My role in beheading American kidnappers was: a confession of IS terror


America brought these terrorists from Britain by extradition

The United States has assured Britain that the terrorists will not be executed, so the death penalty is unlikely.

Alexandra (US): In a courtroom near the US capital, Washington, a British man on Thursday confessed to kidnapping Americans, torturing them physically and torturing them, demanding money for their release and finally beheading them to death. He played an active role in the scheme.

Alexandra Ennakotty, a 37-year-old British man, was convicted of eight counts of aggravated assault by a U.S. district court in Alexandria. The charges against him include abducting American citizens between 2012 and 2015 and providing some documents in support of Islamic State terrorists.

The perpetrator confessed to his involvement in the deaths of European and Japanese nationals, in addition to journalists James Foley, Steven Sotloff, assistant activists Peter Casing and Kayla Mueller, as well as Americans.

The abductors dubbed the four Islamic State militants "The Beatles" because of the way they spoke, the accent and the language of the British. Coty was one of those four terrorists.

The United States last year extradited al-Shafi'i al-Sheikh, a terrorist from Britain, and brought him to court in order to bring him to justice. However, before the US brought them in, Britain assured Britain that the terrorists would not be executed.

The trial of the British citizen is currently underway, with the case against al-Ashfi al-Sheikh set to begin in January. The third of these was Sagarit Mohammad Mwazi, known as Jihadi John, but was killed in a drone attack in 2015. His fourth cousin is currently serving a prison sentence in Turkey.

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