8 May 2001: Today the Court Reporter reissued the transcript for Day 40 to correct page numbers. This is now the corrected version.

7 May 2001
Source: Digital file from the Court Reporters Office, Southern District of New York; (212) 805-0300.

This is the transcript of Day 40 of the trial, May 7, 2001.

See other transcripts: http://cryptome.org/usa-v-ubl-dt.htm


                                                                5687







   1   UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

       SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

   2   ------------------------------x



   3   UNITED STATES OF AMERICA



   4              v.                           S(7) 98 Cr. 1023



   5



   6   USAMA BIN LADEN, et al.,



   7                  Defendants.



   8   ------------------------------x



   9

                                               New York, N.Y.

  10                                           May 7, 2001

                                               9:55 a.m.

  11



  12



  13   Before:



  14                       HON. LEONARD B. SAND,



  15                                           District Judge



  16



  17



  18



  19



  20



  21



  22



  23



  24



  25







                                                                5688







   1                            APPEARANCES



   2   MARY JO WHITE

            United States Attorney for the

   3        Southern District of New York

       BY:  PATRICK FITZGERALD

   4        KENNETH KARAS

            PAUL BUTLER

   5        Assistant United States Attorneys



   6

       SAM A. SCHMIDT

   7   JOSHUA DRATEL

       KRISTIAN K. LARSEN

   8   MARSHALL MINTZ

            Attorneys for defendant Wadih El Hage

   9

       ANTHONY L. RICCO

  10   EDWARD D. WILFORD

       CARL J. HERMAN

  11   SANDRA A. BABCOCK

            Attorneys for defendant Mohamed Sadeek Odeh

  12

       FREDRICK H. COHN

  13   DAVID P. BAUGH

            Attorneys for defendant Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al-'Owhali

  14

       DAVID STERN

  15   DAVID RUHNKE

            Attorneys for defendant Khalfan Khamis Mohamed

  16



  17



  18



  19



  20



  21



  22



  23



  24



  25







                                                                5689







   1            (In open court)



   2            THE COURT:  Mr. Schmidt had faxed me on May 4th that



   3   his time computation is he's got 45 minutes left of the four



   4   hours he requested, and so he will be allowed the 45 minutes.



   5            Any reason not to bring in the jury?



   6            (Pause)



   7            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, while the jury is being



   8   brought in.



   9            THE COURT:  Yes.



  10            MR. RUHNKE:  I received the government's response to



  11   my Brady demand.



  12            THE COURT:  Yes.



  13            MR. RUHNKE:  I would like to have until Wednesday



  14   morning to file a brief reply, if that's all right with your



  15   Honor.



  16            THE COURT:  Yes, very well.



  17            (Pause)



  18            MR. FITZGERALD:  Judge, while we're awaiting the



  19   jury, with regard to Government Exhibit 6, which is a written



  20   report by Agent Anticev concerning Mr. Odeh's statements, in



  21   reviewing that statement we realized there were two areas that



  22   needed to be redacted that we called to Mr. Ricco's attention.



  23   He has agreed and he found an additional word, so we have



  24   corrected the redactions.



  25            Nothing has been added, just things have been taken







                                                                5690







   1   out.  But I just wanted to note that.



   2            THE COURT:  It is very important when the jury starts



   3   deliberating that there is a set of exhibits in a condition in



   4   which they can be sent into the jury upon request.



   5            (Jury present)



   6            THE COURT:  Good morning.



   7            THE JURY:  Good morning.



   8            THE COURT:  Mr. Schmidt, you may resume your closing



   9   argument on behalf of the defendant El Hage.



  10            MR. SCHMIDT:  Thank you, your Honor.



  11            Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.



  12            THE JURY:  Good morning.



  13            MR. SCHMIDT:  I feel like I'm back at school.



  14            Now, this is going to be my final opportunity to



  15   speak with you.  Obviously it's just a continuation from last



  16   week.



  17            Because of the great burden that the government has



  18   on proving their case and every element beyond a reasonable



  19   doubt, they get the benefit of going not just only first, but



  20   also going last.  While that's a great benefit, as jurors, you



  21   have a very important job to do and I ask you to add a little



  22   bit to that.



  23            I have made some arguments to you based on reason and



  24   rationale -- facts, lack of facts, evidence, lack of



  25   evidence -- on Thursday, and I will continue to do it today so







                                                                5691







   1   you will understand, hopefully, that my arguments hopefully



   2   have made it clear to you, so when the government raises any



   3   kind of point of evidence, any kind of argument, any kind of



   4   inference, any kind of assumption, you should be able to know



   5   what my response would have been if I had an opportunity to



   6   respond to the government.  And I ask you to raise that for



   7   me, to raise that for Mr. El Hage, because we don't have that



   8   opportunity.



   9            And I ask you to ask one additional question relating



  10   to the conspiracy charges against Mr. El Hage:  When the



  11   government raises another issue and they say that that proves



  12   he joined in a conspiracy to murder Americans, ask yourself,



  13   how does that really prove that?  Because that's why we're



  14   here, is because the government is asking you to make



  15   assumptions, asking you to make leaps, asking you to connect



  16   dots that they do not have.



  17            They have also said a number of things of what proves



  18   Mr. El Hage was a member of this global conspiracy to murder



  19   Americans, and they cited a few things.  One of them indicated



  20   to you -- and I tried to show you that the evidence does not



  21   show it's true -- that he was a payroll master of al Qaeda in



  22   the Sudan.  The government also has said to you that he was



  23   the leader of the cell in Kenya.  Therefore, he must have been



  24   involved in this worldwide conspiracy over nine years to kill



  25   Americans.







                                                                5692







   1            Well, if you look at one of the government exhibits



   2   carefully, it's a tape recording that has been translated as



   3   GX208A-T, for the transcript, a call between what appears to



   4   be Saif al Islam and Harun.  In that, at the bottom of page 3,



   5   Saif al Islam says, "How is our brother Mustafa?" meaning also



   6   Abu Jihad.  Harun says, "He is good, and he is the one who is



   7   in charge after Mr. Karim was gone, may God have mercy on his



   8   soul."



   9            That means Karim is likely another name used by



  10   Mr. Al Banshiri, unknown, clearly, to Mr. El Hage.  No mention



  11   of it.  He is the only person that the government has alleged



  12   died during this period of time.  The government alleged that



  13   he was a leader in Kenya and Tanzania.



  14            Also, the important thing is this conversation takes



  15   place in 19 -- I believe it's 1997 and Mr. Al Banshiri died in



  16   1995, I believe it was.  That means two years have gone by



  17   with members of supposedly this worldwide conspiracy to murder



  18   Americans without even having that information.



  19            The government has alleged this worldwide conspiracy



  20   to kill Americans by putting a little information here, a



  21   little information here, and saying it's all tied up because



  22   of Usama Bin Laden.  And I'll get to that point, but what the



  23   government has done is made allegations, and while the



  24   government has the burden of proof, we have taken it upon



  25   ourselves to show you where their allegations in many ways







                                                                5693







   1   just simply not only is not proven but is simply wrong.



   2            They made the allegation he was the payroll master.



   3   That's wrong.  They made the allegation that Mr. El Hage is



   4   the leader of the Kenyan cell.  That's wrong.  They have made



   5   the allegation that he was trying to bring Stinger Missiles



   6   into Sudan for Somalia.  We've shown the timing makes that



   7   wrong.  And if you recall even the testimony of Mr. Al Ridi



   8   concerning the timing of it, Mr. El Hage made the connection



   9   concerning the plane and he was done with it.  He informed



  10   Mr. Al Ridi that there were people going to be flying to Kenya



  11   and he was done with it.  He didn't have any more information.



  12   The government did not show any more information, which leads



  13   us up to the government claim that Mr. El Hage is setting up



  14   the base for al Qaeda in Nairobi and that that's his role --



  15   to be the facilitator.  Not to be the facilitator for lawful



  16   activity, for political activity, for helping Muslims, but for



  17   being the facilitator specifically in a conspiracy to murder



  18   Americans.



  19            The government uses that word "facilitator," and



  20   please be careful.  The judge is going to inform you of what's



  21   necessary is not facilitation, it's joining a conspiracy,



  22   knowingly, willingly, purposefully, joining in the aims of



  23   murdering Americans.



  24            But when you're involved, indeed, if this is a



  25   conspiracy at that time to murder Americans, we're talking







                                                                5694







   1   about now at that time when Mr. El Hage is in Nairobi, not in



   2   1998 when Harun comes down and buys, rents the house, where he



   3   does it in a manner that is quieter, more secret; he doesn't



   4   let anybody in; he doesn't want Kherchtou, who is a member of



   5   al Qaeda, to come into his home, or this person Mustafa, who



   6   we have heard so little about who is supposedly the leader of



   7   the cell in Kenya.  We know so little about where he lives,



   8   what he does.



   9            Now that's what a person who maybe is doing something



  10   wrong is doing, keeping himself quiet, keeping himself hidden.



  11   And whether he's doing that because of a criminal purpose or



  12   non-criminal purpose, because he knows that if he's helping



  13   Islamic militants in Somalia, that he's going to get thrown



  14   out of jail in Kenya.  And we know that that's true based on



  15   Kherchtou's statement.



  16            If you recall, he mentioned Sheik Bailala, a Muslim



  17   opposition leader whose followers were devout Muslims who the



  18   government opposed.  And if you recall, there was a phone call



  19   to the apartment where Kherchtou was living in, one phone



  20   call.  And that's because apparently Khalid al Fawwaz knew



  21   Sheik Bailala from the time that Sheik Bailala was in Saudi



  22   Arabia going to school.  One phone call to that apartment, and



  23   the next day the apartment was raided and everybody in the



  24   apartment put in jail.



  25            Now, of course Mr. Kherchtou couldn't know for a fact







                                                                5695







   1   that that was the result of it, but there was no other



   2   information concerning why that apartment was raided except



   3   for the next day, after a conversation with Sheik Bailala,



   4   everyone is in jail.



   5            And many many of the Kenyan authorities have to be



   6   paid off to take people out of jail, not because they



   7   committed crimes, because they associated with a Kenyan



   8   opposition leader.  Remember what I talked to you about the



   9   third world is not the United States.  Do not compare what



  10   goes on and the motivations of people in there as you would



  11   react in here, in the United States.



  12            But we don't have just simply a phone call to an



  13   opposition leader or from an opposition leader at Wadih El



  14   Hage's home, we have members of parliament calling him and him



  15   calling them.  Ministers, police officers, that's Mr. Salim



  16   Kheir, letters written to the commissioner of police, letters



  17   written to President Moi.



  18            Mohamed Ali Odeh, Oudeh, who is using the telephones,



  19   who is using the computer, who is using the fax machine.  The



  20   other people were doing business, the two guards Rashid and



  21   Ali, in and out of the home, using the telephone, using the



  22   fax machine for business.  We don't just simply have business



  23   activity and the non-governmental organizational activity on a



  24   level simply to provide a front that there is really nothing



  25   going on there, we have activity swirling all around.  And the







                                                                5696







   1   concept of running a terrorist cell whose goals are to murder



   2   Americans and having all these people around, having them



   3   access to your computer just doesn't make sense.  Doesn't make



   4   sense at all.



   5            And if you compare the computer that is seized in



   6   Wadih El Hage's house, there was a hidden file prepared by



   7   Harun that Wadih El Hage obviously could never have seen



   8   because he wasn't in when it was prepared and seized, what has



   9   the government provided as evidence of a conspiracy to murder



  10   Americans out of Wadih El Hage's computer?  Nothing.  Nothing



  11   that they have shows any intent, any knowledge, any purpose to



  12   kill Americans.  But that doesn't mean others may have not had



  13   computers that may have military tactics, tactics that reflect



  14   the possibility of criminal activity.



  15            We have the computer found at Mr. Anas al Liby the



  16   government going to talk about, Ali Mohamed's computer, but we



  17   don't have it in Wadih El Hage.  Not because that's not his



  18   role, that's because there's no evidence to show that he ever



  19   joined, belonged, agreed, intended to be part of a conspiracy



  20   to murder Americans.



  21            And the fact that people would talk a little bit



  22   carefully on the telephone after the incident with Sheik



  23   Bailala and what's known in Kenya and that people might not



  24   tell the full truth about their activities, that's not



  25   unusual.  Mr. Al Ridi, who's a government witness, who had







                                                                5697







   1   nothing to hide, he was scared of the Egyptian government, not



   2   testifying on behalf of Wadih El Hage but testifying on behalf



   3   of the United States Government, and he was still frightened.



   4            Sikander Juma's friends eliminated his name from the



   5   telephone book, not that he had to do with anything wrong, but



   6   to avoid any contact with the Kenyan and the American agents.



   7   I believe on one of the transfers of money to Mr. al-'Owhali,



   8   even that person who did nothing wrong whatsoever, whited out



   9   some information.



  10            So, please, don't view every single suspicious fact



  11   as evidence of being part of a conspiracy to murder his fellow



  12   Americans when you are in a place where it's important to



  13   avoid dealing with police and agents who may be corrupt, when



  14   you are doing something that their government may not like,



  15   when you are associated with people and have been associated



  16   with people who are on a disfavored list.



  17            But what has been done by Mr. El Hage doesn't show



  18   that he has a guilty conscience, that he is trying to hide the



  19   knowledge to the Americans that he's been trying to kill them



  20   for the last seven years.  It shows a consciousness of



  21   innocence, a consciousness of a pure heart, a heart that has



  22   done nothing wrong.



  23            When the government seized all of his material, he



  24   told them where to find it.  He told them it went to Ahmed



  25   Tawhil.  Obviously Ahmed Tawhil wasn't there anymore.  What







                                                                5698







   1   effort did the Americans make to seek the material and locate



   2   the new office of Mercy International Relief Agency?  None.



   3   Because after the bombing when they wanted to locate this



   4   public-filed agency, like that (snaps fingers), they found it,



   5   just like they found Mr. Harun's home in the Comoros.  He



   6   helped them.  He tried to help them get his material back



   7   because he had no belief that there was anything in there to



   8   indicate he did any criminal activity.  Because he didn't.



   9            He made himself available to speak to the agents.



  10   The next day he went to the hotel.  Not only did he go to the



  11   hotel voluntarily, but without his mother-in-law.  He brought



  12   back Agent Coleman's notebook that he left at the house.  Now,



  13   that shows a person looking to work with the American



  14   government, not a person who has been trying to murder them.



  15            He kept the agents informed of his travel plans.  He



  16   went to the Grand Jury without an attorney.  He testified.  He



  17   went back to Texas.  He didn't run away.  He didn't seek to



  18   flee to Afghanistan or Brazil or any other place.  He stayed



  19   with his family in the place he felt his family had the best



  20   chance to grow up educated -- in the free United States.



