Jungle Jabbah: Maximum Sentence Confirmed
Today, September 8, 2020, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in Philadelphia rejected Mohammed Jabbateh’s appeal, upholding his conviction and 30-year prison sentence.
Mohammed Jabateh was arrested in the USA in 2016 was charged with two counts of fraud in immigration documents and two counts of perjury for having lied to authorities about his role in the First Liberian Civil War as a ULIMO commander.
This trial was the first criminal trial against an ULIMO commander and the first time that victims testified in a criminal trial about crimes committed during the First Liberian Civil War. The 30-year sentence is the longest for immigration fraud in U.S history.
Today, September 8, 2020, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in Philadelphia rejected Mohammed Jabbateh’s appeal, upholding his conviction and 30-year prison sentence.
Mohammed Jabbateh, the Liberian warlord known as “Jungle Jabbah”, was sentenced today to 30 years in prison, culminating a landmark case in the United States and marking a long-overdue milestone for justice in Liberia.
The former Liberian rebel commander Mohammed Jabbateh aka Jungle Jabbah will be sentenced by a judge in Philadelphia on 07 February 2018. Trials of other alleged Liberian war criminals have been scheduled for 2018.