http://frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=24978

 


Getting Off Easy

 

By Ben Johnson <http://frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/authors.asp?ID=1120> 
FrontPageMagazine.com | October 17, 2006 

In his address at the National Cathedral three days after 9/11, President
Bush  <http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/nss/2002/nss3.html> enunciated what has
come to be known as the Bush Doctrine: "We make no distinction between
terrorists and those who knowingly harbor or provide aid to them."
Yesterday, a Clinton-appointed judge nullified those words and hailed a
terrorist's accomplice as an exemplar of "public service, not only to her
clients, but to the nation." 

A jury of her peers
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=17004> convicted
radical leftist lawyer Lynne Stewart of passing fatwas from Omar Abdel
Rahman to his Egyptian terrorist followers, the Islamic Group, a radical
cadre dedicated to replacing President Hosni Mubarak with an Islamic
dicatorship akin to the Taliban. One such fatwa stated IG should honor no
ceasefire with the Egyptian government. Another - which one of Stewart's
co-defendants  <http://www.socialistaction.org/mackler1.htm> reportedly
issued in Rahman's name - demanded "all Jews be killed." Rahman says he
instructed Stewart not to disown this edict, because "it's good." 

 

Stewart provided this messenger service to terrorists with the help of
co-defendants Ahmed Abdel Sattar and Mohamed Yousry. Their division of labor
worked thus: Sattar received messages from IG terrorists and passed them on
to Yousry. Stewart then visited Rahman in his Minnesota prison cell under
the pretense of giving legal advice. Yousry, Stewart's "interpreter,"
related IG's messages to the sheikh and wrote down his murderous fatwas in
return. While this was going on, Stewart made random comments to mislead
nearby guards into thinking she was having a discussion with her client -
despite the fact that the government informed her these conversations may be
recorded.

 

The Justice Department's hefty indictment against Stewart
<http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/terrorism/uslstwrt111903sind.html>
accused her of "making Abdel Rahman available as a co-conspirator" to IG.
U.S. Attorney Andrew Dember told the jury in his closing argument Stewart
helped Rahman commit  <http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,142811,00.html> a
virtual "jailbreak." After 13 days of deliberation, the jury concurred. 

 

U.S. District Court  <http://www.fjc.gov/servlet/tGetInfo?jid=1305> Judge
John George Koeltl greeted her actions with a slap on the wrist and a pat on
the back. Although Stewart faced 30 years in prison, Koeltl ignored federal
guidelines and sentenced her to
<http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,221097,00.html> only 28 months. During
sentencing, Koeltl gushed, "Ms. Stewart performed a public service, not only
to her clients, but to the nation." Koeltl further ruled she could remain
free while she wages a promised "militant" appeal to the sentence.

 

Koeltl - whom President Clinton
<http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/archives/whitehouse-papers/1994/Apr/1994-04-27-P
resident-Nominates-Seven-US-District-Court-Judges> appointed to the
<http://www.nysd.uscourts.gov/judges/USDJ/koeltl.htm> Southern District of
New York in April 1994 - also handed out easy sentences to Stewart's
co-defendants. Yousry faced 20 years; Koeltl gave him 20 months. (Perhaps he
valued Yousry's "public service": teaching Modern Middle Eastern History as
an  <http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=4764> adjunct
professor at York College, part of the CUNY system.) Sattar faced life
imprisonment for conspiracy to kill and kidnap; Koeltl sentenced him to 24
years, citing the allegedly harsh conditions of his imprisonment and the
fact that Sattar had no prior record.

 

It speaks volumes that he would honor Stewart - who has a history of
justifying "revolutionary" violence - after she endorsed the use of
terrorism under oath in his courtroom. Longing for a "popular revolution" on
the stand, she said America "will not be changed without violence."
Moreover, "You can't always separate out the combatants from the
non-combatants." Nonetheless, she hoped "[p]eople will make the right
decision about which to attack," helpfully adding, "The New York City Board
of Education could be one [location] to attack." Her lawyer, Michael Tigar,
objected, claiming these questions dealt with her "abstract political
views," but he let the truth slip in court:
<http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,138025,00.html> "We're getting
perilously close to bridges, buildings and tunnels," the targets envisioned
by her client.

 

Authorities arrested "Blind Sheikh" Omar Abdel Rahman after learning of his
plan to blow up the United Nations, an FBI building, the Lincoln and Holland
tunnels, and the George Washington Bridge. They soon discovered he had
engineered the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, for which he is serving a
life sentence. Although his plan did not work, the plotters intended to
topple both towers, a feat later accomplished by Rahman's terrorist
associate, Osama bin Laden. Coalition forces
<http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,80170,00.html> captured two of his sons
working with al-Qaeda including Mohammed Omar Abdel Rahman, who is thought
to have planned and financed the 9/11 attacks. Authorities say the al-Qaeda
attack on the USS Cole six years ago this month was meant to effect the
release of Rahman, as were a string of bombings by al-Qaeda's Filipino ally,
Abu Sayyaf (bombings Stewart applauded during a visit to Rahman in May
2000). He had declared war on the United States; Stewart had undeniably
given him and his cause "material support"; and this Clinton judicial
appointee let her go with a short sentence she may not live to serve.

