Ten
years ago on this date, November 30, 2005, a Lebanese Terrorist, was paroled in
Germany. I will post information about this terrorist from Wikipedia.
Mohammed Ali Hammadi in 2005
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Mohammed Ali Hammadi (Arabic: محمد علي
حمادي),
also known as Mohammed Ali Hamadi and Mohammed Ali Hamadei, (born
13 June 1964 in Lebanon) is one of the list of FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists. A Lebanese
citizen and alleged member of Hezbollah, he was convicted in a West German court of law
of air piracy, murder, and possession of explosives
for his part in the 14 June 1985 hijacking of TWA
Flight 847.
Under
indictment by US law enforcement for crimes related
to the same hijacking, during which one passenger, U.S. Navy
Seabee diver Robert Stethem, was extensively tortured prior to
being murdered, Hammadi was sentenced to life imprisonment by the West German
court. He was imprisoned in 1987 in West
Germany for 19 years, but was abruptly paroled in 2005, and became a
fugitive from the United States Department of Justice,
which listed him as one of the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists in 2006. He is
believed to reside in Lebanon, where he may have rejoined Hezbollah.
There
has been speculation that his parole was granted as part of a covert prisoner
swap, in exchange for the release of Susanne
Osthoff. Taken hostage in Iraq a month prior, Osthoff was released the week of Hammadi's
parole.
Imprisoned in West Germany
Two
years after the TWA Flight 847 attack, Hammadi was arrested in Frankfurt, West
Germany, in 1987 while attempting to smuggle liquid explosives. The United
States immediately requested his extradition but Hizbullah immediately abducted
two West Germans in Beirut, and threatened to kill them if Hamadei were
extradited. Then it was decided to try Hamadei in West Germany. In addition to
the charges in West Germany of illegal importation of explosives, he was
charged with the 1985 hijacking and hostage taking; tried and convicted of
Stethem's 1985 murder, he was sentenced to life in prison.
The
first opportunity for parole to be granted on a life sentence in Germany is
ordinarily after 15 years. However Hammadi's life sentence included a provision
that due to an exceptional grave degree of guilt the first parole review was to
be later. The Landgericht (regional
court) Kleve decided on 30 November 2005, to grant Hammadi's application
for parole, after his having served 19 years of his term. The US government has
sought his extradition from Lebanon.
Fugitive in Lebanon
His
indicted accomplices in the TWA Flight 847 attack, Hassan
Izz-Al-Din and Ali Atwa continue to elude arrest and currently remain at
large, having been placed among the original 22 fugitives on the FBI's Most
Wanted Terrorists list on 10 October 2001, in the immediate aftermath of 9/11.
Another accomplice, Imad Mughniyeh, was killed on 12 February 2008 in a
car-bombing attack in Damascus, Syria. Those responsible for this attack remain
unknown as of 13 February 2008.
On
14 February 2006, the United States federal government, through the
ambassador to Lebanon, had formally asked the Lebanese government to extradite
Mohammed Ali Hammadi for the murder of Robert Stethem during the 1985 hijacking.
On 24 February 2006, he joined his accomplices on the FBI's Most Wanted
Terrorists list, under the name Mohammed Ali Hamadei.
Several
news outlets reported the announcement by Hezbollah of the death of Imad
Mugniyah by explosion in Syria on 13 February 2008. The remaining three
fugitives from TWA Flight 847 remain on the list, and at large.
On
12 September 2006, a "Bush administration official" indicated that
Hammadi had rejoined Hezbollah upon his release from German prison.
On
12 February 2007, the FBI announced a new $5 million reward for information
leading to the recapture of Hammadi.
Reported death
According
to Deutsche Presse-Agentur, unconfirmed Pakistani
intelligence sources reported Hammadi killed in a CIA drone strike inside Pakistan
in June 2010. Other sources dispute this.
Hammadi
remains on the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists list.
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