  21            After the bombing he did not flee.  After the bombing



  22   he not only spoke with agents in his home, he went down to



  23   their office to speak with them.  He did everything that was



  24   consistent with not being part of a conspiracy to murder



  25   Americans.







                                                                5699







   1            Now, one thing he has made it clear both in his



   2   testimony in the Grand Jury and the documents found on his



   3   telephone conversations that he is a devout Muslim, and one of



   4   the things that we have learned here is that Islam puts the



   5   responsibility of your acts on yourself.  You have the



   6   responsibility to make individual determinations and you must



   7   live by that responsibility.



   8            It's not a responsibility of who you associate with,



   9   the telephone numbers you have, who you allowed to speak on



  10   your telephone and use your telephone, to stay in your home,



  11   it's not whether or not you have helped people who have



  12   multiple goals, including helping Muslims that you share, it's



  13   individual responsibility.  And that's very similar to what



  14   his Honor is going to instruct you in this court.



  15            We're not here to determine the responsibility of



  16   Harun or Usama Bin Laden, but let's take a look a little bit,



  17   though, since the government has tried to make that



  18   assumption, that he is responsible for what Usama Bin Laden



  19   says or writes.



  20            And we know the concepts, a few of the concepts



  21   involved.  I will discuss it only briefly.  It's fatwah and



  22   bayat, two concepts other than the basic tenet of Islam, of



  23   personal responsibility and personal decision-making.  Again,



  24   the government relies on Mr. Al-Fadl for so much, and even



  25   Mr. Al-Fadl's descriptions of some of these things make no







                                                                5700







   1   sense.  They differ from Mr. Kherchtou and they differ from



   2   the imam.



   3            He says that, in answer to a question, "If a person



   4   in al Qaeda gave you an order to do something that you knew to



   5   be haram or forbidden, would you have to do it?"



   6             "Yes, because the scholars in al Qaeda, the scholars



   7   in the group, they discuss that and they make a fatwah and



   8   they say it's okay."  And we know based on Mr. Kherchtou and



   9   the imam that that's hogwash.  That's not true.  Mr. Kherchtou



  10   says that not only is there the individual responsibility,



  11   that the religious committee in al Qaeda didn't even have the



  12   standing to issue fatwahs.



  13            Mr. Kherchtou says that while he was in Afghanistan,



  14   while he was in Nairobi and while he was in Sudan, before



  15   Mr. Bin Laden went to Afghanistan, he heard no fatwahs.  And



  16   he would have heard fatwahs because he knew of people while he



  17   was in Afghanistan and Nairobi who were going to Somalia.  He



  18   talked with them.  Certainly Mr. Harun had no problem of



  19   saying anything he wanted, but during that whole time, not a



  20   mention of a fatwah.



  21            Mr. Al-Fadl, if you accept what he says, there was a



  22   fatwah per week on all sorts of issues.  I ask you to reject



  23   Mr. Al-Fadl's statements about fatwahs because it's not only



  24   contradicted by Mr. Kherchtou, it's contradicted by common



  25   sense.







                                                                5701







   1            And the government says that Mr. Kherchtou, well, he



   2   wouldn't have heard about it, he wasn't there very much.



   3   Remember this:  He was going back every couple of months for



   4   two weeks or four weeks and he went to check on the people and



   5   he went to the meetings.  So he went to, during that period of



   6   time in 1994 to 1993, dozens of meetings.  He went to meetings



   7   in Pakistan.



   8            He was unable to identify the photograph of Jamal



   9   Al-Fadl, and Jamal Al-Fadl told you he went there all the time



  10   because it was mandatory.  Kherchtou said it wasn't mandatory.



  11   Mr. Al-Fadl went to every single meeting he was supposed to



  12   because he said it was mandatory, and not once during that



  13   time did Mr. Kherchtou see that man or recognize his



  14   photograph.



  15            He also said, Mr. Kherchtou, that he never saw Wadih



  16   El Hage there during his time, that he went to the guesthouse,



  17   he went to the Soba farm and he knows Wadih El Hage, he knows



  18   him very well, and he never saw him at any of those meetings.



  19            We also know that most of the speeches against



  20   American policy really occurred in the public mosques because



  21   the American policy as to many, many Muslims around the world



  22   was wrong.  And that was no surprise and that was part of it,



  23   but as Mr. Kherchtou said, there's a difference between saying



  24   that America is your enemy because of their foreign policy and



  25   attacking them and trying to kill them.







                                                                5702







   1            As to bayat, one, there's no proof whatsoever that



   2   Mr. El Hage ever took bayat.  He was an early person who



   3   volunteered to go to Afghanistan even before the Americans



   4   were involved.  He was highly respected because he dedicated



   5   part of his life on three different occasions to going there.



   6   It would be almost an insult to demand that he take bayat,



   7   having proved himself to be a trusted and caring Muslim.



   8            He also didn't take training like Mr. Kherchtou or



   9   Mr. Al-Fadl.  So when I talk about bayat, I don't talk about



  10   Mr. El Hage.  But even if a person who took bayat can say, no,



  11   that's not an Islam that is -- that is unIslamic, obviously a



  12   person who is there because he is trustworthy, is there



  13   because he has never taken a bayat or sworn allegiance clearly



  14   can say no.  And as Mr. Al-Fadhl again says that:



  15            "And is your responsibility the ultimate



  16   responsibility as a good Muslim to make that determination on



  17   your own, that this is a proper fatwah?



  18             "No.  No."



  19            And he goes on to that on page 942.



  20            It is clear from the testimony of the imam and



  21   Mr. Kherchtou that you must make that individual determination



  22   if something is said that doesn't sound right to you and, as



  23   Mr. Kherchtou said, that he would never agree if someone said



  24   to him we're going to go kill innocents, he would never agree



  25   to that, nor would most people in al Qaeda agree to that.  And







                                                                5703







   1   if you ask him to do something wrong, "I would say no."



   2            Also importantly is that when he was told that he's



   3   taking bayat, he could belong to no other organizations.  Of



   4   course that makes sense.  If you are swearing allegiance to



   5   one person, how could you have allegiance to other people as



   6   well?  One organization.  If you belong to another one, you



   7   leave it to join al Qaeda.



   8            Mr. al-Fadl said everybody belonged to different



   9   organizations.  He mentioned all these people, but remember



  10   only three photographs came in, or four photographs came in



  11   under him.  He has his own agenda.  He says what he wants.



  12   Everybody is al Qaeda.  He tried to present this worldwide



  13   conspiracy that just simply did not exist, and he added what



  14   he wanted.  And fortunately Mr. Kherchtou was there and



  15   available to testify here to tell you especially what Al-Fadl



  16   said was not true.



  17            What he did tell you was that there were



  18   disagreements.  Not everybody accepted what Usama Bin Laden



  19   said as correct.  There were disagreements.  Some of them may



  20   have been over minor issues, but one of the things that



  21   Al-Fadl tried to do, he tried to paint this secret, hidden



  22   agenda of Usama Bin Laden, of being against what the Saudis



  23   were doing and the Americans and wanted to kill them.



  24            There was no secret agenda.  As we put in under



  25   stipulation WEHXS11, there are a series of six letters written







                                                                5704







   1   by Mr. Bin Laden, to the Saudi royalty, to the clergy, to the



   2   army, asking, requesting, demanding that they reform, they not



   3   allow Americans to stay in there, they get the Americans out,



   4   they do what's right for Islam.



   5            Review these, please.  They are available to you.



   6   They are an exhibit and they will show you that the rhetoric



   7   that he has in those declarations, in those letters are



   8   somewhat similar to all of his writings.  But there is no



   9   violence in there, there is no demands for killing and death,



  10   there is no question that everybody knew that Usama Bin Laden



  11   is a Saudi citizen of prominence, lost his citizenship because



  12   the Saudis took it away, he was in the Sudan because he



  13   couldn't go back, that he opposed the Saudi government.  That



  14   was no surprise.  Everybody knew it.  And when he ranted or



  15   yelled or argued rationally about why the Saudis are wrong,



  16   everybody knew that that was his position.  But there was no



  17   position of going in and murdering Americans.



  18            These documents were seized, among others, at the



  19   home of Mr. Al Fawwaz, and what we know about that is that the



  20   government has put in a few of the 1998 documents from him,



  21   but they haven't put in the earlier ones.  The earlier ones



  22   show the ongoing, slow development of Mr. Bin Laden to become



  23   more and more anti-Saudi government.



  24            But even if he ends up against the Saudis, as his



  25   1996 proclamation did, it doesn't mean Wadih El Hage either







                                                                5705







   1   knew about it, joined in it, assisted in it, had anything to



   2   do with it.  It was just his next demand.  And it was directed



   3   solely at Saudi Arabia and the protection of the holy places,



   4   and even though it affected the Americans because the American



   5   troops were there, it was directed similarly to the Saudi



   6   government.



   7            And in Nairobi, Mr. El Hage wasn't, couldn't, didn't



   8   do anything to help Mr. Bin Laden with his goals of getting



   9   the Americans out, and certainly nothing to do with anything



  10   about murdering Americans.



  11            And the only thing that he is alleged to have brought



  12   back are two documents:  A very political Taliban report about



  13   the Taliban.  That is a historical and political document that



  14   really has nothing to do with the United States, it has to do



  15   with how he started the Afghani people.  And it also has



  16   nothing -- the Somalia report has nothing to do with the



  17   Americans.  It's about Somalia.



  18            Is it something that the United States Government



  19   opposes, the training of Somali Islamists, militant Muslims?



  20   Of course they do.  Is it against the United States policy to



  21   support activist Muslims against more secular governments?



  22   Absolutely.  Is there a reason for Muslims who are helping



  23   Somalis, Somali Muslims try to form a more Islamic country to



  24   worry about Americans?  Absolutely.  To worry about Kenyans?



  25   Absolutely.  To worry about the Egyptian government?







                                                                5706







   1   Absolutely.  To worry about the Saudi Arabian government?



   2   Absolutely.  But does that provide the evidence that the



   3   government wants you to convict a man for conspiring to murder



   4   Americans?  Absolutely not.



   5            The government makes assumptions that Wadih El Hage



   6   knew about it, that he agreed to it, that he participated in



   7   it, that he intentionally and purposefully and knowingly



   8   joined a conspiracy to kill Americans.  As Mr. Kherchtou said,



   9   well, that was wrong.  And as Mr. Kherchtou said, that



  10   especially in Afghanistan when he went back there, what he



  11   said was not necessarily supported by the people of al Qaeda,



  12   certainly not as non-members, and certain things changed.



  13            And the fact that Mr. El Hage went to Pakistan to



  14   visit and to sell stones, may have had some contact with some



  15   people doesn't make him part of a conspiracy to kill



  16   Americans.  Because there is certainly no evidence of that,



  17   not a single thing mentioned about Somalia during



  18   Mr. Kherchtou's six months with Mr. El Hage in a way that



  19   would cause one to believe that -- not about Somalia, not



  20   about Americans, not even about Saudi Arabia.



  21            Now, the government's case is built on assumptions, I



  22   submit not reasonable, rational inferences where you can draw



  23   a conclusion based on certain facts, as his Honor will



  24   explain, but assumptions that require a leap, a jump over a



  25   void of no evidence.  Assumptions, not proof, about the







                                                                5707







   1   existence of a nine-year-old conspiracy.  Assumptions, not



   2   proof, about Somalia.  Assumptions and not proof about Harun



   3   being a reliable teller of what occurred, while Fadl being a



   4   reliable teller.  Assumptions based on the conduct and



   5   possibly intent of others, some of whom Mr. El Hage knew and



   6   some that he didn't know.



   7            They aren't giving you proof on what he did and what



   8   he said, but what others did and what others said with the



   9   assumption that he had to have agreed to do it.  That's not



  10   sufficient and, as the evidence has shown, that those



  11   assumptions are simply wrong.



  12            And I want to give you an example, one of the



  13   examples, sort of microcosms, sort of a condensed version of



  14   how the government presented its case, and that's presented in



  15   Agent Miranda's testimony.  The manner he testified on



  16   cross-examination was calculated to put the image of Wadih El



  17   Hage as a person of hatred against the United States because



  18   the Americans were in Saudi Arabia.  That's how he testified.



  19            And he testified that when he asked about Usama Bin



  20   Laden's hatred, that Mr. El Hage, in answering that question,



  21   he often switched using "he" for Bin Laden and "we" when



  22   describing the hatred of the United States.  That's how he



  23   tried to sell that to you.



  24            But what we found out is that, one, Mr. El Hage was



  25   open and honest about his disagreements with American foreign







                                                                5708







   1   policy, with the treatment of Muslims and Palenstinians versus



   2   the Israelis, his feelings that the Americans should not have



   3   a presence there.  That was a person talking with a clear



   4   conscience a week or two weeks after the bombing, where there



   5   was evidence of Mr. Bin Laden being involved in it and people



   6   in Kenya being involved in it.  And he spoke about that as



   7   opposed to trying to hide his true feelings, not to make



   8   himself a target.



   9            We also learned that the "we" changes as on one



  10   occasion when he was describing about having the money to be



  11   able to live a life like a good Muslim, that Bin Laden had and



  12   "we," all the other people, did not.  We also learned that the



  13   word "hatred" wasn't Mr. El Hage's word, it was the word of



  14   Agent Miranda.



  15            We learned about the true believing Muslim.  Not only



  16   was "true believing Muslim" used to describe that any true



  17   believing Muslim believes that the U.S. should be driven out



  18   of the Saudi Peninsula because the Koran has reserved the



  19   Saudi Peninsula only for Muslims, he also used it, which Agent



  20   Miranda didn't talk about and it took a while to get out on



  21   cross-examination because he didn't remember the use of that



  22   word until he had to review his notes, that a true



  23   believing -- withdrawn.  He was asked by me, I asked Agent



  24   Miranda:  "You asked him," meaning Mr. El Hage, "would you



  25   support Bin Laden if you learned of his involvement in the







                                                                5709







   1   bombing; isn't that right?"  And the answer, "Yes, sir," that



   2   he asked Mr. El Hage that question.  "Right."



   3            "And do you recall him telling you that, as a true



   4   believing Muslim, I follow the guidance of the Koran and not



   5   people; if Bin Laden was involved, it was mistake; that Bin



   6   Laden would be wrong in conducting such an act because there



   7   was no guidance for it in the Koran and I would not support



   8   him?"



   9            "That's correct, sir."  Agent Miranda said that



  10   indeed Mr. El Hage said that.  "He said that, yes, sir."



  11            He also indicated he would not support Mr. Bin Laden



  12   if he learned that he was involved, that he did not have the



  13   right to attack innocents.  He doesn't remember who used the



  14   word, if it was his word or not.



  15            But what we have here is a clear picture, and even



  16   Mr. Kherchtou said that killing innocents -- of course,



  17   notwithstanding how he got involved -- is really a no-brainer.



  18   There's no support about that in the Koran under these



  19   circumstances, no.  And Mr. El Hage made it clear he did not



  20   support the position.  And it wasn't in a manner that he was



  21   trying to hide his true feelings, it was in a manner that he



  22   expressed his true feelings, his opposition to American policy



  23   that is just everyone's right in our country to do so, and he



  24   did so as an American.



