BELEM, Brazil, May 15, 2007

Brazilian Convicted Of Killing U.S. Nun

Rancher Faces 30 Years In Prison For Ordering The Death Of Rain Forest Defender Dorothy Stang

    • Italmiro Bastos de Moura is seen during the second day of his trial at the Justice Tribunal in Belem, northern Brazil, Tuesday, May 15, 2007.

      Italmiro Bastos de Moura is seen during the second day of his trial at the Justice Tribunal in Belem, northern Brazil, Tuesday, May 15, 2007.  (AP)

    • Dorothy Stang

      Dorothy Stang  (AP)

    • Brazilian nun Delci Franzen holds a cross next to a photo of slain American nun Dorothy Stang during a small demonstration against the nun's killing in Brasilia on Friday.

      Brazilian nun Delci Franzen holds a cross next to a photo of slain American nun Dorothy Stang during a small demonstration against the nun's killing in Brasilia on Friday.  (AP)

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(AP)  A Brazilian rancher was found guilty of ordering the killing of American nun and rain forest defender Dorothy Stang, a judge announced as the two-day trial ended Tuesday.

Vitalmiro Bastos de Moura was convicted of masterminding the killing of 73-year-old Dorothy Stang, on Feb. 12, 2005, along a muddy stretch of road deep in the rain forest.

Judge Raymond Moises Alves Flexa sentenced Moura to 30 years in prison, the maximum sentence, in a case seen as a test of whether the government could crack down on lawlessness in the Amazon.

Moura “showed a violent personality unsuited to living in society,” the judge said, adding that the “killing was carried out in violent and cowardly manner.”

The conviction came even though three other men convicted in connection with the killing — a gunman, his accomplice and a go-between — recanted earlier testimony that the rancher had offered them 50,000 reals (US$25,000; euro18,400) to kill the nun.

Moura is one of two ranchers accused of ordering Stang's killing in a conflict over land he wanted to log and develop but she wasn't trying to protect.

Stang, a naturalized Brazilian originally from Dayton, Ohio, helped build schools and was among the activists who have tried to defend the rights of impoverished and often exploited farmers drawn to the Amazon region. She also attempted to halt the rampant jungle clearing by loggers and ranchers that has already ripped away some 20 percent of the forest cover.

Human rights defenders said the trial is a test of whether the powerful masterminds behind land-related killings can be held accountable in the Amazon state of Para. Of nearly 800 such killings in Para during the past 30 years, only four masterminds have been convicted and none are behind bars.

Shortly after Stang's killing, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva ordered the army into the region, suspended logging permits, and ordered large swathes of rain forest off-limits to development.

© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by eccentric506 May 15, 2007 9:28 PM EDT
What a man--- killing a 73 year old woman---lots of guts to do that--and only gets 30 years
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by eccentric506 May 15, 2007 9:22 PM EDT
What a big man to kill a 73 year old woman---and only 30 years ---
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by hazelknows May 15, 2007 8:18 PM EDT
800 murdered and no one in jail, this coward will find away out, pay off a judge or Brazilian government offical and walk. tough guy, hiring three people to off a 73 year old nun. Typical lawless third world country.
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