A
lawyer for the Nigerian man who pleaded guilty to trying to blow up a
United States jumbo passenger jet on Christmas Day in 2009 urged a
federal judge on Monday not to sentence to Farouk Abdulmutallab spend
the rest of his life in prison because it was cruel and unusual
punishment.
Abdulmutallab, 25, pleaded guilty in a federal court
in October 2011 of trying to detonate a bomb hidden in his underwear as
part of a plot orchestrated by al Qaeda’s affiliate in Yemen, al Qaeda
in the Arabian Peninsula.
He is due to be sentenced on Thursday in Detroit and
faces up to life in prison for the bombing attempt aboard a Northwest
Airlines flight from Amsterdam to Detroit that had 289 people on board.
His lawyer Anthony Chambers argued that the mandatory
life sentence required under US law for some of the crimes he admitted
to committing was unconstitutional, particularly because no one was
seriously hurt during the bombing attempt.
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