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- <text id=93TT2166>
- <title>
- Sep. 06, 1993: Snared in the Terrorist Web
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 06, 1993 Boom Time In The Rockies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 30
- Snared in the Terrorist Web
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The feds charge Sheik Abdel Rahman as mastermind of a vast Islamic
- conspiracy to bomb, kidnap and murder
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--With reporting by Richard Behar/New York, Dean Fischer/Cairo and
- Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Legally, three distinct terrorist crimes had been committed.
- But as investigators dug in, the same names kept popping up
- in all three. El Sayyid Nosair was jailed on gun-possession
- charges in connection with the 1990 murder of a prominent Zionist
- in New York City. He was repeatedly visited in an upstate prison
- by Muslim fundamentalists accused of last February's bombing
- of the World Trade Center. They had links to the ring charged
- with plotting to blow up the Holland and Lincoln tunnels, the
- United Nations building and a federal office skyscraper in early
- July. All looked for spiritual guidance to Sheik Omar Abdel
- Rahman, the blind Egyptian preacher of Islamic radicalism. Finally
- last week federal prosecutors declared that the three cases
- were part of a single terrorist conspiracy led by Abdel Rahman.
- A grand jury in New York City indicted Abdel Rahman, Nosair
- and 13 others on sweeping charges that they had plotted "to
- levy a war of urban terrorism against the United States."
- </p>
- <p> Although that suspicion was not new, Attorney General Janet
- Reno had decided two months ago that there was not enough evidence
- against Sheik Abdel Rahman. When New York politicians angrily
- protested against letting him walk around free, the best Reno
- and U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White could think of was to arrest
- him on a charge of violating immigration laws. Federal authorities
- say no startling piece of new evidence or major new witness
- knitted their case together. Rather, they assert, good police
- work did it: the sifting and analysis of many bits of information
- gradually filled out a picture of far-reaching conspiracy.
- </p>
- <p> As the indictment sketched out the case, the plotters allegedly
- intended to kidnap and/or murder supposed enemies of Islam much
- as they had gunned down Meir Kahane, the virulent leader of
- the rightist Kach organization. The targets named included a
- New York state assemblyman ally of Kahane's, the state judge
- who sentenced Nosair, and President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt.
- Two months ago, Siddig Ibrahim Siddig Ali boasted that the conspirators
- had recruited a pilot willing to bomb Mubarak's presidential
- palace in Cairo. In the U.S. future bombing targets allegedly
- included unspecified military installations as well as the George
- Washington Bridge and the heavily Jewish New York City diamond
- district.
- </p>
- <p> On Thursday all 15 defendants were marched, handcuffed and in
- single file, into a courtroom in lower Manhattan, where they
- entered pleas of not guilty. The courtroom was packed with security
- men, since three Egyptian extremist organizations had vowed
- "revenge" if Abdel Rahman is harmed. Defense lawyers accused
- the government of conflating rumors and suspicions into a fantasy
- conspiracy to whip up a new kind of cold war hysteria, substituting
- Islamic fundamentalism for communism as the enemy.
- </p>
- <p> Prosecutors will have to convince a jury that the bits of circumstantial
- evidence add up. Some consist of items seized from defendants'
- living quarters, notably a big haul from Nosair's apartment
- that languished unexamined after the Kahane slaying. It supposedly
- yielded "formulas for the construction of bombs," and video
- and audio tapes advocating the destruction of tall buildings.
- </p>
- <p> Far more important, however, are tapes recording 150 hours of
- conversation between various defendants and Emad Salem, who
- was simultaneously Sheik Abdel Rahman's bodyguard and an FBI
- informer. Salem is not named in the indictment but is obviously
- the "person known to the grand jury" who is referred to time
- and again. He allegedly was recruited into the conspiracy in
- November 1991, and helped plot bombings.
- </p>
- <p> The case may stand or fall on Salem's credibility to a trial
- jury. Defense Attorney William Kunstler accuses him of concocting
- the whole plot and entrapping the other defendants in it as
- a money-making venture--there are reports that the FBI is
- paying him as much as $500,000.
- </p>
- <p> Defense lawyers further insist that there is no evidence directly
- linking some defendants, especially Abdel Rahman, to specific
- crimes. The Sheik's ferocious tirades against enemies of Islam,
- they say, cannot be equated with inciting followers to kill.
- Ron Kuby, lawyer for two defendants, poses a novel analogy:
- "Why wasn't the Pope taken into custody when he visited Denver?
- He is the spiritual leader of abortion-clinic bombers and doctor
- killers."
- </p>
- <p> The government, however, is bringing its case under conspiracy
- and racketeering statutes similar to those used to convict members
- of the Mafia and drug rings. In a conspiracy case, prosecutors
- can present to a single jury a full picture of everything the
- conspirators allegedly did or planned, including evidence that
- might not be relevant to a specific crime. Jeh Johnson, a former
- federal prosecutor, notes that "if the government can prove
- a defendant was aware of the conspiracy and did something to
- become involved in it, he becomes as liable as the rest."
- </p>
- <p> Under those rules, the government need not prove that Abdel
- Rahman directly ordered his followers to blow up any targets.
- It may be enough to show, as the indictment charges, that he
- "provided instruction regarding whether particular acts of terrorism
- were permissible or forbidden [under Islamic law, presumably],
- served as a mediator of disputes among members of the organization,
- and undertook to protect the organization from infiltration
- by law-enforcement authorities."
- </p>
- <p> The racketeering statutes also offer the government a second
- crack at trying Nosair for the murder of Kahane without running
- afoul of the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy.
- Many people, including the judge in the case, were outraged
- when a state jury convicted Nosair of gun possession but acquitted
- him of the murder itself. It is a well-established principle
- that the same act can be prosecuted twice if it violates the
- laws of different "sovereignties." And though murder as such
- is not a federal crime, killing someone to further a racketeering
- conspiracy, as Nosair is accused of doing, is.
- </p>
- <p> Some legal experts think U.S. Attorney White may have drawn
- the conspiracy too broadly. If she cannot prove all that is
- alleged, they think, she may wind up with fewer convictions
- than she might have won in a series of narrowly defined cases.
- As to Abdel Rahman, the feds may have figured they had nothing
- to lose. They had no narrow case against him, and if he is acquitted
- of the larger charges, they can resume deportation proceedings
- and "kick his butt out of the country," as an official puts
- it.
- </p>
- <p> But where could he be sent? Egypt has put in only a quarter-hearted
- request for extradition; Mubarak would vastly prefer to have
- Abdel Rahman in a U.S. prison than on trial in Egypt, fluttering
- terrorists' hearts. The sheik's lawyers have talked about having
- him go voluntarily to Afghanistan, but no one wants to see him
- free in that hotbed of Islamic fundamentalism. Mohammad Mehdi,
- head of an Arab-American organization, predicts that "the sheik
- is going to be our guest in America for many years." Fine by
- Washington, as long as his guesthouse has bars on the windows.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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