-Caveat Lector-

>From Nat'l Post

>>>Normally, I'm not a fan of Alan D.  However, it is interesting to
see this whole thing from the standpoint of such a thing as "the rule
of law" (where have I heard THAT before and how MANY times?).
Buckaroo Bush and his posse are out riding the range (remember the
Rambo movie then the images of the SpecOps guys on horses, both in
Afghanland) seeking outlaws and saving native gals in distress.
While they are doing this, they're operating on some yet-to-be-
defined pretext of legitimacy.  This ought to go into Guinness as the
world's largest man-hunt, lynch mob, and vigilante (frontier justice)
action as UbL has yet to be tried, yet he's been given the sentence..
This is like feeding a goat meadow muffins and having them come out
carrots, eh, what?  A<>E<>R


}}}>Begin
Page URL:
http://www.nationalpost.com/search/story.html?f=/stories/20011215/8779
25.html

December 15, 2001

Tape doesn't prove bin Laden's guilt



National Post

Alan M. Dershowitz, a professor of law at Harvard University and an
appellate lawyer, has represented such clients as Claus von Bulow,
Mike Tyson and O.J. Simpson. In an exclusive to the National Post, he
analyzes the legal merits of the Osama bin Laden videotape, released
on Thursday.

- - -

Now that the world has seen and heard Osama bin Laden and his fellow Islamic 
extremists taking credit and praising Allah for the mass murder of thousands of 
innocent people, few reasonable people will doubt the moral culp
ability, despicability and dangerousness of these misguided Muslims. But does the tape 
actually strengthen the legal case against bin Laden, Zacarias Moussaoui and others 
likely to face trial in connection with the outrag
es of Sept. 11?

In assessing the legal implications of the tape, it is as important to focus on what 
is missing from the tape as what is present on it. There is nothing on the tape that 
reveals bin Laden possessed information only a pers
on guilty of planning this horrible crime would possess. In other words, the truth of 
the incriminating statements made on the tape is not self-proving: It relies on 
believing bin Laden is telling the truth.

Contrast this tape with tapes that are sometimes introduced in organized-crime or drug 
cases that are self-proving. Such tapes contain information that is not in the public 
domain and could be known only by the criminal.
Such information might include the calibre of bullets used, the location of transit 
points for drugs, the names of undisclosed associates, etc. The bin Laden tape, in 
contrast, includes only information known to everybody
. For example, bin Laden's assertion that Mohammed Atta was the leader of the 
hijackers has been widely reported and cannot be independently confirmed.

It could be argued bin Laden's statement that several of the hijackers were unaware of 
their mission until just before they boarded the plane is precisely the kind of 
information that would be known only to the planner. B
ut there is no independent evidence that this claim is true. It is exactly the sort of 
statement that would be made by someone falsely seeking to claim credit for something 
he did not plan, since it suggests unique knowle
dge that can never be disproved. It, too, had been widely reported in the press before 
bin Laden made his statements. In other words, it is entirely possible bin Laden is 
boasting and claiming credit for a "success" for w
hich he had little personal responsibility and no advance knowledge.

Why, one may ask, would bin Laden lie to his fellow Muslim idealogues? What motive 
might he have for taking credit for so horrible a deed if he was not, in fact, 
responsible? There are no easy answers to these questions,
but it will be argued by some that in that part of the world people often take credit 
for the terrorist acts of others. There is a long history of multiple groups claiming 
credit for a single act of terrorism -- even of g
roups claiming credit for explosions that turned out to be accidents. It is possible 
this tape, despite its poor quality, was intended as a recruiting device, and that 
claiming credit for the largest attack on the United
States was seen as helping the recruiting effort. It is also possible bin Laden was 
responsible for creating the terrorist holding company that commissioned specific 
groups to design and carry out terrorist acts against t
he United States, without himself knowing the specifics in advance. It is also 
possible -- I would say probable -- that bin Laden was directly involved in planning 
the attacks, but this tape by itself does not prove legal
 guilt, as I hoped it would.

There may well be other evidence proving bin Laden's culpability, but the tape alone 
consists primarily of dreams, Koranic quotations, boasts, congratulatory statements 
and information that has been widely reported or can
not be confirmed independently. If a prosecutor sought to have the tape admitted 
against bin Laden himself, it would almost certainly come in under a well-established 
exception to the hearsay rule. It would be an admissio
n of criminal conduct by the defendants, and any such admission can be introduced into 
evidence, even if it lacks other indications of truthfulness. But if a prosecutor 
sought to have the tape admitted against a defendant
 who did not appear on it and it did not fit into a well-recognized exception to the 
hearsay rule (such as the co- conspirator exception), then it would have to contain 
indications of truthfulness. If it passed that test,
 the fact finder would still have to be persuaded bin Laden was telling the truth 
rather than boasting before a friendly and supportive audience.

Even if the tape does not conclusively prove bin Laden planned the attacks, it leaves 
no doubt at all that he applauds them and is pleased so many innocents were murdered. 
His attitude, as distinguished from the facts, is
 self-proving. Anyone can see it in his face and hear it in his voice. If the tape is 
not a smoking gun of legal guilt, it is certainly a smoking gun of moral 
despicability. No jury viewing that tape would want to acquit
bin Laden, and few judges would have the courage to exclude the tape from evidence, 
even if they were to conclude its prejudicial impact might outweigh its probativeness.

It is entirely possible the first test of the tape's admissibility may be sought not 
by the government but by a defendant.

Mr. Moussaoui, a French Moroccan now imprisoned in the United States, was the first 
person indicted in connection with the attacks. His lawyers may well seek to introduce 
the tape in defence of their client. There are two
 aspects of the tape that could be considered exculpatory, at least in some respects. 
First, although bin Laden names Mohammed Atta as the leader of the terrorists, he 
never mentions Mr. Moussaoui. Second, bin Laden claim
s several of the hijackers did not know the object of the plan until they were about 
to board the airplanes (though he says they knew they would be martyrs). This claim 
could be used to support an argument Mr. Moussaoui w
as unaware of the specific aim of the conspiracy. There is other evidence, of course, 
that points to his guilt, including the fact (if true) that he sought flying 
instruction that did not include landing an airplane. More
over, if he was aware the plan included hijacking, he would be guilty of a serious 
crime even if he did not know the precise target of the hijackers. It might be a 
closer case if he did not know the hijackers planned to c
rash the plane into buildings or even to kill anyone, but the latter seems highly 
unlikely.

It will be interesting to see how this tape plays out in the Moussaoui case and in 
others that are likely to follow, even if there never is a trial for bin Laden or any 
of the people speaking on the tape.

On a larger level, the tape will serve as an important public-relations weapon in the 
political, diplomatic and psychological war against terrorism in general and bin Laden 
in particular. The court of public opinion has n
o rules of admissibility for tapes or other types of information. And although the 
vast majority of reasonable viewers and listeners will see this tape for what it is -- 
an immoral man using religion to justify mass murde
r -- they must also remember bin Laden is almost certainly a liar and he may have had 
a corrupt motive to lie about at least some of his claims.

We're still waiting for the self-proving evidence that does not rely on believing bin 
Laden is telling the truth.

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