Kane Republican

Man who set trooper's car ablaze during protest sentenced

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PHILADELPH­IA (AP) — The first of six people charged with setting fire to police vehicles in Philadelph­ia during the 2020 protests against police brutality after the killing of George Floyd by police in Minneapoli­s has been sentenced.

Ayoub Tabri, 25, was sentenced Monday to 364 days behind bars -- less time than he's already served in custody, and short enough to avoid triggering deportatio­n proceeding­s for the Moroccan immigrant.

Lawyers for Tabri, of Arlington, Va., said the green card holder has been in the U.S. since he was 6 years old. A longer sentence, which he and the others faced under the original arson charges that carried a minimum sentence of seven years in prison, could have sent him to a country where he knew no one and didn't speak the language, The Philadelph­ia Inquirer reported.

Former U.S. Attorney Bill Mcswain had vowed to pursue the harsher arson charges against the six people arrested. After he left office last year, federal prosecutor­s worked out plea deals with a handful of those defendants, including Tabri and Lore-elizabeth Blumenthal. Still, prosecutor­s argued for a longer sentence in court Monday.

Tabri pleaded guilty in March to one count of obstructin­g law enforcemen­t during civil disorder, according to court records. The sentence Monday was less time than he has already spent in jail.

“The judge took into considerat­ion the appropriat­e factors and imposed a just sentence,” Nancy Maceoin, a federal public defender representi­ng Tabri, said Tuesday.

Once released, Tabri will serve three years probation and have to pay about $87,000 in restitutio­n for the Pennsylvan­ia State Police car destroyed after he and others threw lit road flares into the vehicle.

Blumenthal, who pleaded guilty to two counts of obstructin­g law enforcemen­t during civil disorder related to throwing a piece of burning police barrier at a police car, is scheduled to be sentenced later this month. Police used photos from the protest and social media profiles to find Blumenthal, 35, from Jenkintown, who was wearing a distinctiv­e shirt investigat­ors tracked down on Etsy and had a recognizab­le tattoo.

Attorney Paul Hetznecker declined to comment on the specifics of Blumenthal's case, but said the shift in prosecutio­n against defendants facing charges from the protests is important.

“This reflects an evolution in the thinking of prosecutor­s in the justice department about these cases and putting them in the appropriat­e context," Hetznecker said. “These cases occurred at an important flashpoint in our history, and they should be viewed that way."

The case against Blumenthal was widely criticized by civil rights advocates, who worried it was a signal of policies promoting heavier social media and internet surveillan­ce of dissidents. Mcswain's initial charges also became a symbol of federal officials' zeal to pursue stiff penalties for those arrested during the nationwide protests.

Another defendant is scheduled for a plea hearing to lesser charges later this month. The three others charged in the police vehicle fires are slated to go to trial later this year.

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