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Businessman gets 14-year prison sentence in plot to kill Danish newspaper staffers

Rana owned Kinsman meat packing plant, which was raided by the FBI

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(MCT) — CHICAGO—Throughout Thursday’s sentencing, Tahawwur Rana’s children appeared nervous, his college son bouncing his leg rapidly and his daughter, a high schooler, leaning forward with her hands clasped tightly.

After all, their father, a former doctor and businessman who was convicted in one of Chicago’s most significant terrorism cases, now faced up to the 30 years in prison for aiding and abetting a plot to slay and behead Danish newspaper staffers because of cartoons it published of the Prophet Muhammad. Rana also had been convicted of providing support to Lashkar-e-Taiba, a deadly Pakistani terrorist organization.

But at the end of the 90-minute hearing, the brother and sister left the crowded courtroom appearing much relieved—their faces visibly softened—after U.S. District Judge Harry Leinenweber sentenced Rana to 14 years in prison, a little less than half of the maximum.

After court, Rana’s attorneys expressed satisfaction with the sentence in light of the vigorous arguments from federal prosecutors that Rana, 52, serve the full 30-year term.

“I thought we had the law on our side, frankly,” said Rana’s attorney, Patrick Blegen. “But obviously it’s a scary proposition when the government asks for such a lengthy sentence. And his family was very concerned.”

Rana’s trial drew international media attention because he was also charged with supporting Lashkar’s chilling terrorist attacks in 2008 that killed more than 160 people in Mumbai, India’s largest city. Rana, however, was acquitted of those more serious charges.

Rana owned the First World Management meat packing plant in Kinsman, Ill. The facility was raided by the FBI on Oct. 18, 2009. Rana was arrested later at his home on federal terrorism charges.

David Coleman Headley, Rana’s childhood friend who pleaded guilty in the Danish and Mumbai attacks, was the government’s star witness at the three-week trial. Headley’s testimony about the inner workings of Lashkar provided a rare insight into an international terrorist network. He faces up to life in prison when he is sentenced next week.

At trial, evidence showed that Rana supported the Danish plot by letting Headley pose as an employee of Rana’s Far North Side immigration business while Headley scouted the Jyllands-Posten newspaper in Copenhagen in advance of the attack. The plot was never carried out.

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