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U.S. District court convicts Mohammad Jabbateh of perjury and immigration fraud for concealing his role as former liberian warlord “jungle jabbah”

  • Autores: Jean Galbraith
  • Localización: American Journal of International Law, ISSN 0002-9300, Vol. 112, Nº 1, 2018, págs. 118-120
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • In the spring of 2016, U.S. prosecutors charged Mohammad Jabbateh with four counts of perjury and immigration fraud for making false statements during his pursuit of asylum and later permanent legal residency in the United States. At the time of the indictment, Jabbateh was a Liberian national living in East Lansdowne, Pennsylvania, and the owner of a shipping company. The indictment charged that Jabbateh lied to U.S. immigration officials to conceal the role he played in Liberia's first civil war as the warlord “Jungle Jabbah.” In October of 2017, a jury convicted Jabbateh on all four counts. Jabbateh is reportedly the first person prosecuted and found guilty in connection with atrocities carried out during Liberia's first civil war, which ran from 1989 to 1997.


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