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An Enemy Among Us': Iranian-Born Texas Man Gets 25 Years for Plotting Assassination on U.S. Soil
This courtroom drawing shows Manssor Arbabsiar (2R), who holds both a US and Iranian passport, charged over an alleged Iranian government-directed plot to murder the Saudi Ambassador to the United States with explosives, appearing before US Southern District Court Judge Michael H. Dolinger (BACKGROUND) and United States Assistant US Attorney Glen Kopp (L) during his Arraignment at Federal Court in New York October 11, 2011. Credit: AFP/Getty Images

An Enemy Among Us': Iranian-Born Texas Man Gets 25 Years for Plotting Assassination on U.S. Soil

"key conduit for, and facilitator of, a nefarious international plot"

This courtroom drawing shows Manssor Arbabsiar (2R), who holds both a US and Iranian passport, charged over an alleged Iranian government-directed plot to murder the Saudi Ambassador to the United States with explosives, appearing before US Southern District Court Judge Michael H. Dolinger (BACKGROUND) and United States Assistant US Attorney Glen Kopp (L) during his Arraignment at Federal Court in New York October 11, 2011. Credit: AFP/Getty Images

NEW YORK (TheBlaze/AP) -- A Texas man who admitted that he plotted to kill Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the United States was sentenced Thursday to 25 years in prison.

Manssor Arbabsiar, a U.S. citizen who was born in Iran, pleaded guilty in October to two conspiracy charges and a murder-for-hire count. He admitted he was directed by Iranian military officials to go to Mexico on multiple occasions in 2011 to arrange the assassination attempt, which never occurred. He was reportedly directed to enlist the help of Mexican drug traffickers.

Arbabsiar lived in Corpus Christi, Texas, working in real estate and automobile sales since moving to the United States in 1977.

The government said he intended to kill the ambassador by planting explosives at a Washington restaurant and that he recognized the plan likely would result in mass casualties.

"A large number of bystanders who had done nothing other than chose to eat in a particular restaurant were very likely to be killed as a result of the assassination of the ambassador," the government said. "Nonetheless, Arbabsiar quickly dismissed the significance of those additional civilian casualties and on numerous occasions demonstrated a callous disregard for all those who would be killed."

Prosecutors said Arbabsiar told a confidential government source that killing innocent bystanders, including U.S. senators who the source suggested would likely be at the restaurant, was "no problem" and "no big deal."

The government said Arbabsiar also told law enforcement officials after his arrest that he had demanded at least $1 million for his involvement in the plot in addition to the $25,000 he was given by the Qods Force, a branch of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps that in 2007 was designated by the U.S. Treasury Department as a supporter of the Taliban and terrorist organizations.

Prosecutors said the plot was thwarted only because the person Arbabsiar recruited to assist his co-conspirators happened to be working as a source for law enforcement.

In a statement obtained by Reuters, Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara called Arbabsiar "an enemy among us" and a "key conduit for, and facilitator of, a nefarious international plot" to kill the ambassador and as many innocent bystanders needed to finish the job.

"U.S. authorities also brought charges against Gholam Shakuri, who prosecutors say was a member of the Quds Force, the covert unit of Iran's Revolutionary Guards. Shakuri has not been arrested," Reuters reports.

Defense lawyers argued for leniency, saying Arbabsiar's crimes were undeniably serious but also "the result of a severe mental breakdown caused by a longstanding, untreated bipolar disorder, worsened by the death of his father and his best friend in the same year. Mr. Arbabsiar's criminal behavior is entirely aberrational, with no precedent in his life."

They asked for no more than a 10-year sentence and added: "He has had no involvement or interest in Middle Eastern or Iranian politics, and absolutely no involvement in any terrorism, international intrigue, or anything of the sort, until his involvement in this bizarre offense."

The news comes just one day after a bail hearing for 44-year-old Wissam Allouche, an alleged former Hezbollah commander who was arrested in San Antonio, Texas, after being indicted on charges of not disclosing his affiliation with terrorist groups.

The prosecution on Wednesday claimed that an FBI raid in 2011 turned up documents Wissam allegedly fabricated to show proof of security clearances, membership in U.S. special forces and Defense Department intelligence units. He is also accused of failing to disclose those terror tied when applying for a sensitive Defense Department job.

It was also revealed that Allouche had at least three aliases, one of which meant "god of death." Investigators claim the suspected Hezbollah member was known for "acting crazy or acting dangerously."

Prosecutor Mark Roomberg testified that the suspect admitted to "sodomizing and murdering an Israeli POW" and that he was indeed once a member of the radical Amal militia and a commander in Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Read more on that stunning story here.

 

(H/T: @smgliberty)

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