  25            And he answered the questions about his beliefs at a







                                                                5710







   1   time when all of the United States, if not the world, was



   2   looking upon Muslims, especially ones who wanted the American



   3   troops out of Saudi Arabia, looking at them as possible



   4   terrorists.  And he didn't avoid it, he admitted it.  But he



   5   told him what his feelings were.  Yes, he wanted them out.



   6   Yes, the Saudi should get them out.  But you don't kill



   7   innocent people.  You don't do what Bin Laden did.



   8            Now, there's one other example that shows the



   9   assumptions made -- more than one example, but I want to



  10   finish with one example that shows the government in 1997 was



  11   making assumptions about Wadih El Hage.  In 1991 -- excuse me,



  12   in 2001 they're asking to you make the same assumption, and



  13   it's wrong.  I'm going to play a very short piece of tape, and



  14   I want you to listen to the voice of Mr. El Hage and the voice



  15   of the agent and how they're talking and see who



  16   misunderstands who.



  17            (Tape played)



  18            MR. SCHMIDT:  This agent is surprised that Mr. El



  19   Hage is telling him he's flying on El Al, the Israeli



  20   airlines, because they just simply make assumptions about



  21   Wadih El Hage, not because what they really know about Wadih



  22   El Hage, but because he worked for Bin Laden, that he has



  23   friends and associates who are Muslims who are helping the



  24   devout Muslims in Somalia fight the bandits and the warlords,



  25   that he wants to help the Muslims in Tajikistan and Bosnia,







                                                                5711







   1   that he opposes the American support of Israel in the manner



   2   that they do and they don't treat the Palenstinians correctly.



   3            And because of that, to the agents, to the United



   4   States Government, he must be an Arab terrorist who wants to



   5   kill Americans.  And Bin Laden talks about Ismailis and Jews



   6   as well while they misunderstand him, because what he is is a



   7   caring, devout Muslim, who cares about his fellow Muslims but



   8   cares about his family and cares about himself and wants to go



   9   back to America and would prefer going on the Saudi airlines



  10   because he's not paying three times the price to fly American



  11   Airlines.  He'll go on El Al if he has to, and he doesn't even



  12   consider, until later, when he is informed that, you can have



  13   trouble because you're from Lebanon, you're from a Muslim



  14   country.



  15            Ladies and gentlemen, we're here because of



  16   assumptions about Wadih El Hage.  We're here because the



  17   government assumes he's the type of person who would murder



  18   Americans because Harun worked for him, he had communications



  19   and worked for Mr. Bin Laden, he supports much of what Mr. Bin



  20   Laden did, but he does not support the killing and murdering



  21   of innocent people and there is nothing in the evidence that



  22   should change your mind.



  23            I ask you, on this very difficult case, uphold the



  24   burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, beyond a reasonable



  25   doubt, before you can say that Mr. El Hage is a person who has







                                                                5712







   1   agreed, conspired, intended to kill Americans.  I ask you to



   2   pause, I ask you to review what the government says proves



   3   that, and I ask you to come back with the verdict of not



   4   guilty.



   5            Thank you.



   6            THE COURT:  Thank you, Mr. Schmidt.



   7            We'll take a five-minute recess.



   8            (Recess)



   9



  10



  11



  12



  13



  14



  15



  16



  17



  18



  19



  20



  21



  22



  23



  24



  25







                                                                5713







   1            THE COURT:  Mr. Ricco, you asked for three and a half



   2   hours.



   3            MR. RICCO:  Your Honor, we have allotted that amount



   4   of time but I don't think it will be three and a half hours.



   5            THE COURT:  I never complain about brevity but I do



   6   like keeping people to the maximum they requested.



   7            (Jury present)



   8            THE COURT:  We will next hear from Mr. Ricco on



   9   behalf of the defendant Odeh.



  10            MR. RICCO:  Good morning, your Honor.  Ladies and



  11   gentlemen.  First, on behalf of Ms. Babcock, Mr. Herman, Mr.



  12   Wilford and even Mohamed Odeh, we would like to thank you all



  13   for paying attention to the case all the way through.  From



  14   time to time I would sort of look out the side of my eyes to



  15   get a sense of whether or not you were still paying attention,



  16   and most of you have been.



  17            Now I am going to talk for the next two days about



  18   Mohamed Odeh -- that's not going to happen.  Let me tell you



  19   this.  I have this big notebook full of notes, and we spent



  20   the whole weekend working on a computer disk so that we could



  21   show you, you know, where somebody said this in the record and



  22   show you this picture, and we were even up this morning, what,



  23   about 6:00, trying to get this thing to work, and guess what,



  24   it's not working.  So that's OK.  You know, I'm a true



  25   believer that everything happens for a reason.







                                                                5714







   1            I'm sort of glad that we had an opportunity not to



   2   respond directly behind the fine summation that Mr. Karas



   3   gave, because I think we would have spent too much time saying



   4   to you, you know, Mr. Karas is a good lawyer, but he twisted a



   5   word here and he twisted a word there, and showing you charts



   6   where the witnesses didn't say this and didn't say that.  I'm



   7   not going to do that -- not that much.  Instead, I want to



   8   talk to you in my closing remarks about my collective thoughts



   9   about this case.  Those thoughts developed as the case



  10   proceeded and unfolded.



  11            I will tell you this, that my primary concern in this



  12   case was what your expressions would be after you saw the



  13   videotape.  So as the videotape was playing, I was sitting



  14   here watching, and I saw some of you react with your hands



  15   over your mouth.  Most of you reacted with revulsion and



  16   disgust at the horror that was depicted there.  Many of the



  17   people who are here today, seated in the audience, are victims



  18   or relatives of victims of that crime.  I was concerned



  19   whether or not as jurors you could survive watching that video



  20   and still keep an open mind.  My basis for that was a simple



  21   one:  It's hard for me or anybody else.  When confronted with



  22   that type of evidence, we all react viscerally to it.



  23            So I thought over the weekend what would I say to



  24   you.  Where would I start.  How would I find a place to talk



  25   to you about Mohamed Odeh.  I will tell you this.  The best







                                                                5715







   1   place to start is where the government says its proof is.



   2   What I would like for you to do, rather than get involved in



   3   the minutia of who said this, where they said it, what page it



   4   was, how it contradicts this page and that page, I want you to



   5   stay with some themes in this case when you go back in the



   6   room to deliberate.  The themes will take you to the



   7   testimony, to the letters, to the documents, and you can see



   8   it for yourself.



   9            The government says that Mohamed Odeh was the



  10   technical adviser to the bombing.  Right?  That's what



  11   Mr. Karas told us, and the evidence of that, according to



  12   Mr. Karas, is Mr. Odeh's statement that he gave to Agent



  13   Anticev, who is also present today, seated in the back row,



  14   over the 13 days he was held in communicado in Kenya.  And



  15   what Mr. Karas says is that Mr. Odeh danced with the truth,



  16   danced around the truth.  There is no evidence in this case



  17   that Mr. Odeh even knows how to dance.  All the evidence in



  18   this case reveals that he is a man who speaks truthfully.  I



  19   don't say that as rhetoric.



  20            This is what I want you to do.  You take every



  21   letter, every document that was seized from his house.  Take



  22   it in the back and put it on the table and start going through



  23   that stuff.  Not only the stuff that the government put in but



  24   the stuff that we put in.  You start going through the letters



  25   to his family, the tapes and what not, and you see if that







                                                                5716







   1   doesn't reflect the mind set of a man who dances or the mind



   2   set of a man who handles and can deal with the truth.



   3            I want you to remember something, and that is this:



   4   That Mr. Karas says his flight and being with others proves he



   5   is guilty, along with other evidence.  He slips that in the



   6   back.  The judge is going to instruct you on the law.  I am



   7   not going to say no words on the law.  But the judge will



   8   explain to you how you deal with the evidence of one's



   9   association, and I submit to you that the association does not



  10   establish guilt.  Physical evidence is what the government



  11   spoke about.  This was the trump card for the government.



  12   This was the piece that got everyone on the jury looking at



  13   Mohamed Odeh a little differently -- at least that was my



  14   impression.  What the government said was Mr. Odeh used a fake



  15   passport.  You using a fake passport, you know you doing



  16   something wrong, right?  And his clothing.  The clothing had



  17   PETN and TNT in it.  Very important.



  18            Mr. Karas also said that the tape letter and the



  19   diagram -- that diagram.  Where is it?  That diagram shows



  20   that Mr. Odeh is guilty.  We blew it up big.  This is the only



  21   thing that -- I am sorry, we enlarged it.



  22            (Laughter)



  23            MR. RICCO:  Excuse me, your Honor.  That diagram,



  24   that's it.  Got you.  That's what the government said, right?



  25   When you look at that diagram at first blush, you sit back and







                                                                5717







   1   you say they got him, there it is.



   2            Mr. Wilford is going to handle a part of the



   3   summation.  Mr. Wilford is going to handle the forensic



   4   evidence and that document.  I am going to come back at the



   5   end and wrap things up.  I submit to you that one of the great



   6   aspects of this country is that everybody charged with a crime



   7   gets a lawyer.  Some get more than one.  But they are entitled



   8   to a lawyer.  And we get to ask questions about this document.



   9   Like, for example, where it came from, who wrote it, is it



  10   dated.  How does it compare with the other documents.



  11   Remember the ampersand and all the rest of it, that they can



  12   prove something from an ampersand.  Nobody stick this in the



  13   face of an expert, you know, we found some books in the house,



  14   why don't we compare that to that.  Mr. Wilford is going to



  15   handle that.  That's it from the government's case.  That's



  16   what they said proved their case.  What we are saying to you



  17   is that the evidence in the case, all of it, every single



  18   piece of it, down to the nanogram of TNT and PETN that was



  19   found on his clothes, Mr. Odeh's clothes, do not establish his



  20   guilt.



  21            I want to share with you a story.  There was a person



  22   who testified in this trial.  He was a young, nice-looking



  23   fellow.  He said he had delivered money for Al Qaeda secretly.



  24   He didn't know who it was, he took money around.  So he is



  25   associated with Al Qaeda, right?  He said I went and







                                                                5718







   1   negotiated the contract for the house that was used to build



   2   the bomb.  OK.  He said he was present at the bomb factory the



   3   night before the bombing, but he was kept in the dark



   4   downstairs.  He didn't know what was going on.  He said he



   5   drove the family of Harun to the airport.  You know, Harun



   6   escaped, took his family with him.  He helped get the family



   7   out.  Very important role, I would think, right?  You going to



   8   blow up a building in a country and you going to sneak on off?



   9   I think it might be a good idea to take your wife and kids



  10   with you, right?  That's what he did, and this fellow helped



  11   him.  He said after Harun left he went and had the house



  12   cleaned up.  To try to get rid of what?  That PETN and TNT,



  13   whatever.  He said after that, he cleaned the truck up that



  14   was used to deliver the bomb supplies.  He also told you that



  15   he planted a piece of evidence in the house to divert the case



  16   to somebody else and away from himself.



  17            Remember that testimony?  You know who I'm talking



  18   about?  I'm not talking about Mohamed Odeh, the technician,



  19   right?  I'm not talking about the guy who is sitting here at



  20   this table this morning.  I'm talking about a guy came in



  21   through that door.  His name was Sikander Juma.



  22            He also told you something that was very important.



  23   He said that when he first started interviewing with agents he



  24   didn't tell them that he planted the evidence or had somebody



  25   plant it, whichever story you feel more comfortable.  He was







                                                                5719







   1   dancing with the truth.  Right?  He was trying to make a scene



   2   like this book belonged to somebody else.  Remember that?  And



   3   when you look at the involvement of him and you say to



   4   yourself, well, wait a minute, how come he's not sitting at



   5   this table, well, the difference is, Mr. Odeh is a member of



   6   Al Qaeda, Mr. Sikander isn't.



   7            What's important, when I started this case I said to



   8   you it is very important, it's crucial that you make a



   9   distinction between inferences that are reasonable, they sound



  10   reasonable, and inferences that are accurate.  Again, looking



  11   at this chart, what does it accurately depict?  Not what does



  12   it reasonably depict -- a circle, some boxes and a road, bomb



  13   blast -- a term that Mr. Karas used, no bomb expert, he said



  14   bomb blast cone.  You say that sounds reasonable.  Then you



  15   start seeing pages ripped out.  What happened to that page?



  16   Whatever.  Mr. Wilford will deal with it.  The point is this,



  17   the inferences should be accurate, not just reasonable,



  18   because Mr. Sikander Juma testified to you that he had nothing



  19   to do with the bombing of the embassy and he did the thing



  20   with the book because he was afraid that his association with



  21   others would result in people believing that he was guilty.



  22   So given the world that we live in, where people prejudge and



  23   make associations, he decided to help himself by planting



  24   evidence and putting it somewhere else.



  25            I just wanted to share that story with you, that







                                                                5720







   1   testimony with you about the case.  And I want to just take a



   2   couple of minutes and look at an overview.  But before that,



   3   remember when I started I told you about who Mr. Odeh was?



   4   Let's think back.  Let's go back to January.  I told you that



   5   Mr. Odeh was a young man who left his college studies to go



   6   fight jihad in Afghanistan.  He was an engineering student.  I



   7   told you that the money that his father sent him for school,



   8   he does what a lot of young people do with the money their



   9   parents send him.  He used it for what he wanted to do.  And



  10   he consulted with some scholars and he decided to go and



  11   follow his conscience to Afghanistan.  I told you that he was



  12   a person trained -- he's not denying it.  No problem.  You



  13   going to go to a war, you better be trained if you expect to



  14   come home.  He was trained in Afghanistan, trained in firearms



  15   and everything else a person needs to be trained with in a



  16   war.  He survived Afghanistan.  And when he decided to leave,



  17   when things changed, he thought long and hard about joining Al



  18   Qaeda.  He had a concern.  He said I don't want to join a



  19   group that would require me to follow orders blindly.



  20            Now, some men who go to war -- and women -- they



  21   don't care what the orders are.  Our history is replete with



  22   men and women who have gone to war and have committed



  23   tremendous acts of barbarism against people, right here in our



  24   own nation.  It was in the papers recently about something



  25   that happened.







                                                                5721







   1            The concept that somebody who is Islamic would have



   2   those same moral scruples, is it foreign to you?  That's why



   3   we called Imam Siraj, because many of us don't know people in



   4   the Islamic world.  What Mr. Odeh said was, I believe in what



   5   I'm doing, I sacrificed my studies to do it.  But I can see



   6   what's going on here.  Got a lot of different kind of players



   7   here.  You saw some on the witness stand.  I'm going to try to



   8   find a group where I can fulfill my religious beliefs to do



   9   good for people who are Muslim all over the world.  That's



  10   where he started, and that's the trick that they used to get



  11   him out of Kenya at the end.  That's me saying it was a trick.



