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US will not appeal 37-year sentence for would-be ‘millennium bomber’

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Hillier said Ressam has consistently apologized and taken responsibility for his crimes and has rejected violence.

The government, he said, “has continued to jack up these phantom fears” by unfairly portraying Ressam as a unapologetic terrorist who continues to pose a threat to the U.S.

“Ressam is very sorry he did this,” Hillier said. “It seems like the only people who understand and know this is the defense and the judge.”

Hillier said the end of the case has proved “bittersweet.”

“I am disappointed in the length of the sentence Mr. Ressam will serve,” he said.

After he was convicted by a federal jury on nine terrorism and bomb-related charges in April 2001, Ressam became a crucial source of information about al-Qaida after the Sept. 11 attacks. But his isolation in prison and repeated interrogations eventually soured him.

He stopped talking and eventually recanted his earlier statements, including information that had led federal prosecutors to indict a man believed to be al-Qaida’s chief recruiter in Western Europe and another who had said he wanted to detonate a fuel truck in a Jewish neighborhood in Montreal.

Those prosecutions were dropped when Ressam quit talking, the government said.

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