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JFK bomb plotter sentenced to life in prison

By the CNN Wire Staff
This courtroom drawing shows Abdul Kadir, left, and co-defendant Russell Defreitas in an August 2 court appearance.
This courtroom drawing shows Abdul Kadir, left, and co-defendant Russell Defreitas in an August 2 court appearance.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Former Guyana parliament member convicted of plotting to blow up airport fuel tanks
  • He was found guilty of five counts in July
  • "We will bring justice" to those who target U.S., attorney says
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New York (CNN) -- A former Guyana parliament member was sentenced to life in prison Wednesday after he was convicted of plotting to detonate explosives at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York.

Abdul Kadir is one of four people who faced charges in a 2007 plot to explode fuel tanks and the fuel pipeline under the airport, according to a statement from the U.S. Eastern District Court of New York.

"The sentence imposed on Abdul Kadir sends a powerful and clear message," U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch said. "We will bring to justice those who plot to attack the United States of America."

A federal jury convicted Kadir and co-conspirator Russell Defreitas in July after a nine-week trial, the statement said.

Defreitas, former JFK cargo worker, was found guilty on all six counts: conspiring to attack a public transportation system, to destroy a building or other real property by fire or explosive, to attack aircraft and aircraft materials, to destroy or damage international airport facilities and to attack a mass transportation facility; and surveillance of a mass transportation facility.

Kadir was found guilty on five counts but not guilty of surveillance of a mass transportation facility.

His attorney, Kafahni Nkrumah, was not immediately available for comment.

A third defendant, Abdul Nur, pleaded guilty in June to providing material support to terrorists; a fourth man, Kareem Ibrahim, faces the same charges as Defreitas and Kadir, the statement said.

Prosecutors have said the men tapped into an international network of Muslim extremists to develop the plot and start work toward carrying it out.

A criminal complaint accused the men of obtaining satellite photos of the airport and using DeFreitas to conduct surveillance and identify potential targets and escape routes.

An informant secretly taped conversations in which DeFreitas described the symbolic importance of targeting JFK, the complaint says.