Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Three in Fort Dix Five terrorist plot sentenced to life

. Wednesday, April 29, 2009


Three of the five men convicted of plotting a terrorist attack on Fort Dix were sentenced to life in prison yesterday, and two of them were given an additional 30 years for gun charges.
All three of the Duka brothers - Dritan, Eljvir and Shain - vociferously proclaimed their innocence before their sentences were announced.

At the end of his statement, Eljvir Duka, 25, turned toward his large family, seated in the gallery, and urged them to "be patient, don't worry."

"Being in prison and knowing you're innocent is a great feeling in the sight of God," he said. "The government knows what they did."

District Court Judge Robert B. Kugler noted that the defendants showed no remorse for their actions, and said "a harsh, punitive sentence is necessary."

"I don't impose these sentences lightly. I see the family members . . . I see the heartache," he said. "But I have to balance that against what they did. . . . I'm convinced of their guilt."

In December, a jury convicted the Duka brothers and two other defendants, Mohamad Shnewer and Serdar Tatar, of conspiracy to kill U.S. soldiers. The jurors acquitted the men of attempted murder.

Shnewer and Tatar are scheduled to be sentenced today. They also face possible life terms.

All five are Muslims born overseas, but raised primarily in Cherry Hill. The case had been one of the country's most noted instances of what authorities have termed homegrown terrorism.

Prosecutors called the arrests a success of the FBI's tactic of discovering plots in their earliest stages and disrupting them before they could come to fruition.

They said the men, inspired largely by watching violent jihadist videos downloaded from the Internet, had planned to use a pizza delivery pass to get on the Army base and open fire on soldiers.

All five were arrested in May 2007, on the day when Dritan and Shain Duka attempted to buy machine guns from a government informant. Dritan, 30, and Shain Duka, 28, were given an additional 30 years in prison for a gun charge related to that attempted purchase.

The case was built largely on the work of two informants who infiltrated the group and recorded hundreds of hours of conversations.

The defense argued that the informants entrapped the men in a phony conspiracy, goading them into making inflammatory statements about the government and pushing them to make half-hearted plans for an attack they never intended to carry out.

The Duka brothers all cited examples from their recorded conversations that they said proved their innocence. Dritan Duke spoke in a rapid-fire cadence for nearly 30 minutes, while reading off a pile of yellow legal pad sheets.

"This case was nothing more than a conspiracy that was formed against us by the government," he said.

None of the defendants took the stand at trial.

In emotional statements yesterday, Duka family members also pleaded the innocence of the three brothers, saying the case was full of innuendo, not hard evidence.

"Prove it. What are intentions?" said their father, Ferik Duka. "Because if they are terrorists, I swear to God I will say it now, they are not my sons."

Dritan Duka's 11-year-old daughter, Lejla, the oldest of his five children, also spoke, saying that she would dedicate herself to becoming a lawyer and helping the oppressed. link...

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