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Thursday, April 16
The Indiana Daily Student

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Justice Dept. asks to reverse terror conviction

Major victory deemed unjust due to misconduct

WASHINGTON -- The Justice Department asked a judge Tuesday to throw out the convictions of a suspected terror cell in Detroit because of prosecutorial misconduct, reversing course in a case the Bush administration once hailed as a major victory in the war on terrorism.\nIn a late-night filing, the department told U.S. District Judge Gerald Rosen that it supports the Detroit defendants' request for a new trial and would no longer pursue terrorism charges against them. That means the defendants at most would only face fraud charges at a new trial.\nThe Justice Department is "concurring in the defendants' motions for a new trial" and asks the court to dismiss the first count of the original indictment charging the defendants with material support of terrorism, according to a summary of the government's filing that was obtained by The Associated Press through the court's electronic access system.\nThe filing said there was a 60-page memo laying out the government's concerns about its own prosecutors' handling of the case, but that document was not immediately available through the courts' electronic access.\nThe department's decision came after a months-long independent investigation uncovered several pieces of evidence that prosecutors failed to turn over to defense lawyers before the trial last year and exposed deep differences within the government over the course of the case and the quality of the prosecution's evidence.\nThe development occurred in the shadows of the Republican National Convention in New York, where President Bush and his allies are trumpeting his successes in the war on terror.\nLegal sources familiar with the 60-page investigative memo attached to Justice's filing, speaking only on condition of anonymity because the judge has imposed a gag order, said it harshly criticizes Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Convertino, the lead prosecutor in the case.\nConvertino has been under investigation for months and filed a whistle-blower lawsuit against Attorney General John Ashcroft earlier this year. In an interview with the AP, Convertino accused Justice Department superiors of thwarting his efforts to introduce some evidence against the defendants at trial.\nConvertino's lawyer, William Sullivan, declined comment Tuesday night, citing the judge's gag order. However, a lawyer for one of the defendants hailed the development.\n"If indeed it does throw out the convictions, it's obviously the right thing to do," said James R. Gerometta, one of the attorneys who represents Karim Koubriti. "In my mind, there's only one right thing to do. And I hope they do it."\nIn the new court papers, the Justice Department divulges new testimony from a recently retired CIA officer who calls into question one of the government's key conclusions at trial, the legal sources said.\nThe retired CIA officer told the Justice Department he had offered to testify at the trial but was turned down and that he came to a somewhat different analysis of a sketch the prosecutors introduced at trial as evidence the Detroit men cased and intended to attack a Turkish air base, the sources said.\nThe internal review also turned up evidence the government failed to turn over satellite photos of a suspected terror target in Jordan that the Detroit cell was accused of plotting to attack, the legal sources said. The government had indicated there were no such photos.\nAnd the government uncovered new evidence, recently reported by the AP, that FBI agents in Las Vegas and Detroit disagreed over whether a videotape found in the Detroit terror cell's apartment was surveillance footage as jurors were told.\nIn addition, a Tunisian man who appeared in the videotape of landmarks in New York, Las Vegas and California has told investigators the tape was amateur footage from a university student trip, not surveillance as prosecutors claimed, the AP reported.\nMemos obtained by the AP and reported last month show Justice supervisors in Washington and Detroit bickered over numerous aspects of the case, with Washington portraying the Detroit prosecution team as wayward.\nThe internal review, however, turned up evidence that some testimony government witnesses gave at trial was wrong or overstated, leading to the decision that terrorism charges could not be supported at a new trial, the legal sources said.\nIn a June 2003 jury verdict hailed by the administration as the breakup of a terror cell, Koubriti, 26, and Abdel-Ilah Elmardoudi, 38, were convicted on terrorism and fraud charges and Ahmed Hannan, 36, was convicted of fraud. A fourth defendant, Farouk Ali-Haimoud, 24, was acquitted.\nTheir lawyers have argued for months for a new trial, accusing the prosecutors of withholding evidence that could have aided the defense during the trial. Rosen ordered a formal review of the prosecution's conduct and even was interviewed by the FBI.

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