LOS ANGELES
A man who was already serving a 25-year sentence for helping a terrorist organization was sentenced today to serve an additional 20-year prison term for trying to kill the warden of the federal prison where he was housed, according to officials.
U.S.District Judge Virginia A. Phillips sentenced Fazliddin Kurbanov, 36, on Monday.
Kurbanov plead guilty on March 13 to one count of attempted murder of a federal officer.
As part of his plea, Kurbanov admitted making and using a prison-made knife to attack the warden at the Federal Correctional Institute-II in Victorville on May 31, 2016, and attempting to slit his throat.
The warden suffered serious injuries in the attack but has since recovered and now serves at another U.S. Bureau of Prisons facility, officials said.
At Monday’s hearing, Kurbanov, speaking through an interpreter, told the court he was not sorry for his actions and that the victim was supposed to die. Kurbanov also expressed extreme animosity toward the United States.
In handing down the maximum possible sentence for the attempted murder offense, Judge Phillips noted the impact to the victim and his family, and she concluded Kurbanov remains an extreme danger.
Judge Phillips ordered that the 20-year sentence run consecutively to the 25-year sentence imposed in the previous case and that he be on lifetime supervised release once he completes the prison terms, according to authorities.