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A Haitian immigrant convicted last year of participating in a plot to bomb New York synagogues and shoot heat-seeking missiles at U.S. military planes was sentenced to 25 years in prison.
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Three men convicted of plotting to blow up New York synagogues and to fire heat-seeking missiles at U.S. military planes were sentenced to 25 years in prison.
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A New York man convicted in a foiled plot to bomb New York synagogues and fire heat-seeking missiles at military planes asked a federal judge to impose a 25-year prison term and not a life sentence.
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A request for a new trial by four men convicted last year of plotting to blow up synagogues in New York and fire heat-seeking missiles at military planes was denied by a federal judge.
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Four men charged with plotting attacks synagogues and military planes in New York completed their bombs during a stop at a shopping center in suburban Westchester County, a witness told a jury in Manhattan.
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James Cromitie, the alleged leader of a plot to blow up New York City synagogues, told an undercover informant he wanted to kill Jews and send a message “bigger than the World Trade Center” in two days of secretly recorded talks played for jurors in his trial.
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The man accused of leading a plot to bomb New York synagogues told an undercover informant less than two months before his arrest that he was “struggling” and needed time to think about the plan.
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Lawyers for four men on trial for an alleged plot to bomb synagogues in New York City and shoot down military aircraft rested their case after presenting two witnesses.
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Three of the four New York men convicted of plotting to bomb New York synagogues and fire heat- seeking missiles at military planes should be sentenced to life in prison, U.S. prosecutors said.
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Bail was denied for three of four men accused of plotting to blow up New York synagogues and attack aircraft at a military base with heat-seeking missiles. The fourth wasn’t eligible for pretrial release because of his immigration status.