  12   That's my view of the evidence.



  13            Mr. Odeh took bayat, and I told you straight up he's



  14   a soldier.  And you look at him.  He looks like a soldier.  He



  15   watches everything.  He takes notes.  He's smiling sometimes,



  16   serious at others.  He is a person that I said few Americans



  17   get to meet.  You would meet him on a battlefield somewhere, a



  18   legitimate battlefield.  He has no shame in that.  But there



  19   are many men who fight wars who don't hate their enemies, who



  20   don't shoot people in the back.  Therefore many men who do



  21   tremendous acts of bravery in the battlefield.  They save



  22   their enemy.  They bring them to safe havens.  Many men.  And



  23   what is in them?  What is instilled in an individual that



  24   would do that?  It's your religious upbringing.  It's your



  25   moral values.  Right?







                                                                5722







   1            Some people will see an older person like Miss Allen



   2   walking down the street.  And Miss Allen is hobbling with her



   3   cane, as usual.  And her bag drops.  And Miss Allen,



   4   struggling so much just to get from one point to the next, is



   5   not paying attention to the bag.  And there's a lot of people



   6   who will sit back and go, hm, opportunity.  There are other



   7   people would say, Miss, you dropped your bag.  Of course we



   8   are talking about someone more serious than someone dropping



   9   the bag.  But the state of mind is the same.  It's a righteous



  10   state of mind.  So the government is right.  Islam is not on



  11   trial.  What is Islamically correct is not on trial.



  12   Mr. Odeh's state of mind, his intentions is on trial.  And his



  13   records and his phone calls and his taped notes to his wife



  14   give you an insight into what?  His state of mind.



  15            He comes and he goes to Somalia and from Somalia he



  16   goes into Kenya.  The events lead him up to traveling to



  17   Pakistan and being arrested.  The government, if we go back



  18   and look at the overview, the statements, the physical



  19   evidence, the diagram, etc., the statement, according to the



  20   government, shows that Mr. Odeh was dancing with the truth.



  21   Government's Exhibit 6 is 34 pages, a single-spaced,



  22   typewritten account of what Mr. Odeh told Agent Anticev.  And



  23   we know that he told him more, because Agent Anticev told us



  24   that.  He said he kept notes and that he made that statement



  25   from the notes, and he told us that there were many things







                                                                5723







   1   that were kind of left out and some things weren't included,



   2   and we talked about some of it during the trial.



   3            But you have to remember something.  The FBI decided



   4   not to tape these interviews.  It's the FBI policy.  OK.  All



   5   right.  They didn't videotape it.  That's their policy.



   6   That's OK too, because their techniques are not on trial



   7   either.  But the evidence is on trial.  So just because they



   8   say they didn't want to do it or didn't do it don't make it



   9   right.  So when a person comes in here and starts explaining



  10   to you the subtleties of what people are saying, oh, you need



  11   that tape.  Oh, yes, you need that video.  That stuff is



  12   helpful.  Kherchtou told you when he was being interviewed,



  13   that agency, whoever they were, from whatever country they



  14   were from, they had a tape on, to record what and how he was



  15   saying.  Because this typewritten document is a reflection



  16   back.  He prepared it on the 31st of August, six days after he



  17   left and 15 some odd days before the interview started.



  18            He also asked him hypothetical questions and showed



  19   him disturbing photographs.  For example, it's not FBI policy



  20   to take -- well, it's FBI policy not to use a tape, but it's



  21   good FBI policy to show a person a picture of bomb victims to



  22   get them to start talking.  That's the policy.  You have to



  23   ask yourself, what's the purpose of the hypothetical



  24   questions?  Agent Anticev said it was to get him to start



  25   talking.  If you check out the report, the hypothetical







                                                                5724







   1   questions don't come till page 25.  So either the hypothetical



   2   questions should have been at the beginning to get him to



   3   start talking or he wasn't talking for the first 25 pages.



   4   But as you go through his document, you will see that he



   5   talked about the same stuff every day that he was there, in



   6   and out all over again.



   7            It is significant for everyone to realize that



   8   Mohamed Odeh was in communicado.  Let me break in communicado



   9   down.  Mohamed Odeh was kept without a lawyer, without being



  10   able to see his friends, without being able to see his family



  11   for 13 days.  Anybody got a problem with that?  No.  You know



  12   you don't.  Because you wouldn't care if Mr. Magoo caught the



  13   right people as long as they were caught.  Right?  Right?  He



  14   was kept 13 days in communicado, separated from his wife, his



  15   family and his friends, and he gave his consent.



  16            In addition to the 13 days he was kept in communicado



  17   in Kenya, he was kept seven days in communicado in Pakistan.



  18   Lovely place to be kept in communicado, for seven days there.



  19   Do you get disoriented?  What's the purpose of it?  Is it to



  20   extract statements?  And when it doesn't work you start asking



  21   hypothetical questions, well, if I can't get it this way, let



  22   me try this way?  Is that what the purpose is?  Ultimately it



  23   is for you to decide how reliable his statement is.



  24            I submit to you, when you go in the back don't do



  25   what the government did, let's focus on this paragraph and







                                                                5725







   1   that -- take the whole statement and read it from front to



   2   back, and read it more than once.  Because I will tell you,



   3   each and every one of you, that every time you read that



   4   statement you find out something new about Mohamed Odeh.  You



   5   find out small facts about him.



   6            I submit to you that Mohamed Odeh gave a truthful



   7   account of his actions in detail.  I submit that to you



   8   because his statement is verified in every way.  Each piece of



   9   evidence in this case tells you that Mohamed Odeh was telling



  10   the truth.  Everything from his travel to Afghanistan, owing



  11   his father the money, where they later find the letter in Witu



  12   where he was talking to his dad about the money in school nine



  13   years ago -- that's a heck of a son to say dad, I'm going to



  14   pay you back the thousand dollars from nine years ago -- to



  15   his decision to make bayat with Al Qaeda.  It was all



  16   verified.



  17            And the government, I submit to you, is having it



  18   both ways.  Because, see, they look over in the corner at



  19   Mr. El Hage and they say you know what, El Hage is guilty,



  20   because El Hage had an opportunity to help the government



  21   investigate this case and he went in there and lied.  That's



  22   what they tell you.  And he lied and he slowed down the



  23   investigation, he's wrong, he's unAmerican I think somebody



  24   said, or something like that -- or somebody said that.  I



  25   don't know if the government said that.  I think somebody







                                                                5726







   1   responded to the government -- excuse me, Mr. Karas.  What



   2   they said was that he had a choice between his allegiance to



   3   America and his allegiance to Al Qaeda, and he picked what?



   4   Al Qaeda, according to the government.



   5            Now let's look at Mohamed Odeh's 35-page statement.



   6   Mr. Odeh also was at the threshold.  He had to decide.  Agent



   7   Anticev told you, we gave him an opportunity to have a lawyer.



   8   We wanted to find out about it.  A pause was taken.  Mr. Odeh



   9   came up with a solution himself:  Can I talk to the Americans



  10   alone?  No, not really.  Go back over the testimony.  Mr. Odeh



  11   is coming up with, well, how can we work this out?  And Agent



  12   Anticev tells you that ultimately Mohamed Odeh decides to



  13   speak to the agents.



  14            When he was confronted at that crossroad between,



  15   quote/unquote, helping the investigation or his allegiance to



  16   Al Qaeda, what path did he choose?  Take a look at the



  17   evidence.  And if he's wrong for doing what he did, how can he



  18   be wrong for doing what he did?  Wrong means guilty.  The way



  19   you make it work is that you say he was dancing with the



  20   truth.  Take it in the back.  Go through it.  And tell me the



  21   name of this dance.  Because what you going to find is that



  22   this statement is verified by many, many small aspects of the



  23   case.



  24            I will tell you one.  In his statement Mr. Odeh says,



  25   well, I knew two Ubaidahs.  Agent Anticev showed him a







                                                                5727







   1   photograph.  That's Banshiri.  He was the boss.  But when I



   2   was back in the camp, there was another Ubaidah.  He was a



   3   bomb instructor.  That's a little detail.  Who confirmed that?



   4   Kherchtou.  Kherchtou told you that when he went to the camp



   5   he had a guy that he ran with called -- I forgot his name



   6   right now.  But he ultimately became a bomb instructor, and



   7   his name was Ubaidah.  And Kherchtou told you that there were



   8   Ubaidahs, one who was an instructor who was his friend at the



   9   camps, and the Ubaidah Banshiri that he later found out.



  10   Mr. Mohamed told you the same thing.  He wasn't dancing on the



  11   truth about that.  Little small points.



  12            So his statement, I submit to you, we submit to you,



  13   is not evidence of his guilt in this case.  I don't care what



  14   you call it.  Go through it.



  15            Flight with others.  The evidence will show that



  16   Mr. Odeh's flight from Kenya was orchestrated by someone other



  17   than himself.  Nobody disputes that.  He wanted to stay.



  18   Nobody disputes that.  The evidence in this case shows that it



  19   was through a trick, telling him he had to go back and confer,



  20   that they got the guy who somebody had to have some prescient



  21   knowledge of.  You don't want Mohamed Odeh in Kenya.  Get him



  22   out.  Why?  And why do I say that?  Because the evidence shows



  23   that by 1998 you had a new breed of people in the mix.



  24   Remember the young hotheads?  Abu Jihad, son of jihad?  Harun?



  25   These guys are now moving.  He, Mr. Odeh, is a purist.  He's







                                                                5728







   1   living in a mud hut in the middle of nowhere with his Koran



   2   and his wife and his child.  He's not living in a fancy villa,



   3   driving a car, cell phone, or satellite phones, fax, computers



   4   and all the rest of that.  By 1998 he's a problem.  He's a



   5   pain in the side.  They want him out and they take him out.



   6            He is a member, and he did associate with others who



   7   did travel.  He left with them, some of them.  But his flight



   8   doesn't establish guilt.  His association with them does not



   9   establish guilt.



  10            I want you to remember that he was a member of Al



  11   Qaeda, and this is important, because the government is kind



  12   of having it both ways.  They are kind of mixing the word Al



  13   Qaeda with the conspiracy in Count 1.  You got to be clear.



  14   The conspiracy in Count 1 is not an Al Qaeda conspiracy.  The



  15   conspiracy in Count 1 is a conspiracy to kill Americans



  16   wherever you find them.  That means in the jury box, as



  17   administrators, as judges, as lawyers.  Children on the



  18   street.  Wherever you can find 'em, kill them.  That's what



  19   Count 1 charges, anywhere in the world, kill 'em.  And what



  20   the government has to prove to you is not that Mohamed Odeh



  21   associated with Al Qaeda and Al Qaeda traveled out of Nairobi.



  22   The government has to prove to you that he agreed to kill them



  23   anywhere and everywhere that he can find them.  And he talked



  24   about that in his statement also.



  25            His religious beliefs brought him to Al Qaeda, but







                                                                5729







   1   even Mr. Fadhl had to admit that Bin Laden twisted religious



   2   principles to justify acts of violence.  Let me say that



   3   again.  Fadhl testified that Bin Laden twisted religious



   4   principles to justify acts of violence.  Many members of Al



   5   Qaeda, including Mr. Odeh, opposed taking action that was not



   6   supported by the Koran, the Hadith and the principles of



   7   Islam.  What I submit to you is that his association with Al



   8   Qaeda is based on his religious beliefs, and he did not join



   9   Bin Laden in twisting religious principles to satisfy acts,



  10   justify acts of violence.  And all them fatwahs that came into



  11   evidence, and the CNN interview, in one of those interviews



  12   you heard Bin Laden himself saying that these acts are not



  13   from our religion but we're doing it because that's the only



  14   way that you listen, Americans, we giving you back your own



  15   medicine.  He doesn't say there is a religious basis for it.



  16   He says just the opposite.  Imam Siraj took the stand.  One



  17   question.  Is there any religious authority for the killing of



  18   innocent women and children?  People object, whatever.



  19   Answer, of course not.



  20            Physical evidence.  I told you that Mr. Wilford will



  21   go into that.  The tapes and other documents, I've said that.



  22   I've talked about Mohamed Odeh.  I am going to move on.  I



  23   just talked about the issue of membership and it's very



  24   important, because the government has to prove membership in



  25   this conspiracy.  They don't just get to stand up here and







                                                                5730







   1   wave the flag, come on, we all Americans, we know what to do.



   2   Because the government stands up here on one side of their



   3   mouth and says I'm appealing to your common sense.  But



   4   they're really saying prove guilt by association.  And they



   5   say that in the absence of evidence.  And when the government



   6   comes up behind us, Mr. Fitzgerald comes up behind us and he



   7   is talking to you about Mohamed Odeh, think to yourself, point



   8   to the evidence, what evidence supports that.



   9            I want you to remember this also about the membership



  10   and association.  Ladies and gentlemen, forgive me for not



  11   flowing.  I would like to be able to talk to you much faster



  12   and a lot more comprehensively but it's a lot of stuff.  Quite



  13   frankly, I don't see how Ken Karas was able to do this for the



  14   time he was able to do it.  It is very difficult.  I want you



  15   to remember small parts, because I'm a great believer in the



  16   small things.  You know, remember Kherchtou -- when we talk



  17   about membership and association, remember Fadhil traveling to



  18   Kenya with his wife?  I know he was on the stand for a long



  19   time.  But one of the things Fadhl told you, and the purpose



  20   of me sharing this with you, I think it highlights this point



  21   about membership, and you can't infer knowledge because me and



  22   you happen to be together.  I want to go to the evidence.



  23   Remember Fadhil said there came a time when he got on a plane



  24   and flew into Kenya.  They took his wife.  They give him an



  25   envelope.  He said nobody told me what it was about, but he







                                                                5731







   1   assumed that him and his wife were going to stay in Kenya.  He



   2   said he met a person at the airport -- it wasn't Mr. Odeh --



   3   and they drove him somewhere.  The person got out the car,



   4   came back and told him, go to Pakistan.  He took his wife,



   5   went back to the airport, got on the plane and went to



   6   Pakistan.



   7            Now, I'm smiling because most of us who are married



   8   know that would be a very difficult task to accomplish.  You



   9   moved your wife and family all the way to Kenya to tell them



  10   to go back to the airport to get on the plane to go to



  11   Pakistan?  And he says I didn't know what it was about, but I



  12   was a member, I did it.  Did you believe that?  I don't know



  13   if it's true or not.  Is it possible?  It's possible.  OK.



  14            So that highlights my point, because a lot of you



  15   will say, Mr. Odeh was at the hotel, come on, what do they



  16   talk about, what do Muslim people talk about when they get



  17   together other than blowing up buildings, things like this.



  18   They don't have all these conversations about their wife and



  19   kids and family circumstances and things like that.  Right?



