Appeals court says 28-year sentence is too lenient for Libyan militant convicted in Benghazi attack
First publishedJul 17, 21:54 UTC
Last updatedJul 17, 23:20 UTC · 14m ago
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Answer
A federal appeals court has concluded that a 28-year prison sentence is too lenient for a Libyan militant who was convicted of terrorism-related charges in the 2012 attacks on U.S. compounds in Benghazi, Libya, that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.
Reported by 1 outlet — Seattle Times. See all sources ↓
Read the full report at Seattle Times ↗
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In brief
- What's the story?
- A federal appeals court has concluded that a 28-year prison sentence is too lenient for a Libyan militant who was convicted of terrorism-related charges in the 2012 attacks on U.S. compounds in Benghazi, Libya, that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.
- How widely is it covered?
- 1 outlet, average source rating 6.0/10.
- When was it last updated?
- 14m ago.
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Appeals court says 28-year sentence is too lenient for Libyan militant convicted in Benghazi attack
Sources1TypeCoverageSeattle Times
Related in the knowledge graph
organizationAmbassador Chris StevensorganizationAmericansorganizationAppealsorganizationBenghaziorganizationLibyaorganizationLibyanorganizationU.S
Sources (1)
Avg source rating 6.0/10Processing cluster
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