 

This was but Koeltl's latest act of kindness to the Legal Left's favorite
spokeswoman. He threw out two federal charges as
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/websat/Helper/editor/.%20http:/www.refuseandres
ist.org/article-print.php?aid=962> "unconstitutionally vague" and gave the
jury
<http://www.bauaw.org/2005/01/bauaw-newsletter-tuesday-jan-18-2005.html> 139
pages of instructions to govern their deliberations. He then delayed
imposing his light sentence
<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/04/nyregion/04stewart.html?ex=1161230400&en=
2d662436e94dd9a5&ei=5070> multiple times. Though the jury convicted the trio
more than 20 months ago, he deferred the sentence when he learned Stewart,
67, had breast cancer. "If you send her to prison, she's going to die. It's
as simple as that," pleaded
<http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,221097,00.html>  Stewart's lawyer,
Elizabeth Fink. (In prison, she would have gotten to experience the wonders
of a state-run health care system, one of the "progressive" causes for which
she fights.) He also seemed to give credence to Stewart's own cry: she wrote
a letter to Koeltl, insisting against all evidence, "I am not a traitor."
"The end of my career truly is like a sword in my side," she protested at
her hearing. "Permit me to live out the rest of my life productively,
lovingly, righteously." 

 

Upon hearing Koeltl's combination sentence-and-pep-talk, she exulted: "You
get time off for good behavior usually at the end of your prison term. I got
it at the beginning." Should she be granted additional time off, her
already-truncated sentence would be whittled down to virtually nothing. Had
Koeltl sentenced her in July 2005 as originally scheduled, she almost
certainly would have "paid her debt to society" by now.

 

She should be productive, indeed. Even as an accused (and now convicted)
assistant to a terrorist, Stewart has been an acclaimed figure on college
campuses and accepts several speaking engagements each year. She turned away
more than 700 admirers from the packed Riverside Church the night before her
sentencing.  

 

Stewart rightly called Koeltl's sentence
<http://www.cnn.com/2006/LAW/10/16/terror.trial.ap/index.html> "a great
victory." The victory is for terrorists and those in the American Fifth
Column who would aid and abet them. 

 

The Center for Constitutional Rights is in the lead on this front. The CCR
has dedicated itself to fighting the government's every anti-terrorism
measure, suing and demonizing its own government as necessary. The CCR
<http://www.ccr-ny.org/v2/legal/september_11th/sept11Article.asp?ObjID=majIF
i5c8m&Content=210> filed an amicus brief on Stewart's behalf. 

 

Evidence notwithstanding, CCR Legal Director Jeffrey Fogel
<http://www.ccr-ny.org/v2/reports/report.asp?ObjID=UcivXnaXPq&Content=522>
claimed, "the case had nothing to do with al-Qaeda or Osama bin Laden, or
terrorist attacks on America or Americans." The CCR "denounced the
conviction of Lynne Stewart as a threat to lawyers, to those who dissent, to
the guarantee of attorney-client confidentiality, and to the Constitution
itself." CCR President Michael Ratner said, "the government prosecuted
Stewart for political reasons.  The overriding goal of the case was to send
a message to lawyers who represent alleged terrorists that it's dangerous to
do so." The CCR
<http://www.ccr-ny.org/v2/reports/report.asp?ObjID=UcivXnaXPq&Content=522>
pledged to "will assist in the legal and political struggle to overturn this
conviction." Fogel affirmed, "We must not let this conviction stand." 

 

The National Lawyers Guild has also shown its "solidarity" with NLG member
Lynne Stewart. She keynoted its 2003 national convention, at which she
enumerated her heroes: Ho Chi Minh, Mao Tse-tung, and Che Guevara. The NLG
held a  <http://www.nlg.org/news/statements/DayOfOutrageLynne.htm> "Day of
Outrage" last February 17, a week after her conviction, and encouraged its
members to spend the day in silence (not an unwelcome development). The
prosecution, it asserted, was part of "the government's efforts to
intimidate individuals who are willing to defend persons accused in the 'war
on terror.'" 

 

The Legal Left so closely identifies with Stewart, because she so
"passionately" identifies with terrorists. CCR co-founder Ron Kuby once
<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=15221> revealed to
a New York Times reporter that lawyers are cowards and vicariously advance
their political causes by those they represent. Looking at these terrorists:


 

we see the people that maybe we could have been had we the courage to do
what they did. And as a result, if you're a good lawyer, you spend a lot of
time doing gut checks. And because it's a profession that is so cowardly,
enjoying the aura of being those people without ever taking the risks of
being those people, it's easy to say: this is the right thing to do, I'm not
hurting anyone, this is morally justified.

 

Lynne Stewart took the risk, and a Democratic president's judicial appointee
saw to it the risk paid off. With terror-enablers as with the terrorists of
whom they are so enamored, this will guarantee more of this behavior in the
future.



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