NEW YORK, (Reuters) – An accused former top aide to Osama bin Laden was sentenced yesterday to life in prison for stabbing a guard through the eye with a sharpened comb while awaiting trial for conspiring with al Qaeda to kill Americans.
Mamdouh Mahmud Salim, 52, pleaded guilty in 2002 to attempted murder and conspiracy to murder a federal official.
Salim was sentenced in 2004 to 32 years in prison, but the case was sent back to U.S. District Judge Deborah Batts for resentencing after an appeals court ruled the judge had failed to take terrorism-related factors into account.
U.S. prosecutors say Salim, who trained as an engineer in Iraq, was a founder of al Qaeda who issued religious decrees for bin Laden and operated training camps and safe houses in Pakistan and Afghanistan. The assault on the official, Louis Pepe, occurred in 2000 when Salim and four others were being held in the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan while awaiting trial for planning attacks on Americans including the August 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.