This issue has nothing to do with either "ideas" or "aid".it is about
terrorism and terrorist supporters.  Period.

 

Bruce

 

 

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-terror7jun07,0,3580768.
story?coll=la-home-nation

 


THE NATION


Line Between Ideas, Aid Is at Issue as Terrorism Trial Begins


By John-Thor Dahlburg
Times Staff Writer

June 7, 2005

TAMPA, Fla. - A lawyer for an ex-university professor facing charges that he
supported and helped finance a terrorist group in the Middle East tore into
the government's case Monday, claiming that Sami Al-Arian was being
prosecuted not for any illegal deeds but for expressing pro-Palestinian
views.

"This case will be about Dr. Al-Arian's right to speak, your right to hear
him and the attempt of the powerful to silence him," defense lawyer William
Moffitt told jurors in his opening statement.

Under beefed-up security in U.S. District Court, federal prosecutors opened
their case against Al-Arian, 47, and three others accused of racketeering,
conspiracy to murder people outside the U.S. and providing material support
to Palestinian Islamic Jihad, a group designated as a terrorist organization
by the U.S. government. Each man could be sentenced to life in prison if
found guilty.

The government alleges that Al-Arian and codefendants Sameeh Hammoudeh, 44,
Ghassan Zayed Ballut, 43, and Hatem Naji Fariz, 32, although not personally
responsible for acts of violence, promoted Palestinian Islamic Jihad - an
organization known as PIJ that calls for the destruction of Israel - helped
facilitate its international communications and raised money to support it. 

"These people were way above the level of any fool going to strap a bomb on
himself and go stand by people waiting for a bus," Assistant U.S. Atty.
Walter Furr told jurors. Al-Arian, the prosecutor claimed, "was the
secretary of the board of directors of the PIJ. For a time, he was maybe the
most powerful man in the world in that organization."

Furr said that in a letter hand-carried to Kuwait in February 1995, soon
after Palestinian Islamic Jihad suicide bombers killed 19 Israelis,
Al-Arian, who has made statements disavowing terrorism, asked for "true
support so operations like this can continue."

"They were very effectively leading double lives," Furr said of the
defendants. "They were pure PIJ."

Providing a preview of Al-Arian's defense, Moffitt argued that U.S. law did
not bar people from belonging to a terrorist organization or espousing such
a group's cause as long as the individuals did not engage in illegal
actions. He promised jurors that during the trial, which could last six
months to a year, "there will be no evidence any violent act took place, and
no violent act was ever planned to take place in the United States."

"The outstanding feature of this case is freedom of speech," Moffitt said.
He noted that the government planned to call numerous witnesses from Israel,
and predicted jurors would conclude that "the Israelis are here to silence
Dr. Al-Arian."

The Kuwait-born son of Palestinian refugees, Al-Arian was arrested Feb. 20,
2003, and fired from his position as a professor of computer engineering at
the University of South Florida in Tampa after his indictment. He has been
in custody since his arrest.

Furr said the government intended to prove that Al-Arian used a think tank
he founded while at the university, as well as charities he started, to
promote and assist Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

In June 1995, the director of the think tank, Ramadan Abdullah Shallah, left
Tampa. Later that year, he became leader of Damascus, Syria-based
Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

Furr said the evidence would show that the defendants used 20 bank accounts
to launder money. From 1990 to 1993, the federal prosecutor said, they
received $1.8 million from overseas sources, chiefly from Iran, to pay local
expenses, organize U.S. conferences and fundraisers and pay for three-way
telephone calls that enabled Palestinian militants in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip to talk to people in Iran or Syria.

But, Moffitt said, "not one bomb, not one stick of dynamite" could be proven
to have gone to Palestinian Islamic Jihad as a result of the telephone
conferences organized by Al-Arian.

The prosecution has also claimed that Al-Arian and the other defendants
helped perpetuate a "cycle" of terrorism by sending money to the families of
Palestinian suicide bombers and imprisoned militants, thereby encouraging
fresh attacks.

But Moffitt said sending the aid was not a criminal offense unless
prosecutors could establish that there had been a promise of assistance for
terrorist activities in advance.

"It is not against the law for Dr. Al-Arian or anyone to feed women and
children," the defense lawyer said.

Ridiculing the government's allegation that Al-Arian had been a key figure
in Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Moffitt said that in wiretaps from 1994 to
2003, the FBI listened in on 472,239 of his client's phone calls and deemed
295 relevant to the case.

"This was anything other than a very active organization," he said.

Moffitt said Al-Arian had been allowed to remain at liberty for years as the
FBI investigated him, and even had visited the White House concerning Muslim
matters.

"If Dr. Al-Arian is guilty of everything the government says he is, why
would the government have let this go on for 10 years?" Moffitt said. He
said the government acted after Al-Arian became a known critic of the use of
secret evidence in U.S. immigration trials.

"It is the only time that he was a real threat," the defense lawyer said.

"He had reached the point in society where he might have been able to change
people's minds." 

In the back row of U.S. District James Moody's courtroom were two of
Al-Arian's five children. A daughter, Leena, expressed concerns that the
security - crowd-control barriers, police and courthouse guards on the
street outside - might have an influence on jury members.

"We hope we get a fair trial," the 20-year-old woman said. "I don't know if
it's possible in the circumstances."



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