  20   So I raise this point.



  21            The other point with Kherchtou took place Ali Amriki



  22   and Hamza Liby, and the other fellow.  He says that they were



  23   in his apartment and they had all of this equipment set up,



  24   and he said, you know, I assume that they were doing some kind



  25   of surveillance because they had a camera, you know, the







                                                                5732







   1   developer -- very smart.  Right?  He was assuming.  And it was



   2   the surveillance instructor from the camps.  He says these



   3   guys are taking pictures, they doing something.  I don't know



   4   if it's a drill, I don't know if it's real, but I know they're



   5   doing something.  But you cannot take from that that



   6   Mr. Kherchtou joined them in what they were doing unless he



   7   shares the same intent.  He's got to know.  And if he knows



   8   and he does it, he's guilty.  But Mr. Kherchtou told you I



   9   didn't know that they were looking at the American Embassy.



  10   Do you believe him?  Do you?  Do you think he was lying to



  11   you?  Government witness.  Wasn't my witness.  He was either



  12   telling you the truth or he was lying.



  13            Sikander, I told you about him.  Traveling, moving



  14   around, getting a house, taking people to the country,



  15   cleaning up the scene.  He said he didn't know.  Do you see a



  16   pattern here?  Do you see a pattern here?  Kherchtou said that



  17   he was in Kenya in August of 1998, that he went out looking



  18   for his friend Harun, and he said he ultimately found Harun,



  19   and that they spent some time together.  These were within



  20   days of the bombing.  He said Harun has some guys around him



  21   that he never saw before.  That's what his testimony said.  I





  22   didn't know these guys that were around Harun.  So it wasn't



  23   Saleh, must have been some other guys.  Wasn't Mohamed Odeh,



  24   the bomb consultant, because he knows Mohamed Odeh.  He knows



  25   him as Marwan, a guy he believes was in Somalia.  You can







                                                                5733







   1   point out over there and say I saw Mohamed Odeh running around



   2   with Saleh a couple of days of the bombing.  You can say to



   3   yourself was Kherchtou's associations, his travel, his contact



   4   with the people of Al Qaeda around the 5th and 6th of August,



   5   does that make him guilty?  If he shared the criminal intent



   6   it does.  But if he didn't, it does not.  Do you think that he



   7   was telling the truth when he said that he didn't have



   8   anything to do with the bombing?  Same thing for Sikander



   9   Juma.  Remember Tawhil he was afraid to be seen with Kherchtou



  10   after the bombing.  Remember he ran into him at the hotel?



  11   Tawhil was nervous, upset, he didn't want to be seen with or



  12   have anything to do with Al Qaeda.  The association is



  13   powerful.



  14            I want to skip through.  I want to skip through a



  15   lot.  I want you to bear with me.  I want to share a point



  16   with you and it might hurt somebody.  But you know how life



  17   is.  When I was making the point to you about the tape



  18   recorder or the videotape -- this is very important, because



  19   sometimes it's not what we say, it's how we say it.  That's a



  20   lesson that all of us learn from when we this big.  When those



  21   devices are on we capture that.  Mr. Karas pointed out to us



  22   how Fadhl answered questions certain ways and he used the term



  23   we.  He is focusing in on the subtleties of what a person



  24   says, not so much what but how they say it, how they



  25   expressing themselves.  Remember Agent Miranda?  Agent Miranda







                                                                5734







   1   said that he interviewed El Hage and showed him a picture.



   2   And after the picture was shown to him there was a smirk.  You



   3   remember the testimony about that?  And I asked him, what kind



   4   of smirk was it?  Because there's a lot of different kind of



   5   smirks.  And he said the smirk was, he's a fool.



   6            Now, what I submit to you, I want you to keep that in



   7   mind as we go through these points.  The government says that



   8   Mohamed Odeh was the technical adviser to the bombing.  Let's



   9   start from the basic proposition.  One, what evidence is it



  10   that he agreed to participate in the bombing?  The government



  11   said he was a prominent member of Al Qaeda.  They used the



  12   word prominent.  They used the word prominent because they



  13   wanted to influence you, just like people of prominence do.



  14   Prominence means possessing or exercising influence, a person



  15   who has indirect power over others through wisdom, force or



  16   character.  That's what a person of prominence is.  A leader.



  17   Ask yourself -- the government used that term -- how did they



  18   prove his prominence?  Who did Mr. Odeh influence in this



  19   conspiracy?  Name a person.  Name one.  And in what way?



  20   Where?  And how?  Who did they prove he exercised prominent



  21   influence over?  Other than the government just saying it,



  22   what is the evidence to support that accusation?  Zip.  None.



  23            How did Mr. Odeh participate in the planning,



  24   assembly, execution or coverup of the bombing as an adviser?



  25   Let's look at the planning.  Ask yourself the following







                                                                5735







   1   questions.  Who selected the target?  Who said we're going to



   2   bomb the embassy?  Who selected the date?  Were other targets



   3   considered?  When was this discussed?  What evidence is there



   4   that Mr. Odeh participated in those discussions?  None.  The



   5   government says that the date is significant, had something to



   6   do with President Bush sending troops into the Persian Gulf



   7   area.  Who made the decision to bomb the embassy on that



   8   particular date?  Was it Mr. Odeh?  I don't think so.  There



   9   is no evidence of that.  Who made the decision to bomb both



  10   the United States Embassy and Kenya and Tanzania?  And who is



  11   responsible for coordinating the execution of simultaneous



  12   bombings in two separate countries?  Who is that person?  And



  13   when and how did Mr. Odeh advise that?



  14            Let's look at what the government calls the bomb



  15   factories.  Who chose the type of house to build the bomb?



  16   What is the evidence before you?  That came from the lease



  17   agreement, the negotiations with the landlord, testimony from



  18   Sikander Juma in Nairobi.  Mr. Odeh is not even charged with



  19   anything in Tanzania, which is going to be very interesting



  20   when Mr. Wilford gets up.  But we will wait for that.  Who



  21   paid for the houses?  Who was present for those negotiations?



  22   It was Harun, Sikander Juma, and others.  There was no



  23   evidence whatsoever that Mr. Odeh participated in the planning



  24   and selection of the bomb houses, factories.



  25            The players.  Who selected the men to participate in







                                                                5736







   1   this?  Who made the decision?  Did they just sprout up one



   2   day?  Where did they come from?  How were they recruited?  Who



   3   gave them their specific assignments?  What evidence is there



   4   that Mohamed Odeh participated in those discussions as the



   5   technical adviser?  What?  There is none.



   6            Travel.  Who supervised the travel arrangements for



   7   the players?  Look at the statements of the defendants.



   8   According to Odeh, his travel was coordinated by Saleh and



   9   Fahad, and that is verified by the documentary evidence that



  10   the government put in.  Is there any evidence in this case to



  11   contradict that statement?  No.  There is inferences to be



  12   drawn from the physical passports that were recovered in



  13   Tanzania.  Those are the passports of Al-'Owhali and Azzam



  14   that were found in Tanzania -- I am sorry, that were found in



  15   the Comoros, right?  They were found in the Comoros.  Mr. Odeh



  16   was a part of that?  Who coordinated the travel plans of these



  17   individuals into Kenya and Tanzania?  Who paid the advance



  18   money?  Who consulted with that?  The guy living in the shack



  19   up in Witu?



  20            Who coordinated the housing accommodations for the



  21   participants in the bombing upon arrival in Nairobi?  Look at



  22   the defendant's statements.  Again, look at Mr. Odeh's



  23   statement.  Look at the hotel registry.  Look at 43 Runda



  24   Estates.



  25            Who was responsible for obtaining the passports and







                                                                5737







   1   other travel documents for the participants, and where did the



   2   passports come from?  The government argued in its summation



   3   that passports were the lifeblood of Al Qaeda, and that sounds



   4   good.  That sounds right.  Who was the prominent person



   5   responsible for and advising on where to obtain those travel



   6   documents for the participants?  Look at Odeh's statement.



   7            Remember the testimony of Kherchtou and Fadhl, that



   8   Al Qaeda had passport experts.  Did you believe them when they



   9   said that?  They said that Al Qaeda had passport experts.



  10   They had a bureau that was specifically set up, a department



  11   for the production of these items.  Remember, they said that



  12   the participants, many men, and Al Qaeda documents were taken



  13   from them and collected.



  14            Again, remember Mr. Odeh's reluctance to leave Kenya.



  15   Remember his testimony that he lost his Jordanian passport and



  16   how that is confirmed by the government putting into evidence



  17   a newspaper article where he advertises the lost passport.  Do



  18   you believe that the technical adviser for the bombing had to



  19   pay for his own passport?  The testimony is that he paid $400



  20   for a passport with somebody else's picture on it that was



  21   expired.  There is no evidence to contradict that.  The



  22   passport is in evidence.  And, significantly, that he did not



  23   make travel arrangements for his own family.



  24            I think Mr. Wilford is going to go into this a little



  25   later, but I want you to remember one thing, that all the







                                                                5738







   1   people who participated in this case, in the bombing, they



   2   took care of their family.  Odeh's family and kids.  Saleh's



   3   family and kids, in Afghanistan.  Harun has Sikander get his



   4   family out.  The other man who is seated here, he is young, he



   5   don't have no family.  Azzam, he was destroyed in the bombing.



   6   He was from somewhere else.  The only person whose family,



   7   whose pregnant wife and child that was left behind in Kenya



   8   was the technical adviser to the bomb, according to the



   9   government.



  10            And what I submit to you is that the fact that his



  11   family was there and that he traveled with so little clothing



  12   is an inference that you can draw that supports his statement



  13   that his intentions was to confer and come back, unless he was



  14   a person who didn't really care about his wife or he was one



  15   of these guys in Al Qaeda who had four or fife wives and it



  16   didn't make no difference to him.  You can tell from the



  17   quality of his letters that he wrote to his wife about being



  18   separated from her and etc., etc., that he loved his wife and



  19   he missed her and that he would not have left her behind in



  20   Kenya had he known of this bombing.  He would have did what



  21   everybody else did, got her out of there.



  22            Let's look at the bombing itself.  Who were the



  23   technicians?  Who selected and purchased the trucks to be



  24   used?  Who decided what bombs to use?  Was it Mr. Odeh?  Any



  25   testimony of that?  Who supervised the conversion of the







                                                                5739







   1   trucks for the delivery of the bomb?  Remember Mr. Karas told



   2   you that 3, that shows that the truck was three meters long.



   3   So I guess he was involved in the selection of the truck.  Any



   4   evidence of that?  Mr. Wilford is going to come back to that.



   5   It don't even represent that.  Who supervised that?  Who



   6   assembled the bomb and where was the bomb assembled?  Doesn't



   7   the technical adviser to the bomb have to look at the bomb and



   8   make sure it sets right, it's in its proper place?  Doesn't he



   9   or she?  There is not a nanogram of evidence, forensic



  10   evidence that Mr. Mohamed Odeh was at 43 Runda Estates.



  11            Mr. Wilford is going to address that, but keep in



  12   mind a point made by Mr. Karas in his remarks.  He said that



  13   the microscopic residue found on Mr. Odeh's clothes that were



  14   in his bag contained PETN and TNT, and since there was no PETN



  15   at 43 Runda Estates, according to the government, he did not



  16   get it on his clothes from anything that was contaminated at



  17   43 Runda Estates.  So Mr. Karas says it must have happened



  18   before then, because he's thought out his own logic, it didn't



  19   take him nowhere.  Mr. Wilford will explain to you where that



  20   evidence came from.  It came from somewhere else.  Mr. Odeh's



  21   statements indicate that there is no contact with Runda



  22   Estates, Mr. Sikander or anyone else who ever set foot inside



  23   of 43 Runda Estates.



  24            Who then were the bomb technicians who calculated the



  25   quantities of TNT to be used and the number of detonators







                                                                5740







   1   necessary to destroy the building?  What does the credible



   2   evidence show?  Abdel Rahman, the master bomber, the bomb



   3   trainer from Afghanistan.  Do you think on a job like this --



   4   let's think about it.  These simultaneous bombings were going



   5   to attract international attention and response.  Do you think



   6   they sent their best bomb man to do it?  Or the fool?



   7            Fahad, who wanted to be a Jihad warrior, the guy



   8   looking for a fight, the guy whose name is son of jihad.



   9   Remember, he took the expert course in bombing.  He paid



  10   $6,000 out of his own pocket to go to a bombing course in a



  11   part of the world where the average worker makes $1,200 a



  12   year?  Wait a minute.  The average worker in that part of the



  13   world makes about $1,200 a year, if they got a job.  He spent



  14   $6,000 to go train on bombing?  You think maybe he was the



  15   technical adviser?  I don't know.  Could be.  What does the



  16   evidence show?



  17            Where is the credible evidence that says that Mohamed



  18   Odeh served as a technical adviser to Fahad, or to Abdel



  19   Rahman, his former trainer from Afghanistan?  It is important



  20   to keep in mind the internal dynamics of Al Qaeda.  At this



  21   point Al Qaeda is moving in a different direction.  Every



  22   witness told you that.  Different witnesses.  There were many



  23   young lions ready to move up to test out that $6,000 worth of



  24   training and to do something to make a name for themselves,



  25   who wasn't satisfied going to help people in Somalia and







                                                                5741







   1   wanted to do something big.



   2            Remember that many members of Al Qaeda, at least one



   3   member of Al Qaeda or associate of Al Qaeda believed by this



   4   time that Mohamed Odeh was a fool.  There's a big difference



   5   between people -- it is a big difference when people think



   6   you're a fool and being a person who can be fooled.  When I



   7   was a kid growing up, I used to get up early in the morning,



   8   go to school, my book bag, the whole nine yards.  And I would



   9   cross people on the street and they would say Anthony Ricco,



  10   he's a fool, he ain't going nowhere, I don't know what he's



  11   wasting his time for, he will be right here with the rest of



  12   us.  When Mohatmas Ghandi gave up his law practice, traded his



  13   Brooks Brothers suits, fine clothes to take on the cloth of



  14   the poor people, to take on the injustice of the British



  15   empire, there were many people in his family who thought that



  16   he was a fool.  When Dr. King turned down a cushy place in the



  17   church hierarchy to lead a fledgling civil rights movement,



  18   his own father thought he was a fool.  It's in his Bible.



  19   When Nelson Mandela, the recently retired president of South



  20   Africa, gave up his title of only one of six black lawyers in



  21   the nation of South Africa to take on apartheid, there were



  22   many people who considered him a fool.  When Mohamed Ali --



  23   the boxer -- gave up his heavyweight championship and the



  24   millions that came with it because of his conscientious



  25   objection -- to what?  War -- there were many people who







                                                                5742







   1   considered that African American to be a fool.



   2            And when you look back, who was the fool?  And who



   3   was not fooled?  Many times you have to look at the person who



   4   is using the label to get a full flavor of what that term



   5   means in any given situation.  The credible evidence in this



   6   case establishes that this bomb was consulted and built by



   7   Abdel Rahman, the master bomber from Afghanistan, and Fahad,



   8   the wanna-be Jihad warrior who was running back and forth



   9   between Nairobi and Tanzania making sure everything was right,



  10   and Harun, who had some training in bombing.  There was no



  11   room for him, and there is no evidence that he participated.



  12   There is no evidence whatsoever to support the government's



  13   accusation that Mohamed Odeh was an adviser for the assembly



  14   of the bomb.



