Court upholds death sentences against Egyptian police officer Mabrouk's assassins
Col. Mohamed Mabrouk, an Egyptian Homeland Security officer, was killed by seven masked militants on November 13, 2013.
Mabrouk was shot and killed soon
after he left his house in the eastern Cairo neighborhood of Nasr City on his
way to work.
His assassination came in the wake
of his submission of a detailed 35-page report about the Muslim Brotherhood.
The report contained evidence that incriminated
34 of the group's leaders, including the late Muslim Brotherhood president
Mohamed Morsi.
The Egyptian Court of Cassation
upheld recently death sentences against Mabrouk's assassins who belonged to Ansar
Beit al-Maqdis, a homegrown terrorist organization.
Twenty-two people were indicted in
the case, including a colleague of Mabrouk called Mohamed Owais.
Owais provided Mabrouk's killers
with information about his moves, in Owais' capacity as a Traffic Department
officer.
Owais was arrested after Mabrouk's assassination.
He conceded that he was approached by the Ansar Beit al-Maqdis terrorists for
information about Mabrouk's car, including its color and license plate number.
Owais also provided the killers with
information about Mabrouk's residence.
This information helped the
assassins track Mabrouk down. In return, Owais received a large financial
reward from the terrorists.
Owais met Mabrouk's killers at
religious lectures he used to attend.
The terrorists succeeded in luring
him for their plan and extremist brand of religion.
They then opened channels of
communication with him. One time, the terrorists sent Owais photos of the
police officers they put on their death list.
Owais then provided the terrorists
with information about these officers.
In March 2020, the State Security
Criminal Court referred the files of Owais and 37 defendants to the Grand Mufti
(Egypt's top Islamic authority) for religious advice on their execution.
This came after the 38 were accused of
perpetrating 54 terrorist attacks that let 42 policemen and 15 civilians dead
and over 340 others injured.