‘The Beatles’ Daesh cell member loses sanity assessment, moved to America’s toughest supermax prison

Sudan-born, El Shafee Elsheikh, a Deash cell famous for “The Beatles”, faces eight life sentences for hostage-taking, conspiracy to murder US citizens and supporting a terrorist organization. (Screengrab)
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Updated 18 March 2023
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‘The Beatles’ Daesh cell member loses sanity assessment, moved to America’s toughest supermax prison

  • El Shafee Elsheikh claimed he suffered from poor mental health to avoid being jailed in ADX Florence in Colorado
  • Unnamed US prison official quoted as saying ‘Elsheikh will rot in the closest thing America has to hell on Earth’

DUBAI: A member of a Deash cell known as “The Beatles” faces dying alone in an American prison, described by an ex-warden as a “place not designed for humanity,” after his appeal for a sanity assessment was rejected.
Having been given in August eight life sentences for hostage-taking, conspiracy to murder US citizens and supporting a terrorist organization, El Shafee Elsheikh, 34, had claimed that he suffered from poor mental health to avoid being jailed in ADX Florence in Colorado, the Daily Mail reported on Saturday.
Elsheikh dodged being jailed for some time at the toughest supermax jail in the US, also labeled the “Alcatraz of the Rockies,” after submitting his claim.
Following his mental assessment, the 34-year-old, who was one of four terrorists in a Daesh cell in Iraq and Syria called “The Beatles” by their captors due to their British accents, was moved to ADX Florence earlier in March, reported the Mirror.
He is now said to be serving his eight life sentences in solitary confinement in a 7-by-12-foot cell.
An unnamed US prison official was quoted as saying that “Elsheikh will rot in the closest thing America has to hell on Earth.”
“The Beatles” comprised Elsheikh, Aine Davis, Alexanda Kotey and Mohammed Emwazi. The latter was nicknamed Jihadi John and was killed in a drone strike in Syria in 2015.
Media reports cited US officials as saying that “The Beatles,” whose members were brought up in west London, had decapitated 27 hostages. Other hostages have alleged that the Daesh cell tortured people using electric shocks and mock executions.
Elsheikh was found guilty in April 2022 and later sentenced in August to eight life sentences with no option for parole while his crimes were branded “brutal” and “horrific.”
Sudan-born, Elsheikh was convicted of conspiring to kill four American hostages: journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, and aid workers Peter Kassig and Kayla Mueller.
Two other Brits, shoe bomber Richard Reid, 49, and Abu Hamza, 64, are also serving life sentences in ADX Florence.
The 34-year-old was apprehended alongside Kotey in Syria in 2018 by the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces during the duo’s bid to escape to Turkiye.
After pleading guilty in 2021, Kotey was jailed in the US in April 2022 for his part in the killings.
Meanwhile, Davis was imprisoned in Turkiye before being repatriated to the UK in September 2022.
Elsheikh’s judgment came on the eight-year anniversary of the day that Daesh uploaded a video to YouTube showing the gruesome beheading of Foley.
The attorney representing the victims’ families said Elsheikh remained “defiantly remorseless and unrepentant” during his sentencing.
The charges against Elsheikh, whose British citizenship was withdrawn in 2018, carried a potential death sentence, but US prosecutors had agreed not to seek his execution in a deal with British officials to carry forward the case.
Commander Richard Smith, head of counterterrorism at London’s Metropolitan Police Service, told the Daily Mail: “This is one of the most significant international terrorism cases ever brought to trial…These were some of the most barbaric terrorist acts ever seen, carried out with chilling callousness and brutality.”
Elsheikh is the most notorious and highest-ranking member of Daesh to ever be convicted in a US court, prosecutors said.
 


King Charles’ brother Andrew leaves Windsor home after latest Epstein revelations

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King Charles’ brother Andrew leaves Windsor home after latest Epstein revelations

  • Former prince will now live on king’s Norfolk estate
  • Sun newspaper says ‘humiliating’ move took place at night
LONDON: Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the younger brother of King Charles, has moved out of his mansion on the royal estate in Windsor, a royal source confirmed on Wednesday, following new damaging revelations about his links to the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
His exit from Royal Lodge, his home for decades, marks a new low for the former prince, following years of scrutiny over his connections to Epstein, a scandal that has cast a shadow over Britain’s royal family.
Mountbatten-Windsor, 65, had hoped to stay at the 30-room Georgian mansion for longer, the Sun newspaper said, but he moved under the cover of darkness on Monday and was driven ‌to a cottage ‌in Sandringham, the king’s estate in Norfolk, in eastern England.
No more ‌Windsor ⁠horse rides
The royal, ‌who had in recent days been pictured riding his horse in Windsor, just west of London, has always denied any wrongdoing in connection with Epstein.
But in light of the latest release of files by the US Justice Department, Thames Valley Police on Tuesday said they were reviewing a new allegation against Andrew.
The former prince’s move to Norfolk was confirmed by a royal source, who said Andrew might occasionally return to Windsor in the coming weeks while a transitionary phase was completed.
“With the latest batch ⁠of Epstein files it was made clear to him that it was time to go,” the Sun quoted an unnamed friend ‌as saying. “Leaving was so humiliating for him that he chose ‍to do it under the cover of darkness.”
Mountbatten-Windsor, ‍the second son of the late Queen Elizabeth, was removed from public life when he ‍was forced to quit all official royal duties in 2019.
Three years later, he settled a lawsuit brought by Virginia Giuffre which accused him of sexually abusing her when she was a teenager and, while he has always denied her account, it gained prominence again last year with the release of her posthumous memoir.
Further releases of Epstein files in the US last year forced Charles to act and, seeking a clean break for the monarchy in October, he stripped Andrew of his title ⁠of prince and said he would be removed from Royal Lodge, in one of the most dramatic moves against a member of the royal family in modern British history.
The king said his sympathy was with the victims of abuse.
Police investigate latest Epstein files
Amid the fallout from the release of the latest trove of millions of files related to Epstein, British police on Tuesday also launched an investigation into Peter Mandelson, Britain’s former ambassador to the US, over alleged misconduct in public office, following allegations that he leaked market-sensitive information to Epstein.
The files included emails suggesting that Mountbatten-Windsor had maintained regular contact with Epstein for more than two years after he was found guilty of child sex crimes.
He had previously denied maintaining ties with the financier after Epstein’s 2008 conviction, apart from a 2010 visit to New York ‌to end their relationship.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Saturday that the former prince should testify before a US congressional committee, following the new revelations.