Fazliddin Kurbanov received the sentence yesterday that includes three years of supervised release and a USD 250,000 fine. He will also face deportation proceedings after serving the prison sentence.
A federal jury in August convicted Kurbanov of conspiracy, attempting to support a terrorist organization and possession of bomb-making components. Kurbanov has maintained his innocence.
"Your honor," Kurbanov told US District Judge Edward J. Lodge through an interpreter, "I'd like to say that I'm not a terrorist. I've never been a terrorist."
Prosecutors say the 33-year-old Russian-speaking truck driver who fled Uzbekistan in 2009 downloaded jihadist and martyrdom videos from a terrorist website and communicated with a terrorist organization, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan. Authorities monitored his communications and arrested him in 2013.
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Besides targeting Boise, authorities said, Kurbanov also discussed with a confidential FBI source targeting military bases, in particular West Point Military Academy in New York.
Kurbanov received 15 years each on the first two counts to be served concurrently and 10 years on possessing the bomb-making components to be served after completing the 15-year sentences.
"That's punishment enough for what he did," Peterson said.
US Assistant Attorney Aaron Lucoff asked Lodge to sentence Kurbanov to 35 years in prison.
"Society needs to be protected from this defendant," Lucoff told Lodge. Lucoff said Kurbanov wanted to strike Americans on US soil to avenge US military action in central Asia.
Prosecutors called four witnesses at the sentencing hearing, one an FBI agent and explosives expert and three jail workers at the Ada County Jail. They also showed videos of Kurbanov in the jail spitting on a jail deputy and spitting on a camera and other areas of a special holding cell.
Lodge said he was "taken aback" by the videos and testimony. He also said Kurbanov lacked an appreciation for a system of government that would spend more than USD 1 million on his defense on the foundational idea that anyone accused of a crime is innocent until proven guilty.
"The lengthy term of imprisonment imposed by the Court ensures that this defendant, who by his words and acts was intent on taking American lives, does not and will not pose any further threat to the safety and security of our community," said US Attorney Wendy Olson in a statement after the sentencing.