President George W. Bush hailed the sentencing of the man he said "openly
rejoiced" at the deaths on September 11 and said that "evil" had been
vanquished.
"The end of this trial represents the end of this case, but not an end to the
fight against terror," Bush said. "And we can be confident. Our cause is right,
and the outcome is certain: Justice will be served. Evil will not have the final
say."
Former New York
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, who led the city through the
September 11 attacks and their aftermath and testified at the trial, said on
MSNBC's "Hardball" program, "I would have preferred to see the death penalty,
but I kind of stand in awe of how our legal system works that it can come to a
result like this."
Jim Cohen, a professor at Fordham Law School in New York, said the jury was
looking for a just resolution. "This is not sympathy for Moussaoui. It's the
penalty they thought most of the victims wanted, and it's the penalty they
thought would be worse for him."
Family members of victims, some of whom sat in the courtroom as the verdict
was read, said they were pleased with the sentence.
"He will be in jail for the rest of his life, which is exactly what this man
deserves," said Carie Lemack, whose mother died on one of the airplanes that was
crashed into New York's World Trade Center.
"He's an al Qaeda wannabe and he does not deserve any credit for 9/11 because
he was not part of it, and I am so glad the jury recognized that."
Moussaoui sat praying silently as Brinkema read the verdict. He appeared to
relax after she said the jurors did not unanimously agree a sentence of death
should be imposed.
The jury did not find Moussaoui's actions resulted in the deaths of about
3,000 people on September 11 -- a central part of the government's demand for
the death penalty.
Three of the 12 jurors found that Moussaoui's role in the 9/11 operation, if
any, was minor, Brinkema said.
None of the jurors found Moussaoui's execution might create a martyr for
extreme Muslim fundamentalists and al Qaeda in particular.
Anti-death penalty activists said the case showed U.S. juries were less
willing to impose capital punishment than in the past, even in a case of such
wrenching emotion. The number of death penalties imposed by juries has fallen
dramatically since the late 1990s.
Moussaoui was arrested three weeks before the September 11 attacks, in which
hijackers rammed commercial airliners into buildings in New York and outside
Washington. A fourth plane went down in a Pennsylvania field.
During testimony in the sentencing trial, Moussaoui said he was meant to
pilot a fifth airplane into the White House -- a contradiction of his earlier
claims he was meant to be part of a second wave of attacks.