Islamic Terrorist Gets Life in Prison in Infamous Train Attack Foiled by American Heroes
A French court on Thursday convicted an Islamic State operative in a 2015 train attack was foiled by passengers.
It sentenced Morocco-born Ayoub El Khazzani to life in prison, with 22 years guaranteed behind bars.
Three accomplices, who weren’t on the train, were also convicted of complicity and handed sentences ranging from seven to 27 years.
The verdict closes the month-long trial of El Khazzani for attempted terrorist murder.
He had boarded the train to Paris on Aug. 21, 2015, with an arsenal of weapons.
The court rejected El Khazzani’s contention that he had changed his mind about carrying out the attack. He seriously wounded a French-American teacher who grabbed his Kalashnikov.
Few if any of the passengers in car No. 12 of the train from Amsterdam to Paris would have reached their destination alive if the assault had gone off as planned, prosecutors, lawyers and some witnesses contended during the trial.
El Khazzani, armed with an assault rifle, nearly 300 rounds of ammunition, a hand gun and a knife when he boarded the train in Brussels, was tackled, choked and knocked unconscious by three Americans.
The depictions of the heroics of California friends Spencer Stone, Alek Skarlatos and Anthony Sadler were the highlight of the trial.
The court convicted Bilal Chatra and Mohamed Bakkali of complicity and sentenced them to prison terms of 27 years and 25 years, respectively. A third man, Redouane El Amrani Ezzerrifi, was given a seven-year sentence.
Investigators had exposed an alleged network of connections that culminated, months after the train attack, in the attacks on a Paris music hall, cafes and restaurants and at a sports stadium that left 130 people dead.
The train attack was allegedly organized by Abdelhamid Abaaoud, who coordinated the November 2015 attacks in Paris as well.
El Khazzani was with Abaaoud in Syria and traveled with him to Brussels.
He told the court that Abaaoud concocted the plan for the train attack and that he followed it to the letter — until he changed his mind.
El Khazzani’s testimony was often confused, but he agreed when the presiding judge said he appeared to be “a puppet” of Abaaoud, who was killed by French special forces shortly after the Paris massacre.
“I believed him. It’s stupid but I believed,” he said during testimony in November.
El Khazzani said Abaaoud told him to kill three to five American soldiers in the car.
Abaaoud had told him they were responsible for bombings in Syria, including that of a mosque that El Khazzani said triggered his wish for revenge.
It remained unclear at the trial’s end how he identified the vacationing Americans as servicemen, as he claimed he had, because they were in civilian clothes.
The verdict comes a day after 14 people were convicted of involvement in the January 2015 massacre at satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and another deadly attack. All three attackers were killed.
The Western Journal has reviewed this Associated Press story and may have altered it prior to publication to ensure that it meets our editorial standards.
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