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United States: The author of a massacre in the name of IS in New York in 2017 found guilty

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United States2017 New York IS killer convicted

Sayfullo Saipov, a radicalized Uzbek who killed eight cyclists and pedestrians in a large vehicle in New York in 2017 on behalf of the Islamic State group, faces the death penalty.

Flowers erected at the place where the accused mowed down a cyclist, November 7, 2017.

Getty Images via AFP

The 34-year-old, who had been on trial since Jan. 9, was found guilty on 28 counts Thursday by a federal jury in Manhattan. Eight counts are for “murder to join the Islamic State”, “which are punishable by death or life in prison”, said the Manhattan Federal Prosecutor’s Office.

On Halloween in 2017, Sayfullo Saipov launched his pickup truck on a drive along the Hudson River in lower Manhattan, claiming multiple casualties and killing eight people, including five Argentinians and one Belgian. It was the deadliest toll for an attack in New York after those of September 11, 2001.

This trial is the first at the federal level of Joe Biden’s mandate where the death penalty is at stake. Elected in November 2020, the Democratic president had promised during his campaign to work to abolish the death penalty at the federal level and his Minister of Justice had decreed shortly after the election a moratorium on federal executions, not preventing those decided by the States.

But in a Sept. 16, 2022 court document in Sayfullo Saipov’s case file, Manhattan District Attorney Damian Williams acknowledged the Justice Department’s decision “to continue to seek the death penalty” in the case, a decided stance. under the mandate of Donald Trump (2017-2021).

According to the Manhattan Prosecutor’s Office, the sentencing hearings will begin on February 6 before the same twelve-person jury, which will have to be unanimous if they want to sentence Saipov to the death penalty.

The death penalty has been abolished in the state of New York, but it may apply in the case of a federal trial. Nevertheless, the last execution dates back several decades in this state.

(AFP)

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