By Amelia Hansen
Daily Journal Staff Writer
It's not everyday that a man who agrees to spend nearly two decades in prison for seditious conspiracy later accuses his own lawyer of selling him out.
But in the case of an Oregon man convicted of scheming to join al-Qaida and the Taliban to fight Americans in Afghanistan, that's exactly what happened.
...
Daily Journal Staff Writer
It's not everyday that a man who agrees to spend nearly two decades in prison for seditious conspiracy later accuses his own lawyer of selling him out.
But in the case of an Oregon man convicted of scheming to join al-Qaida and the Taliban to fight Americans in Afghanistan, that's exactly what happened.
...
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