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<http://www.comcast.net/news/international/index.jsp?cat=INTERNATIONAL&fn=/2
007/06/18/692372.html> &fn=/2007/06/18/692372.html

Italian Judge Suspends CIA Trial





MILAN, Italy - An Italian judge on Monday suspended the first trial
involving the CIA's extraordinary rendition program until the country's
highest court can rule on the case.

The Italian government has asked the Constitutional Court to throw out the
indictments against the 26 American defendants, all but one identified by
prosecutors as CIA agents. They are accused of kidnapping an Egyptian terror
suspect from a Milan street on Feb. 17, 2003.

In an argument that would effectively scuttle the case, state lawyers have
said that the judge who issued the indictments unlawfully relied on state
secrets to justify the charges. The high court is to also hear another
similar challenge from the defense saying prosecutors had gone too far by
wiretapping phone conversations of Italian secret service agents.

The 26 Americans have left Italy, and a senior U.S. official has said they
would not be turned over for prosecution even if Rome requests it. The
government has not yet responded to prosecutors' requests to seek their
extradition, and the justice minister has indicated the Constitutional
Court's ruling would be a key factor.

On Monday, Judge Oscar Magi suspended the trial until Oct. 24, agreeing to a
request by the defense to put the trial on hold until the Constitutional
Court's ruling, which is expected on Oct. 19.

The ruling will indicate whether the trial will have the power to publicly
air details of the U.S. renditions _ moving terrorism suspects from country
to country without public legal proceedings.

The judge also stopped the clock on the statute of limitations until the
trial reconvenes. The statute of limitations on the charge of abduction with
aggravating circumstances is 12 1/2 years from the date of the crime; four
years and four months have elapsed.

"It's a very clean decision," said Alessia Sorgato, a lawyer for several
American defendants. "It's like sealing the case in Tupperware and putting
it in the freezer."

Italian prosecutors say Osama Moustafa Hassan Nasr, also known as Abu Omar,
was abducted in an operation coordinated by the CIA and Italian
intelligence, then transferred to U.S. bases in Italy and Germany before
being moved to Egypt, where he was imprisoned for four years. Nasr, who was
released Feb. 11, said he was tortured.

Prosecutor Armando Spataro argued vigorously that the court must continue
its deliberations despite the pending case in the highest court, denying
that any state secrets were involved in the preparation of the case and
expressing confidence that the Constitutional Court's decision would back
him up.

Prosecutors said the decision effectively gives the government inordinate
powers to interfere with the justice system. "Is it possible to have a
system in which a trial can be suspended anytime any government decides to
launch a conflict?" co-prosecutor Ferdinando Pomarici said.

Besides the Americans, seven Italians also were indicted in the case,
including Nicolo Pollari, the former chief of military intelligence. Pollari
has denied any involvement by Italian intelligence in the abduction.

 



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