| Published: | Oct 18, 2010 8:59 PM EDT |
| Updated: | Oct 18, 2010 5:59 PM EDT |
NEW YORK (AP) - Four men snared in an FBI terrorism sting have been convicted in a plot to blow up New York City synagogues and shoot down military planes.
A jury reached the verdict Monday in federal court in Manhattan after deliberating for more than a week.
Prosecutors had accused James Cromitie of hatching the scheme with a paid FBI informant he met at a mosque north of New York city in Newburgh. They also said Cromitie recruited his three co-defendants to fire heat-seeking missiles at cargo planes.
The informant helped make hundreds of hours of surveillance tapes that were played at the trial. The defense argued the government entrapped their clients.
A judge denied a request for a mistrial last week after a juror came across a document in an evidence binder that shouldn't have been there. The juror was dismissed.
Related Articles
- Man charged with tossing wife off cruise ship
- Tropical depression heads toward southern Mexico
- Taco Bell to test 'Power Protein' menu
- Demonstrators flood Brazilian streets in protest
- NSA director says plot against Wall Street foiled
- New video, $65K reward in '08 Times Square bombing
- 911 call: Judge in Zimmerman trial hears dispute





