LOS ANGELES: The man behind the 
anti-Islam video which sparked widespread protests in the Muslim world 
was jailed for a year Wednesday for breaching the terms of his probation
 for a previous offense.
Mark Basseley Youssef will serve the sentence in federal prison after
 he admitted four allegations of using false identities, violating the 
terms of his probation for a bank fraud conviction in 2010.
In February 2009, a federal indictment accused Youssef and others of 
fraudulently obtaining the identities and Social Security numbers of 
customers at several Wells Fargo branches in California and withdrawing 
$860 from them.
He was arrested in September for eight probation violations. At a 
hearing last month he denied all counts, but on Wednesday he admitted to
 four, in return for the other four being set aside.
US District Judge Christina A. Snyder said Youssef, who has already 
spent five weeks in custody, must spend 12 months behind bars, followed 
by four years of supervised release.
Youssef was previously listed as Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, and known as Sam Bacile when the protests about the video emerged.
Assistant US Attorney Robert Dugdale said Youssef had “betrayed” the 
actors involved in the “Innocence of Muslims,” by not telling them he 
was a “recently released convicted felon.”
The Egyptian-born Coptic Christian also deceived them by dubbing 
anti-Islamic dialogue over their lines after the movie was shot. “He 
made that choice for other people,” the prosecutor said.
Such behavior was part of a “long-standing pattern of deception” by Youssef, he added.
An actress on the film, Cindy Lee Garcia, filed two lawsuits against 
YouTube demanding that the online video service withdraw a 14-minute 
clip of the film. Both were rejected, one by a local judge and another 
in federal court.
Garcia said she thought she signed up for a film called “Desert 
Warrior” about life 2,000 years ago, and only realized her lines had 
been over-dubbed when Muslim protests erupted in September. Source: Mahasib - Pakistan Nov 7, 2012.

 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
The views expressed in this section are the authors' own. It does not represent The North Bank Evening Standard (TNBES)'s editorial policy. Also, TNBES is not responsible for content on external links.