  15            Let's talk about the execution.  There is no evidence



  16   that Mohamed Odeh was a technical adviser to those young men



  17   who executed the bomb in Nairobi.  First question, who



  18   debriefed the young men?  Any evidence that said Mohamed Odeh



  19   did?  Who synchronized the watches, made sure the watches were



  20   together?  Who gave the men their last minute pep talk, come



  21   on, let's go out and kill 2, 300 people?  Any evidence of



  22   that?  No.  Where did this pep talk take place?  Is there any



  23   evidence of it was Mohamed Odeh present?  I submit this was



  24   done by men like Fahad, Saleh and Harun, who were staying out



  25   all night.  If it was done by Mohamed Odeh, where is the







                                                                5743







   1   evidence?  There was no evidence whatever that Mohamed Odeh



   2   was ever at 43 Runda Estates.  Who does the government claim



   3   drove the trucks?  What evidence is there that Mr. Odeh ever



   4   advised them?  Remember that Agent Anticev showed Al-'Owhali a



   5   photograph -- I am sorry.  Excuse me, your Honor.  Remember



   6   that Agent Anticev showed Mohamed Odeh a photograph of



   7   Al-'Owhali, and Mr. Odeh said I don't know him.  Ask yourself,



   8   what credible evidence is there in this case that says that he



   9   is a liar?  Where did they meet?  When and where?  What



  10   evidence is there?  Don't sit back there and say they met.



  11   Point to the evidence that says they met.  Look at his



  12   statement.  Look at the other evidence.



  13            And there was never any allegation -- they're telling



  14   me to move on.  There is never any allegation that Mr. Odeh



  15   was holding back anything.  Did Agent Anticev say that on the



  16   witness stand?  No, he did not.



  17            The bomb aftermath.  There is no evidence that



  18   Mr. Odeh consulted anybody on cleaning up the bombings and



  19   what not after it was done.  Nor did he even know Sikander



  20   Juma, who testified here.  There is no evidence that the two



  21   of them ever met each other.  So in this regard, what evidence



  22   is it then that Mohamed Odeh consulted with anyone on any



  23   subject, that is, the planning, the building, the bomb or the



  24   execution of the bomb in this case?  None.  So how then, how



  25   then does the government prove, not say -- because you can say







                                                                5744







   1   anything -- how do they prove that he was the technical



   2   adviser?  They wave the flag, they say we Americans, he's not,



   3   convict him.  That's how it goes.



   4            I want you to keep in mind, the coordinating of this



   5   event must have been tremendous.  It involved the arrival --



   6   just the arrival and departure of the participants alone must



   7   have been a massive effort.  The government says that Al Qaeda



   8   was an army, an multinational corporation, and like all



   9   multinational corporations, Al Qaeda was headed up by a



  10   billionaire, Bin Laden, with assets in several countries.



  11            (Continued on next page)



  12



  13



  14



  15



  16



  17



  18



  19



  20



  21



  22



  23



  24



  25







                                                                5745







   1            MR. RICCO:  (Continuing) They had the ability to



   2   purchase nuclear weapons.  They had sophisticated businesses,



   3   fax machines, computers, private jets.  They had eight $80,000



   4   cell phones.  Do you think that the planners of this event



   5   that was going to capture an international audience, do you



   6   think that the planners selected a technical advisor for this



   7   coordination who didn't even have a telephone?



   8            He's living in Witu without a telephone.  How is he



   9   technically advising?  How is he coordinating the people?  I



  10   submit to you that it did not happen.  That's why it didn't



  11   happen this way.  You can't make something exist that doesn't



  12   exist.  And when it doesn't exist, the response will be to



  13   say, well, let's dance around what there is.  And I must say



  14   to you that if there is evidence in this case that supports



  15   that Mohamed Odeh was involved, let's deal with it.



  16            Your Honor, this is a great place and Mr. Wilford



  17   will be coming on next.



  18            Thank you very much.



  19            THE COURT:  We'll take a brief recess.



  20            MR. COHN:  As soon as the jury is gone, your Honor.



  21            (Jury not present)



  22            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, at this time, based on part of



  23   Mr. Ricco's summation, I move for a mistrial as to



  24   Mr. al-'Owhali.



  25            Mr. Ricco found it incumbent on him, in commenting on







                                                                5746







   1   people who had taken part in the bombing, taken care of their



   2   family, to then include my client, who has no family, and



   3   specifically inferred that my client was guilty, implied that



   4   my client -- more than implied, said almost in terms.



   5            I find that to be extraordinary from an experienced



   6   and able trial lawyer.  And nobody elected him the 13th juror,



   7   and I move for a mistrial at this point.



   8            THE COURT:  Anybody want to comment on that?  Nobody



   9   wants to comment on it.  All right, I'll comment on it.



  10            I don't think that's a fair inference to be drawn.



  11   The reference was to the government's allegations and what the



  12   role of other people are said to have been by the government,



  13   and obviously the government takes the position that



  14   Al-'Owhali was one of the executors.  And the fact that



  15   somebody who is said by the government to be in that position,



  16   is not identified by another person said to be in that



  17   position is a relevant comment and doesn't assume guilt or the



  18   role of a 13th juror.



  19            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, with due respect, reading his



  20   remarks would not show you that he's commenting on the



  21   government's theory of the case, but he said people who



  22   participated in the bombing, that -- and I respectfully



  23   disagree with the Court's analysis.



  24            THE COURT:  Is there any kind of instruction you want



  25   to the jury?







                                                                5747







   1            MR. COHN:  I don't think that's going to particularly



   2   help.  I'll take care of it.  If you won't give me the



   3   mistrial, I'll take care of it.



   4            THE COURT:  We'll take a very brief recess.



   5            (Recess)



   6            (Jury present)



   7            MR. RICCO:  Excuse me, everyone.  I had promised you



   8   when we took the break that Mr. Wilford was going to be up,



   9   but they reminded me that I left a few things out.



  10            There is a great problem when you are involved in a



  11   case as jurors and as lawyers where there is as much evidence



  12   as there is here and there are so many different defendants.



  13   There is always so much that we want to say, but there is only



  14   really but so much of it that is really important, and lawyers



  15   have a bad way of not just like, this is what we're trying to



  16   say and be done with it.



  17            Now, Mr. Odeh gave a very detailed statement.  It was



  18   detailed.  He talked about people, their background, their



  19   wives, their kids, what countries they came from, where he



  20   thought they would be now.  He could remember who he met at a



  21   camp, what they talked about.



  22            When you look at his statement, I want you to really



  23   look at that statement very well and look at how Agent Anticev



  24   put that statement together for you to read one day in a



  25   courtroom, okay, and I want you to remember something.  I was







                                                                5748







   1   picking at Ken Karas' use of the word "prominent," and it only



   2   struck me as odd that the prominent al Qaeda member was living



   3   in the conditions that Mr. Odeh was living in:  Rural, cut off



   4   from everyone else, no telephones, no electricity, no running



   5   water.  "Prominent" is not a word that I would use to describe



   6   that unless you are telling me he had some other influence,



   7   like he's a great guru living in the mountains that people go



   8   to for advice.  I don't get that impression.



   9            The impression that you got from one of his letters



  10   is that Harun checked in on his wife and he said, oh, I have



  11   good news about your wife.  That's in one of his letters.  And



  12   also his letters to his wife are written by guy like a



  13   country-type guy who misses a simpler life.  And so it's very



  14   important that you keep that in mind, because as we sit in



  15   front of you and talk at you for hours and hours about this,



  16   the most important thing is that you try to capture the



  17   essence of who it is and what it is we're talking about and



  18   not so much the minute details.



  19            The one point that I wanted to make to you is that



  20   the government put this up.  This is page 25, I think, from



  21   Mohamed's statement.  25, and what it says is, according to



  22   Agent Anticev's typewritten notes, is that he was angry and



  23   disappointed at the performance of al Qaeda's cell leader.



  24   Odeh stated that if they couldn't get the pickup truck into



  25   the garage of the embassy, then the occupants of the truck







                                                                5749







   1   must die trying.  They should not have left the truck to



   2   explode and kill so many people, right?



   3            Odeh stated that nobody, even Bin Laden, could be



   4   happy with the results.  Odeh further stated that the position



   5   of the pickup truck was a mistake.  The back of the truck



   6   where the explosives were held should have been facing.  So,



   7   in other words, according to what Agent Anticev is telling



   8   you, the truck should have made a U-turn and then backed in



   9   all the way back down to the building or got under the



  10   building, according to Agent Anticev.



  11            Odeh stated that an errant shock wave hit the wrong



  12   building.  Remember what the experts told you how a bomb



  13   explodes?  You know errant shock waves.  Bombs go like this.



  14   And people who have been to war and trained around bombs know



  15   that they go like this, which is why they duck when the bombs



  16   go off.  A guy in war doesn't say, well, the back of that



  17   truck is not facing me so I don't have to get out of the way



  18   when it blows up.  When this thing goes up, he goes down,



  19   okay?



  20            Odeh said that he accepts responsibility for the bomb



  21   because he's a part of the group.  What group?  Al Qaeda?  Did



  22   he ask him?  The group that did this?  And it was a big



  23   mistake and Saleh blundered.  Odeh stated that the truck had



  24   to back into the building in order to prevent the cab from



  25   acting as a hindrance to the shock wave, therefore preventing







                                                                5750







   1   the surrounding buildings from being affected.



   2            Then the government turns and shows you this, and



   3   they go, well, if you kind of turn it sideways and look at it



   4   like this, wow, that's the whole thing, isn't it?  He's



   5   guilty.



   6            There's a problem with this, and it's a simple one.



   7   Mr. Odeh is held incommunicado in Pakistan for seven days,



   8   right?  He's held incommunicado in Nairobi for 13 days.  When



   9   he's interviewed, he does not get to see family, friends,



  10   newspaper, nothing.  How does Mr. Odeh know that the truck



  11   didn't get into the building?  How?  How does he know?



  12            Now, some people will say, how does he know it was a



  13   truck unless he was involved?  But let's deal with it



  14   step-by-step.



  15            That truck was blown into a billion pieces, right?



  16   How does Mr. Odeh know that if they couldn't -- that they



  17   didn't get the truck into the garage?  Because that's the



  18   implication, right?  How does he know that somebody didn't die



  19   doing this?  Who told him that?



  20            Couldn't have been -- I can't say that.  Let's just



  21   say that there's no evidence that anybody said that to him.



  22   How does he know that?  How does he know that somebody



  23   survived that?  Where does he get that from?  Where?  How does



  24   he know that it was a mistake and the truck should have been



  25   backed up into the building?  How does he know, if he's a part







                                                                5751







   1   of it, that that didn't happen?  How does he know that?



   2            And I submit -- listen to what I'm saying because I



   3   want to be clear.  According to the government, the truck went



   4   in face-first.  According to the government, somebody jumped



   5   off the truck.  That's the government's theory.  They got to



   6   prove this case.  That's what they said happened.  They said



   7   one of the guys ran, surviving those bomb blasts moving at 12,



   8   13,000 feet a second.  They got to prove that.



   9            And I have made reference to young Al-'Owhali



  10   earlier.  Let's be clear.  This is what the government says he



  11   did.  I don't know what he did.  I'm talking about what the



  12   government claims.



  13            How does Mr. Odeh know that an errant shock wave hit



  14   the wrong building, right?  And when the government comes back



  15   up, when we sit down, never to be heard from again, and



  16   they're explaining to you and they are showing you the letter



  17   to his wife and they are talking to you about Bin Laden and



  18   whatever he's involved with in his mind, ask yourself the



  19   question, who told Odeh that the wrong building got blown up?



  20   Maybe he wasn't held incommunicado.  Maybe the agent lied to



  21   us about that.



  22            How can you have it both ways?  Does everybody



  23   understand what "incommunicado" means?  "Incommunicado" means



  24   no wife, no friends, no newspaper, nothing.  You're a suspect.



  25   And if you want to talk about FBI policy, let me tell you







                                                                5752







   1   something:  I submit to you that you never let one guy get



   2   together with the other guy.  They always separate the guys,



   3   because when you put them together, what do you get?  A story.



   4   Right?  They always separate them and keep them separated.



   5            And we asked Agent Anticev, well, were the Kenyans



   6   involved?  He said, well, sometimes I wasn't with him.  When



   7   he was alone, I don't know nothing about, let's blame the



   8   Kenyans.  Was he given this information by the Kenyan



   9   authorities?  Is there any evidence of that?  No.



  10            All right, so when Mr. Karas was pointing to this



  11   chart earlier -- and it looked powerful, didn't it?  No one



  12   sat here and said to themselves, how did Odeh know this if he



  13   was held in the way in which the government says he was held?



  14            Now, this part about responsibility, I asked Agent



  15   Anticev about that when he was on the witness stand, and what



  16   Agent Anticev explained to us was Mohamed Odeh felt morally



  17   responsible -- not criminally responsible, morally



  18   responsible -- because he was a part of al Qaeda, and he, like



  19   Kherchtou -- you know what Kherchtou said:  I seen this.  I



  20   seen that.  I started putting things together.



  21            Well, they were hitting Mohamed with the hypothetical



  22   questions.  And Bin Laden this.  He said it.  He said he was



  23   asking him the hypothetical questions.  Maybe, too, Mohamed



  24   Odeh has a brain and he started saying, damn it -- he wouldn't



  25   have said that, I would have said that -- I feel morally







                                                                5753







   1   outraged at this.



   2            And one of the things that Agent Anticev did record



   3   is Mohamed Odeh's reasons for speaking to them, his moral



   4   outrage and the fact that he was pushed, pushed, pushed to get



   5   out of the country for this.  Huh-uh.  What do you want to



   6   know?  Harun?  He's from the Comoros.  Where did they find



   7   him?  In the Comoros.  Mustafa, he left with his wife and



   8   kids.  What did they find?  Wife and kids playing, records,



   9   etc., etc.



  10            Odeh said they said something about Eagle Travel.



  11   They went to Eagle Travel, what did they find?  The flight



  12   records.  Mohamed said, I stayed in the hotel room, etc., etc.



  13   What did they find?  His fingerprint right where he said it



  14   was.



  15            You want to know about Ubaidah?  I'll tell you about



  16   Ubaidah.  He was a secret guy, always running around.  How



  17   would you have reacted if you found out that a group that you



  18   were involved with, it was even alleged to have done something



  19   like that?  Would you have done the right thing or you would



  20   have said, I want my lawyer?



  21            He told them about Fawwaz.  You remember Fawwaz.



  22   He's in London.  That's what Mr. Odeh told them.  He told them



  23   about Tawfiq, also known as Mohamed Kampala.  It's right



  24   there.  He told them about Abu Ibrahim.  Told them about



  25   Tayyib.  He told them about Abu Hafs.  He told them about Abu







                                                                5754







   1   Rahman, the trainer in explosives.  He told them about Ahmed



   2   the Egyptian, the Tanzanian, Saleh, Harun, Fahad, Tawhil,



   3   Nawawi.  He said that Nawawi was an Egyptian living in



   4   America.  You remember him, he's the guy that was in the plane



   5   with al Ridi when he crashed and he took off and fled the



   6   county.  He told about Atef.  Even that was confirmed to you.



