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Irsan, prosecutors said, was a throbbing muscle of resentment and rage.

He was convicted of murdering his daughter’s best friend, Gelareh Bagherzadeh, 30, an activist and medical researcher who encouraged her to leave home, and, 11 months later, her new husband, Coty Beavers, 28.

Isran’s wife, Shmou Ali Alrawabdeh, and son Nasim were also charged with murder in the Bagherzadeh slaying. Another daughter, Nadia, is charged with stalking.

Ali Alrawabdeh, testifying as part of a plea agreement that will reduce her charge to kidnapping, told jurors her husband also intended to kill their daughter, Beavers’ twin brother and Beavers’ mother, Shirley McCormick.

Immediately after Irsan was sentenced to death, McCormick gave a victim impact statement from the witness stand, with two of her sons standing next to her.

“On Nov. 12, 2012, Ali Irsan and his family destroyed life as we knew it forever,” she said.

“That was the day they ambushed and murdered Coty, to restore honour to someone who never had any.”

“He wanted to kill her,” prosecutor Jon Stephenson told jurors of Irsan during opening statements. “But he wanted to kill all those she loved first, so that she would suffer that much more before she died.”

Testimony also revealed that as the jets slammed into the World Trade Center in New York on 9/11, Isran cheered, telling his children they should become suicide bombers.

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He had earlier murdered another son-in-law because he did not approve of the man, and got by on a myriad of frauds and schemes, including a large scam bilking Social Security.

Isran also ripped off airlines with bogus claims of lost luggage, dozens of sham credit cards, faking injuries in department stores, and urging family members to claim mental illness so they could cash in claims.

As the verdict was read, sobs punctuated the quiet courtroom. Afterward, seven members of the jury returned to the room to hug family members of the dead.

And as Irsan was being led away, one yelled from the gallery: “Adios!”