Monday, 16 April 2012

Would-be bomber has sentence cut


A would-be shoe bomber has become the first terrorist in the UK to have his sentence cut after agreeing to co-operate with prosecutors and give evidence against defendants in a US terror trial.
Saajid Muhammad Badat had his 13 year sentence cut to 11 after the agreement with prosecutors, which is believed to be the first of its kind in the UK.
Badat, 33, of Gloucester, was jailed in 2005 after he admitted plotting to explode a shoebomb on a transatlantic flight in December 2001 at the same time as fellow shoebomber Richard Reid, but changed his mind and decided not to go through with it.
Sue Hemming, head of the CPS special crime and counter terrorismdivision, said the agreement had not been entered into lightly.
It will see Badat give evidence in the US trial, which opens in Brooklyn, of Adis Medunjanin over an al Qaida plot to bomb the New York subway.
Shoe bomber Saajid Muhammad
 Badat has had his sentence cut by two
years after he agreed to give evidence
against terror suspects
"We considered very carefully the merits of entering into this agreement with a convicted terrorist, and we believe that the administration of justice internationally benefits from such an agreement," she said.
"This trial is the first time a UK convicted terrorist has agreed, under the terms of our agreement, to give evidence in the United States. Badat has helped with investigations in this country, he continues to co-operate and has agreed to testify in other trials if called upon."
Ms Hemming added that Badat "fully co-operated with investigators" at Scotland Yard and in the FBI while in prison and "provided information of overwhelming importance in relation to investigations they were conducting".
Deputy Assistant Commissioner Stuart Osborne, the senior national co-ordinator for counter terrorism said: "This case is an example where the Socpa (Serious and Organised Crime and Police Act 2005) legislation has secured substantial and significant evidence and intelligence relating to investigations undertaken by the counter terrorism command which has also assisted law enforcement agencies in other countries."
Badat's sentence was reduced to 11 years on November 13 2009 after he admitted plotting to explode a shoebomb on a transatlantic flight in December 2001 at the same time as fellow shoebomber Richard Reid, but an order banning reporting of the deal was put in place, for Badat's safety, until he was due to give evidence in public, the CPS said. It has now been lifted.

©Press Association

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