Taj Hotel, India |
David Coleman Headley, 52, shifted uncomfortably in a gray tracksuit and kept his eyes fixed on the Chicago courtroom floor Thursday as he listened to the American children’s author describe the violent chaos during her 2008 vacation to India.
Bullets flew past her check and panicked diners dived under tables as gunmen burst into a hotel restaurant then walked around executing people one by one, recalled Linda Ragsdale, at times almost shouting as she stood just a few feet from Headley during the sentencing hearing. More than 160 people died in the attack, including children.
“I know the sweet sickening smell of gunfire and blood,” said Ragsdale, 53, of Nashville, Tenn., who was shot through the chest — the bullet passing along her spine and then out her thigh. “I know what a bullet can do to every part of the human body ... These are things I never needed to know, never needed to experience.”
Others victimized by the attack that
has been called India’s 9/11 said they were disturbed and upset Headley did not
get the maximum life sentence he faced. With credit for good behavior, he could
walk out of prison before he turns 80.
“He lost his right to live life as a
free man. He doesn’t deserve to be let out. He gave up that right when he
played a role in the attack,” said Kia Scherr, whose husband Alan Scherr and
13-year-old daughter, Naomi, were at the same table as Ragsdale and died.
It was prosecutors who pressed for
leniency, saying they wanted Headley to get no more than 35 years as credit for
his almost immediate cooperation after his 2009 arrest and providing
intelligence about terror networks, including the Pakistani-based group that
mounted the attack. Rewarding Headley with the hope of at least a few years of
freedom, the said, would encourage future suspects in terrorist cases to spill
their secrets.
A somber Judge Harry Leinenweber
sounded reluctant about imposing the lesser sentence, saying the Mumbai assault
was so unfathomable and terrifying that, “perhaps the lucky ones were the ones
who didn’t survive.”
“I don’t have any faith in Mr.
Headley when he says he’s a changed person and believes in the American way of
life,” he said.
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