   7            They put together a chronology and they take away the



   8   chronology to sell us.  Then they say, well, now he started



   9   testifying, now he started speaking consistent with the



  10   chronology.  There was no chronology until they talked to



  11   Mohamed Odeh.  Go back and look at the statement.  Compare it



  12   to the indictment.



  13            He told them about Sheikh -- I said this guys' name



  14   wrong every time -- Mohamed.  That was Swedan, the guy who



  15   bought the trucks.  He told them that he was in some kind of



  16   transporting business.  He told them about Mustafa and Ubaidah



  17   and many, many others.



  18            He told them about MIRA, right?  Mercy International



  19   Relief Agency.  And when they go there and find the records,



  20   what do they find?  Lo and behold, a letter from Mohamed Odeh



  21   talking about the lousy fishing business that he was in, that



  22   he was losing money in the fishing business and he wasn't any



  23   good at it.  That's his report to Bin Laden.  I can't sell



  24   fish and we got to sell off the boats and the rest of the



  25   stuff because we can't make any money doing this.







                                                                5755







   1            And, no, I don't even think the government is taking



   2   the position that Bin Laden was doing some good things at



   3   times and that he ran businesses.  Those had to include



   4   people.  You think all the people that worked for this



   5   multinational corporation was, like, I'm going to kill an



   6   American next time I see one?  How can they work and function?



   7   How can they think?  How can they live?  How can they love?



   8   How can they have compassion?  How can you write about God in



   9   your life and the lives of your children's and your nephews



  10   what you see him doing?



  11            So this is very powerful, what the government



  12   presents to you.  They enlarged it, and they enlarged it for a



  13   reason, just like we enlarged this.  I'm not trying to put



  14   anything on the government that I wouldn't do myself.  I



  15   enlarged this for a reason, but this was enlarged because this



  16   is important to their case.  Because what they want to say to



  17   you is that's evidence of a bomb technician.



  18            And then the government says this, well, it might be



  19   kind of a hokey bombing, right?  You know, with the blast cone



  20   that no one ever testified.  No expert in this case testified



  21   to something called a blast cone, okay.  That came from



  22   Mr. Karas.



  23            All right, I want to take a few minutes to talk about



  24   Somalia.  Not a few minutes.  I really mean a few minutes.



  25   I've been sitting here a lot of months, and I haven't figured







                                                                5756







   1   it out yet and you are going to have to do that.



   2            I will tell that you what we know from the evidence



   3   is that Somalia is a vast country filled with nomadic tribes



   4   and shifting allegiances.  And I will tell you this.  In 1993,



   5   when Mohamed Odeh went to Somalia, according to the testimony



   6   of witnesses, al Qaeda had been in Somalia already for a year



   7   before any Americans even got there.



   8            There's no evidence whatsoever that Mohamed Odeh went



   9   to Somalia to kill Americans.  He told Agent Anticev that if



  10   he wanted to kill Americans, he could have went right down to



  11   Malindi and shot people on the street if that's what he wanted



  12   to do, snuck right back up to Witu somewhere and nobody would



  13   have known the difference.



  14            When he went to Somalia in 1993, he went there to



  15   stop the carnage and starvation that was happening as a result



  16   of the fighting amongst the clans.  And Aideed was a major



  17   force in the disintegration and anarchy in that country and



  18   Mohamed went there to assist the tribes that were trying to



  19   follow Islam, to live in peace and to form a unified Muslim



  20   nation.



  21            Mohamed Odeh went to Somalia to do good.  You see,



  22   because for all Muslims having a unified nation doesn't mean I



  23   hate everybody else.  Just like in this country, it's taken us



  24   200 years for people to realize that the concept of



  25   integration is not negative.  It could be a good thing.  It







                                                                5757







   1   could be a bad thing, too, but it could be a good thing.  And



   2   you have to be aware of the fact that many people, millions of



   3   Muslims in the world, some of them sitting in this room,



   4   believe in building a Muslim state without it meaning death



   5   and destruction to other people.



   6            Mr. Odeh went to Somalia not to join Aideed's forces.



   7   And what was Aideed doing, according to Dr. Samatar?  He was



   8   preventing people from getting food.  We're talking about



   9   starvation on a level that we can't even conceptualize as we



  10   sit here in this courtroom.  You don't even have a concept of



  11   what it means to be hungry.  Hungry means what time is lunch



  12   and I want it whether or not the judge orders sandwiches.



  13   Starvation means I know I'm going to die, I'm just wondering



  14   if my children are going to die, too.  And so Mohamed Odeh



  15   went to stop it.



  16            Now, me and you, we watch it on the 6:00 news.  It



  17   sounds terrible and we ask, baby, what times the Knicks coming



  18   on?  That's it.  Other people, motivated by higher goals get



  19   involved.  Some of them people, we often call them fools.  And



  20   he left his hut and went to help somebody else eat, and



  21   there's not a shred of evidence in this case to the contrary.



  22            I don't care what Bin Laden was saying in Sudan up



  23   there eating dates and drinking juice around the beautiful



  24   house with Fadl and the rest of them.  He wasn't down in the



  25   bush with Mohamed Odeh.  He's in the bush doing God's work,







                                                                5758







   1   trying to help people live, and there's not one piece of



   2   evidence in this case to the contrary.  And you could take his



   3   letters that he wrote to his wife and compare them to



   4   statements that other people made that are totally out of



   5   context.  It doesn't work.



   6            Now, Mohamed Odeh went there.  The country was in



   7   chaos.  Samatar told us that everybody in that country was



   8   armed to the teeth.  Now, it's interesting.  He said that he



   9   trained on small arms and medicines and he took food.  And



  10   it's interesting for you to realize that Agent Anticev



  11   testified to something very important in this case, and it was



  12   going to be one of the things that we were going to put on the



  13   computers screens and show you, but it's not to be.



  14            But if you go back to his testimony, what we got



  15   Agent Anticev to reveal, though he didn't say it in his direct



  16   or his original cross, was that he left out that Mohamed Odeh



  17   told him that he went to Somalia to help the tribes that were



  18   against Aideed.  That fact was left out of that 35-page



  19   statement.  And what he told us was, well, now that I've had a



  20   chance to check my notes, I made a mistake, it should have



  21   been there.



  22            It's an important distinction.  It's an important



  23   distinction.  It is as important as telling the person who is



  24   reading this document that he was asked hypotheticals, because



  25   it tells you what his state of mind was when he was going.  He







                                                                5759







   1   went there to help the people that were against the people who



   2   were causing starvation.



   3            Now, he also told you -- I think Kherchtou said he



   4   believed that Marwan was a guy who was in southeastern Somalia



   5   in the bush, not in Mogadishu.  And Mohamed Odeh at this time



   6   wasn't up in Sudan with Bin Laden like Fadl was, scheming on



   7   how to steal $100,000 or more any chance he could get.  He



   8   wasn't like Kherchtou in Nairobi, helping people with



   9   documents.  He was in the bush.  And there's no evidence in



  10   the record whatsoever that would even suggest, let alone



  11   support, that when he went to Somalia in 1993, that he went



  12   there for no other reason but to save people's lives.



  13            Now, if somebody sitting in a cabana somewhere wanted



  14   to use that for their own personal benefit and gain, then



  15   remember Fadl told you that Bin Laden was prepared to twist



  16   religious beliefs to satisfy his own agenda.  He says -- and



  17   I'll be through with Somalia in about two minutes, believe it



  18   or not, okay?  Three minutes.



  19            He says that when he was in Somalia, he ran into Abu



  20   Hafs.  But he didn't say he ran into Abu Hafs, he says that he



  21   was at a camp, that is, Mohamed was with the Um Rahan Tribe.



  22   I know I said it wrong:  Um Rahan.  And he's in the bush



  23   working with the people, and lo and behold, here comes Abu



  24   Hafs.  They had just met, according to these other witnesses,



  25   in Mogadishu.  Now they're coming back from Mogadishu.







                                                                5760







   1            And remember, Abu Hafs went to Mogadishu disguised as



   2   a businessman to get the tribes together.  Al Qaeda was going



   3   to come in and help them, train them, like they needed



   4   training for all the killing and destruction they were going



   5   to do, but they were going to get together and now al Qaeda



   6   was going to back Aideed.  That's the story on it.



   7            Now, Mohamed Odeh doesn't know that Abu Hafs is going



   8   to that meeting.  Fadl told you in the testimony at page 283



   9   he was with Abu Hafs in the Sudan and he didn't know that Abu



  10   Hafs was going to be going to that meeting.  He only found out



  11   when he came back.  So here Abu Hafs is coming back from his



  12   meeting.  I guess it was successful.  I don't know what the



  13   evidence is.  He's coming back and he runs into Mohamed Odeh



  14   with the other side, right?  According to the government, Abu



  15   Hafs just cut a deal with the other people in Mogadishu, and



  16   when he runs into Mohamed Odeh, Mohamed Odeh is with the



  17   people who were being starved to death.



  18            How does he share Abu Hafs' intent?  They're



  19   contrary.  They clash.  They are not the same.  They are not



  20   in Somalia for the same reasons.  And I made this analogy



  21   before and I'll make it again:  Just because people go to



  22   bootcamp together, they may even serve in the same platoon



  23   together, they may even have the same sergeant, that doesn't



  24   mean that they share the same state of mind.



  25            A lot of people sign up for a lot of different







                                                                5761







   1   reasons, some because they can't get a job somewhere else,



   2   some because they want to be GI Joe, and in other cultures



   3   people serve in the military for much more diverse reasons.



   4   He doesn't have the same reasons.



   5            And what Abu Hafs tells Mohamed Odeh is, according to



   6   his statement, is what Abu Hafs was going to do in Mogadishu.



   7   Going to do.  What the purpose of the meeting was to be, not



   8   him telling him, you know, I want to know what your opinion is



   9   before I go to this meeting so we can get this straight.  No



  10   shred of state of mind.



  11            Also, some other people told you that they were in



  12   Mogadishu, according to the evidence.  Harun and Saleh were



  13   supposed to have been in Mogadishu, and according to Harun's



  14   report, he makes the statement that "our young people hit the



  15   Americans in Somalia."  That's what he said.  That's in his



  16   report.  There's not a shred of evidence in this case to



  17   support that statement, that al Qaeda members hit Americans in



  18   Mogadishu.  There is no evidence in this record to support



  19   that at any time.



  20            It's, again, people capitalizing, people trying to



  21   take credit for, people pushing their own agenda.  Abu Hafs



  22   told Odeh that al Qaeda was going to change its policy in



  23   Somalia, not that it was changed.  That's an important



  24   distinction.



  25            Now, there's also some testimony that he ran into a







                                                                5762







   1   guy name Daoud and Daoud had claimed to have been in a



   2   situation with U.N. troops.  During the testimony, I think Mr.



   3   Fitzgerald mistakenly asked him a question and he said U.N.



   4   and U.S. troops.  That's at page 1744.  But Mr. Dratel



   5   corrected it in his recross of Agent Anticev when he had the



   6   agent look at his notes and found out he left another little



   7   thing out, that it was only the U.N. troops.



   8            Now, this happened in '93.  We don't know what that



   9   situation was about.  We don't know what was the intent of



  10   Daoud, who he was with, or anything about that.  But we do



  11   know one thing.  He's also coming this way while Mohamed's in



  12   the bush helping people.



  13            Odeh subsequently went to train -- now, Mr. Karas



  14   mistakenly said that after this happened in November 1993,



  15   Mohamed Odeh left Somalia.  I think he misspoke, because the



  16   evidence shows that Mohamed Odeh stayed in Somalia and didn't



  17   leave until August of '94.  With all this talk about Somalia



  18   this and Somalia that, it is easy to make a mistake about some



  19   of these things, but it's clear that Mohamed Odeh is saying



  20   that he's there until August and that he went into the Ogaden



  21   region and it was there that he was with a group of people



  22   that got involved with a skirmish with U.N. troops, that he



  23   wasn't directly involved, but a troop ahead was directly



  24   involved.



  25            Now, the government uses that as evidence to say he







                                                                5763







   1   was in Somalia with the intent to kill Americans, but there is



   2   no evidence that the government has presented that there were



   3   any American units in the Ogaden region or that there were any



   4   Americans in the U.N. unit that this event took place around



   5   or what the circumstances of it was.



   6            Don't you need to know that?  Wouldn't you like to



   7   know that?  I bet you would like to know it if you were



   8   sitting over here.  You would want somebody to prove that up.



   9   Were there any Americans with them?  What was it all about?



  10   You may not want to know it sitting over here, but if you are



  11   sitting over here, somebody's supposed to prove that up.  I



  12   can't just walk into a courtroom and make a statement and then



  13   say that's so.



  14            The U.N. is a multinational force.  I know we think



  15   it's ours, but it's not.  It was a multinational force.  And



  16   more importantly, the government hasn't produced any evidence



  17   in this case to show that Americans were in that unit and



  18   Americans were attacked that would support an inference that



  19   Mr. Odeh was there to kill Americans.



  20            Dr. Samatar told us about these conditions in their



  21   country, and we also learned that he returned to Somalia in



  22   1997.  And in 1997 he wrote to his family and he told his



  23   family, I'm going back to Somalia.  He said he was going to do



  24   something good.  I don't think he said he was going to



  25   Somalia.







                                                                5764







   1            He also told Agent Anticev something interesting



   2   during the interview.  He told Agent Anticev, you know, I



   3   wrote to my parents and I told my friends that I was in



   4   Tanzania so they wouldn't know I'm in Somalia.  He said that



   5   during his interview.  And lo and behold, when they go to



   6   Mohamed Odeh's house what do they find?  Letters to his family



   7   saying that he's doing good.  A tape to his wife telling



   8   people to say I'm in Tanzania.  Another thing confirmed, a



   9   little tiny thing confirmed about what he said.



  10            But in 1997, he's back there to help the Somalians



  11   fight anarchy and Ethiopians.  Kherchtou, Fadl said nothing



  12   about the Ethiopians.  But there was no intent on the part of



  13   Mohamed Odeh, when he returned to Somalia in 1997, to kill any



  14   Americans.



  15            And the government put in an inventory chart that



  16   showed they were going to set up a camp, and they put in a



  17   report, I think it's 710-T, and that report talks about al



  18   Qaeda's efforts in Somalia.  But what the government does is



  19   use that on one hand and then, on the other hand, talk about



  20   somebody, Al-Fadl, being caught.



