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- <text id=94TT0269>
- <title>
- Mar. 14, 1994: Four For Four
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 14, 1994 How Man Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TERRORISM, Page 33
- Four For Four
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A long, tedious trial ends with a jury convicting all the defendants
- in the World Trade Center bombing
- </p>
- <p>By John Dickerson
- </p>
- <p> To each of the 38 charges, the forewoman of the jury gave the
- same answer. On conspiracy to bomb buildings: "Guilty." On explosive
- destruction of property: "Guilty." On assault on a federal officer:
- "Guilty." Again and again and again: "Guilty." But when that
- calm recitation ended, a different kind of oratory erupted.
- "Injustice! We are the victims!" shouted Mohammad Salameh, one
- of the four men on trial, pointing at the jury and pounding
- his fist on the table. "Allah-Akbar [God is great]!" shouted
- the other defendants. "Al-Nasr lil-Islam [Victory to Islam]!"
- And from the gallery came a retort New Yorkers in the court
- could understand. Cried the brother of defendant Nidal Ayyad:
- "You are all f---ing liars! My brother is innocent."
- </p>
- <p> It was one year and six days after the explosion that killed
- six people, injured more than a thousand and tore a five-story
- hole in the World Trade Center. After a five-month trial, a
- jury of eight women and four men had convicted each of the four
- defendants on all charges in connection with the bombing. The
- prosecution called the bombing the greatest terrorist attack
- ever to take place on American soil. The case, however, did
- not achieve the pyrotechnics of the crime. For five months,
- the jury members twisted in their leather swivel chairs while
- the government paraded 207 witnesses and more than 1,000 exhibits
- before them. Only once or twice did proceedings break the staid
- atmosphere, most notably when a prosecution witness, asked to
- identify two suspects, pointed to members of the jury.
- </p>
- <p> Only at the end did it all come together. In a masterly six-hour
- summation, U.S. Attorney Henry DePippo crafted a cohesive argument
- out of the morass of evidence. Tracing the conspiracy back to
- April 1992, DePippo wove together phone calls, fingerprints,
- chemical analysis, chunks of metal and parking stubs into a
- narrative that led to the on-ramp of the B-2 parking level of
- the World Trade Center. Throughout the tale, he clearly delineated
- the roles of Mohammad Salameh, Nidal Ayyad, Mahmud Abouhalima
- and Ahmad Ajaj in the criminal partnership.
- </p>
- <p> By the time of DePippo's summation, the four defense teams had
- broken ranks. During their cross-examinations of government
- witnesses, defense attorneys cooperated in raising doubts about
- each part of the prosecution's reconstruction in hopes of raising
- reasonable doubt about the overall story.
- </p>
- <p> By the end, however, each defense lawyer was offering a distinct
- case for his client's acquittal. The government had built a
- case on "lies and deception," boomed Abouhalima's attorney in
- a closing argument that sounded more like a sermon. Ayyad's
- lawyer was less passionate, plodding through a four-hour summation
- that had the jurors nodding with fatigue. On one occasion, the
- judge fell into a deep sleep and had to be nudged awake by a
- court clerk.
- </p>
- <p> Salameh's lawyer Robert Precht launched into a final argument
- that surprised his fellow attorneys. He argued that there had
- indeed been a plot but that his client had merely been the unwitting
- dupe of Ramzi Yousef, a fugitive who the government alleges
- was the mastermind of the conspiracy. Three days later, Salameh
- sent a letter to the judge saying, "I object to this summation,
- which I would never have agreed to had it been told me." Ajaj's
- lawyer immediately filed a mistrial motion claiming Precht "did
- more damage to Mr. Ajaj in the first six minutes of his summation
- than Mr. DePippo did in...six hours." Ajaj was in jail during
- the bombing and had been for six months before it happened.
- A defense admission of Yousef's involvement, however, fed into
- the prosecution's contention that Ajaj had helped Yousef get
- into the country to further his plot.
- </p>
- <p> "The message of this verdict is twofold," said William Gavin,
- deputy assistant director of the FBI. "That terrorism has invaded
- the shores of the United States of America, and that you will
- be caught, prosecuted and may go to jail." The government hopes
- this shutout victory is a hint of what is to come. In the fall
- it faces what promises to be an even longer prosecution in the
- conspiracy case against Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and 14 of his
- followers charged with plotting to blow up the U.N. and other
- targets in New York City. The bombing of the World Trade Center's
- Twin Towers is an element of that larger case, and the government
- also hopes to answer questions that were not found in the verdict
- last week: Was a larger organization behind this attack? Who
- ordered it? What was the motive?
- </p>
- <p> But memories of the bombing have left a lingering wariness,
- especially against the backdrop of the trial and the massacre
- in Hebron. Early last week, after a van of Hasidic students
- in New York City was allegedly shot up by a Lebanese cabdriver,
- speculation spread that the deed had been part of an organized
- terrorist attack. At one point, the alleged gunman and two suspected
- accomplices were reported to be part of a terrorist ring under
- surveillance by both the FBI and Mossad, Israel's intelligence
- agency. That information proved to be false, but the fear of
- terrorism is now a real part of the American imagination.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-