His lawyer said today that the court in Chartres, south-west of Paris, set a sentence was double what the prosecutor recommended a day earlier.
Yannick Loichot, 31, acknowledged he visited dozens of Islamist websites but claimed he did it just "out of curiosity," his lawyer Gregory Martin-Dit-Neuville said in a phone interview. He won't file appeal.
The ruling was the first implementation of a recent counterterrorism law that punishes people for repeatedly visiting websites calling for attacks or advocating terrorism while showing beheadings or other murders, even if they haven't themselves glorified terrorism. Journalists and researchers are excluded from the law.
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