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A Libyan national was sentenced Wednesday to 22 years in prison for his role in the 2012 terrorist attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans.

  • Ahmed Abu Khatallah, 47, was sentenced by a judge in Washington, the Justice Department said in a news release. Khatallah was captured in Libya in June 2014 and brought to the United States to face trial in U.S. District Court in the U.S. capital.
  • He was found guilty by a jury in November following seven weeks of trial. The government charged him with 18 counts but he was acquitted of most of them, including murder.
  • Prosecutors accused him of orchestrating the attack in which Ambassador Christopher Stevens and the other Americans died. They said he was a leader of an extremist militia and in the months before the attack on the U.S. mission sought to incite violence against the presence of the United States in Libya.
  • During the attack, according to U.S. government evidence presented at his trial, he positioned himself on the perimeter of the compound and kept others, including emergency responders, from getting to the scene.

In the end, the jury found him guilty of four charges, including providing support to terrorists, destroying property and a weapons charge.

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