Terror convicted Chicago businessman, Tahawwur Rana, was rearrested in Los Angeles to face charges in India for attacks in Mumbai in 2008 that killed more than 160 people, reports The Times of India on June 20. In a statement issued on June 19, United States (US) prosecutors stated that Tahawwur Rana who was serving a 14-year sentence for providing support for the Pakistani terror group, Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), which planned the Mumbai attack, and for supporting a never-carried-out plot to attack a Danish newspaper that printed cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad in 2005, was released early from a Los Angeles federal prison last week because of poor health and a bout of coronavirus. However, two days later he was taken into custody following extradition to India on murder conspiracy charges. Rana was accused of allowing David Coleman Headley, a terror accused to open a branch of his Chicago-based immigration law business in Mumbai as a cover story and travel as a representative of the company in Denmark in lieu of carrying out the deadly Mumbai attacks.