qaida associate Najibullah Zazi.

He said he never told Zazi that authorities were investigating him, but he did.

“I take full responsibility for my actions,” Afzali said in an emotional statement to Judge Frederic Block.

“Honest to God, it was never my intention to help those idiots for what they did in the name of Islam,” he said, referring to the terrorist suspects.

He said he is going to spend as much time as possible with his wife, children and ailing parents before leaving.

He does not expect to return to Afghanistan, where he left as a child with his family, but he is not sure where he will go.

“I’m going to start shopping around,” he said outside court. “I’m sure some good country is going to host me.”

If Afzali does not leave the country within 90 days, he will be deported to Afghanistan.

Judge Block noted he is not allowed to return without special permission from the U.S. government, and if he does, he’ll face steep punishment.

Authorities sought help last fall from the imam, a previously reliable police source, as they scrambled to thwart the plot by Zazi, a Colorado airport van driver who is the case’s principal suspect.

Zazi admitted that he tested bomb-making materials in a Denver suburb before traveling by car to New York intending to attack the subway system to avenge U.S. military involvement in Afghanistan.

Two other men suspected of direct roles in the plot, Adis Medunjanin and Zarein Ahmedzay, have pleaded not guilty to charges they sought to join Zazi in what prosecutors described as “three coordinated suicide bombing attacks” on Manhattan subway lines.

The alleged attacks were timed for days after the eighth anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorism.

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