Subway Bomb Plotter Gets 30 Years
The Pakistani immigrant who plotted to blow up New York’s Herald Square subway station has been sentenced to 30 years in prison. (Hat tip: SoCalJustice.)
NEW YORK (AP) — A Pakistani immigrant was sentenced on Monday to 30 years in prison for hatching an unsuccessful plot to blow up a busy Manhattan subway station as revenge for wartime abuses of Iraqis.
Shahawar Matin Siraj, 24, was arrested Aug. 27, 2004, on the eve of the Republican National Convention. Though there was no proof he ever obtained explosives or was linked to any terror organizations, prosecutors said his intentions were ominous: He wanted to blow up the Herald Square subway station, a bustling transportation hub located beneath Macy’s flagship department store.
Defense attorneys had sought to convince U.S. District Judge Nina Gershon that Siraj’s sentence should not exceed 10 years, arguing in recent court filings that their client was not a dangerous psychopath but more of a confused and misguided youngster.” Prosecutors countered that the defendant deserved at least 30 years behind bars as the “driving force” behind a ”workable terrorist plot.”



