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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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Rana, a Pakistani native, emigrated to the United States from Canada. He worked as a doctor before settling into Chicago, where he set up several businesses and raised three children with his wife. She did not attend Thursday’s sentencing because immigration officials stopped her earlier this month when she tried to re-enter the U.S. after a family trip to Canada, according to Rana’s lawyers.

At the hearing, the defense reiterated its position at trial that Rana had been duped into the plot by a more conniving Headley.

But the sentencing also turned on whether Rana’s plotting constituted an act of terror against the Danish government. That would have required a stiffer penalty under federal sentencing guidelines.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Collins argued for the so-called terror enhancement, saying that in statements to authorities after his arrest, Rana admitted supporting Lashkar as well as knowing that the terror group had targeted India in the Mumbai attack.

As for the other scheme, Collins said the plotters hoped to draw the Danish forces into a “fight to the death” after storming the newspaper and planned to make “martyr videos.”

“It was not just the newspaper,” Collins told the judge. “It was much broader.”

But Rana’s attorney strongly disagreed, saying evidence at trial showed that Rana wanted to punish only the staff of the newspaper for cartoons that had been deemed offensive to Muslims.

Leinenweber ultimately rejected the government’s argument and lowered the maximum faced by Rana to 14 years under the federal sentencing guidelines, leading Collins to make one further attempt at convincing the judge to sentence Rana to the maximum 30 years in prison.

“Defendants who want to think they can avoid detection by sitting at a safe distance need to understand there will be significant penalties when they are caught,” the prosecutor said.

Blegen argued for mercy by insisting that Rana’s crimes were an aberration for a man who has spent most of his life helping others and raising children who are all in school with plans to contribute to society — a sharp contrast to Headley, who testified at trial about teaching military drills to his young child at city parks.

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