  21            And then the government says, Mohamed Odeh writes,



  22   our situation is bad here.  It's going to take thinking,



  23   planning and strategy and we're going to hit 20-fold, and the



  24   government says, remember Mohamed Odeh, patience, thinking,



  25   planning.  He's just waiting for the right opportunity to kill







                                                                5765







   1   Americans.



   2            Wrong.  He was talking about a situation in Somalia,



   3   and I guarantee you, to turn around the devastation in that



   4   country it's going to take a lot more, but at least thinking,



   5   planning, patience and a willingness to put down the people



   6   with force, if you have to, that are willing to starve to



   7   death hundreds of thousands of people.



   8            MR. RICCO:  Your Honor, this is really where I was



   9   going to stop and Mr. Wilford was going to do the forensic



  10   aspect of the summation.



  11            THE COURT:  You want to start or wish to take a



  12   break?



  13            MR. WILFORD:  Prefer we take a break, your Honor.



  14            THE COURT:  All right, we'll take our break and



  15   resume at 2:15.



  16            (Jury not present)



  17            THE COURT:  Mr. Wilford, my records show that an hour



  18   and 40 minutes have been used.



  19            MR. WILFORD:  Yes, Judge.  I'm quite sure we will



  20   finish within that time period.  Thank you.  Thank you for



  21   reminding me.



  22            THE COURT:  That's good to hear.



  23            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, as long as we're on it, I



  24   don't know when they are going to finish, but I suspect if I



  25   start around 3, I would finish by 4:30.  And I would ask you







                                                                5766







   1   if I start at 3:15, if they wouldn't mind taking the extra 15



   2   minutes rather than break mine up.  I may ask them to make



   3   that choice depending on -- of course, you can't predict



   4   precisely, but that's where I think we are.



   5            THE COURT:  You would like to finish today?



   6            MR. COHN:  I would like to if it doesn't



   7   inconvenience the jury and they don't look like they're antsy.



   8            THE COURT:  We're adjourned to 2:15.



   9            (Luncheon recess)



  10



  11



  12



  13



  14



  15



  16



  17



  18



  19



  20



  21



  22



  23



  24



  25







                                                                5767







   1                         AFTERNOON SESSION



   2                             2:15 p.m.



   3            (In open court; jury present)



   4            THE COURT:  Good afternoon.  Mr. Wilford.



   5            MR. WILFORD:  Thank you, your Honor.  Good afternoon,



   6   ladies and gentlemen.



   7            JURORS:  Good afternoon.



   8            THE COURT:  How you doing?



   9            JURORS:  Fine.



  10            THE COURT:  You notice, I ask every witness that.  So



  11   you were expecting it.  It's a nice way to relax everybody and



  12   get everybody to focus that this is more than just getting up



  13   there and testifying.



  14            I want to start, before I even talk about the



  15   evidence there is one point I want to bring up with you, and



  16   it's real simple.  That point is that Mr. Mohamed Odeh is not



  17   guilty.  It's a simple point, real simple point.  But in order



  18   for you to arrive at that point, you don't have to just



  19   examine the evidence.  I am going to show you why the evidence



  20   that the government chiefly relies on does not point to proof



  21   beyond a reasonable doubt.  It doesn't rise to that level.  I



  22   am going to discuss that very shortly.  But it's going to take



  23   more than that.



  24            You know, we have sat in this courtroom since



  25   January, heard testimony since February.  It's a major case.







                                                                5768







   1   There are over 230 people dead.  Thousands of people injured.



   2   And you, each and every one of you have to go home, talk to



   3   your wives, your children, your family, your neighbors, and



   4   answer them a question, because at the end of this case the



   5   only thing you can do is say that Mohamed Odeh is not guilty,



   6   because that's what the evidence tells you to do.  All of you



   7   will have to go home and answer that question.  And the



   8   question is going to be real simple:  How could you do that?



   9   How could you find the guy not guilty, there is 233 people



  10   dead.  They blew the embassies up.  How could you find them



  11   not guilty?  There is one word:  Courage.  Courage.  You have



  12   to be courageous enough to live up to the oath that



  13   Mr. Kenneally gave you when you sat in this box as jurors.



  14   All of you swore.  You didn't just say it, you swore that if



  15   the evidence that the government produces against Mohamed Odeh



  16   did not rise to the level of proof beyond a reasonable doubt,



  17   that you would say Mohamed Odeh is not guilty.  Courage.



  18            You also have to be courageous to sit here and listen



  19   to me and all the other lawyers that are going to be talking



  20   to you for a long time.  But the real courage, ladies and



  21   gentlemen, is going to come from within.  It will be your



  22   ability to live up to your oath and the world, the world.  Not



  23   just people in this courtroom, not just your family.  That



  24   when we as a country do something, we do it right.  Our



  25   justice system works, and if the government doesn't produce







                                                                5769







   1   evidence that satisfies you and you and you and you and you



   2   and you and all of you beyond a reasonable doubt, then you



   3   will find Mr. Mohamed Odeh not guilty.



   4            Now, having said that, this case, for the government



   5   and for Mr. Odeh, comes down really, when you cut through all



   6   the everything, all the bayat, the Bin Laden proclamations, it



   7   comes down to simple physical evidence.  There is forensic



   8   evidence in this case.  There is things in this case that you



   9   can't change.  I can make an argument about anything.  I can



  10   try to convince you that it's snowing outside right now and I



  11   can put together all kinds of inferences to try to make you



  12   believe that.  But if you go outside and the snow doesn't hit



  13   you on the head, that's an irrefutable fact.  I can't change



  14   that.  As long as we are in a cocoon, I can argue to you and



  15   say anything.  But there is physical evidence in this case



  16   that can't be changed.



  17            For instance, there is fingerprint evidence.  The



  18   fingerprint evidence -- remember the agents that testified,



  19   Agent Hollars testified about fingerprint evidence, and he



  20   told you that everybody has ridges on their hands and their



  21   palms and everybody has oils, and when you touch something, it



  22   might not be able to be recovered but sometimes it is.  If you



  23   do, it means something particular happened.  It means that a



  24   person touched a particular object.  Mr. Mohamed Odeh's



  25   fingers touched several items.  The Teach Yourself Swahili







                                                                5770







   1   book had 25 of his fingerprints.  We know for sure that



   2   Mohamed Odeh handled that book.  The hotel room, 107A, I



   3   believe it is, that Mr. Mohamed Odeh says in his statement was



   4   the room that Saleh was staying in, Mr. Odeh's fingerprint was



   5   found on the back of that door.  That doesn't mean that he



   6   rented the room, because the registry doesn't show it in his



   7   name.  As a matter of fact, the government in its summation



   8   showed you the piece of evidence which says that Mr. Mohamed



   9   Odeh rented it in room 102.  He registered in the room.



  10   That's a piece of evidence.  However, his fingerprint on the



  11   back of that door in 107 lets us know that whatever room he



  12   ventured in, he spent time in 107.



  13            Let's look at the Crown exercise book, Government's



  14   Exhibit 704.  This enlargement comes from that book.  It's a



  15   part of it.  That exhibit is a small notebook, and that



  16   notebook has Mr. Odeh's prints on it -- I am sorry, does not



  17   have his prints on it.  It was recovered from his home.  I



  18   just made a mistake.  It could be costly.  But I want to say



  19   it again.  This book -- let me put on my gloves first.  You



  20   can tell I'm not a doctor.



  21            704.  This book contains this item, according to the



  22   government's proof.  This book did not have 25 Mohamed Odeh



  23   fingerprints on it.  Didn't have 15, didn't have 10, didn't



  24   have any.  It had zero.  It had one fingerprint that the



  25   government was able to recover that the FBI found, and that







                                                                5771







   1   was the fingerprint of Mustafa, not Mohamed Odeh, Mustafa.



   2   What does that tell you?  It was found in Mohamed Odeh's



   3   house, yes, OK.  Does it show you that he handled it?  No.



   4   That's not proof beyond a reasonable doubt.  It does show you,



   5   however, that Mustafa handled this book.  That's what the



   6   proof shows you.  Don't be confused.  You may be asked to make



   7   inferences that Mr. Odeh drew this.  The only proof we have in



   8   this case that shows that anybody handled this book is



   9   Mustafa.



  10            When you look at Government's Exhibit 702, which was



  11   an inventory -- this is Government's Exhibit 702, this



  12   inventory written in Arabic and translated into English.  This



  13   document found in Mohamed Odeh's house doesn't have Mohamed



  14   Odeh's fingerprints on it.  It has Mustafa's fingerprints on



  15   it.  Think about it now.  What does that tell us?  It tells us



  16   that Mustafa handled it.  It's written in Arabic.  Doesn't



  17   tell us that Mohamed Odeh wrote it, doesn't tell us that he



  18   handled it.  It's in his house.  We know that Mustafa has been



  19   to Mohamed's house because in his statement Mohamed Odeh said



  20   Mustafa spent the night at my house before.  So he had access



  21   to his home.  He's there.  It's not like some stranger.  This



  22   is a friend of his, somebody that he knows.  They spent time



  23   together.  It's not uncommon for somebody to spend time at



  24   your home.  If somebody came to your home and left a document



  25   there and it is something that he owned, their fingerprints







                                                                5772







   1   would be on it.  The fingerprints show that it was not



   2   Mohamed's, it was in fact Mustafa's.



   3            There were other fingerprints recovered in this case.



   4   I am not going to detail them all.  But the fingerprints from



   5   Harun were recovered at 43 Runda Estates.  The fingerprints



   6   from Harun were recovered from the pickup truck.  Did anybody



   7   come in here and testify that Mohamed Odeh's fingerprints were



   8   found at 43 Runda Estates?  No.  Did anybody come in here and



   9   say that Mohamed Odeh's fingerprints were found in any



  10   vehicles involved in this case?  No.



  11            The fact that his fingerprint was, however, found at



  12   the Hilltop Hotel establishes that he was there.  Corroborates



  13   the statement.  Mohamed didn't say I wasn't at the hilltop.



  14   As a matter of fact, it corroborates it.  He said I spent the



  15   night in room 107.  Guess what is in the back of the door.



  16   His fingerprint.  That means he was there.  The government



  17   didn't take his fingerprint and put it on the door, they found



  18   it there.  It corroborates the statement.  It shows the



  19   truthfulness of the statement.



  20            One thing it doesn't do, however, is create his



  21   agreement to participate in a bombing anywhere in this world,



  22   or his agreement to participate in killing Americans anywhere



  23   in the world.  It doesn't create his agreement or his



  24   participation in any of the conspiracies charged against



  25   Mohamed Odeh.







                                                                5773







   1            The court will instruct you that mere presence in a



   2   place or with people, even with knowledge, even with



   3   knowledge, is not sufficient for you to find Mr. Odeh guilty



   4   unless the prosecution can establish his agreement to



   5   participate in the conspiracy.  That's not here.  Don't get it



   6   confused.  There's a lot of evidence in this case, a lot of



   7   words going around, a lot of arguments being made.  But keep



   8   fast to the truth, keep fast to the evidence, and keep fast to



   9   the instructions this his Honor is going to give you, and it



  10   points one way:  Odeh is not guilty.



  11            The government spent a lot of time in this case with



  12   another piece of forensic evidence, and that piece of forensic



  13   evidence is the explosive residue, the explosive residue that



  14   was found on Mr. Odeh's clothes.  They were found on these



  15   pieces of clothing:  His pants that were found in this bag,



  16   the wrap-around sarong -- one of the things that we introduced



  17   into evidence was the box that the sarong was in.  I am not



  18   going to waste time with it, but you remember the box that I



  19   walked past all of you here -- and the T-shirt.  Three



  20   articles of clothing.  It's interesting.  Some things just



  21   don't jive.  Agent Whitworth says I examined these particular



  22   items because they appeared to be soiled and stained.  Wait a



  23   minute.  Whitworth is a collections expert.  He goes out and



  24   collects evidence.  For whatever reason, in his mind a stain



  25   on clothing -- there ain't no stain on the jeans, there is no







                                                                5774







   1   stain on a T-shirt, there is a stain on the pants, but for



   2   whatever reason, that stain must be some residue.  Every other



   3   expert that testified in this case said we are talking about



   4   residue, we are talking about something microscopic.  We are



   5   talking about something that you cannot see with the naked



   6   eye.  For whatever reason, Agent Whitmore decided to testify



   7   about those particular articles.  It doesn't square with the



   8   fact that there was a stain on it.  We are talking about



   9   microscopic.  I don't care what side called an expert.  All of



  10   them got up there and said we are talking about particles.  As



  11   a matter of fact, one witness said if you took an aspirin



  12   tablet and broke it up, the millions and billions of particles



  13   would be what we are talking about, residue, little traces,



  14   tiny particles that they have to get a microscope.  Think



  15   about the tests that were done to see whether or not there was



  16   residue.  There's the EGIS test, microscopic analysis.



  17   They're going through all sorts of tests just to be able to



  18   say there is something there.  This is not something that you



  19   can say wait a minute, there's a stain on his clothes, must be



  20   TNT.  Remember, I asked Agent Mount, I said if you bumped into



  21   the embassy, oh, I got TNT on me.  No.  But Agent Whitmore



  22   comes and testifies that he has to test it because it got



  23   stains.  The government says yeah, yeah, we got proof, we knew



  24   there was, for whatever reason Agent Whitworth tested the



  25   clothes, he tested them.  I am not disputing the fact that







                                                                5775







   1   residue of TNT was found on them.  When you look at that



   2   sarong, please use the gloves, and look at that stain.  My



   3   vision is horrible and I can see the stain, even without my



   4   glasses.  That's not microscopic residue.  But that's what he



   5   said.



   6            Remember, Dr. Lloyd said that a thimbleful, a



   7   thimbleful -- everybody knows what a thimble is.  I remember



   8   my grandmother used to sew with a thimble, by hand.  A



   9   thimbleful -- we are not talking about a big giant -- of



  10   explosive, of TNT could contaminate 10 to 20 million people.



  11   That's his testimony.  I didn't make that up.  The man's an



  12   expert.  The government didn't object, no.  Dr. Lloyd is not



  13   an expert.  He qualified as an expert in this courtroom.  He



  14   testified and that's what he told you.  That's a scientific



  15   fact.  So what we are really talking about is something very



  16   small.



  17            The FBI did not measure the amount of TNT, and that



  18   becomes significant, see, because if we are talking about



  19   these little tiny particles that could be on anybody --



  20   remember Dr. Lloyd's testimony.  He said as I sit here now,



  21   because I examined the clothing I'm probably contaminated, and



  22   if you put me through the EGIS I'd pop up positive for



  23   explosive residue, if you wanted to establish that there is



  24   TNT residue -- that sounds horrible.  When you first heard



  25   about it, wait a minute, they got the TNT residue on his







                                                                5776







   1   clothes.  What are we talking about here?  But then when you



   2   stop and you get the scientific fact of how small and



   3   minuscule this is, it takes on a different tenor.



   4            The FBI, remember, I asked Agent Mount the first time



   5   she came to testify, I said, Agent Mount, can you quantify the



   6   amount of TNT that was recovered?  She said oh, no, can't be



   7   done.  She comes back.  I ask her again, can you quantify the



   8   amount of TNT?  Yes, you can, but we just didn't do it in this



   9   case.  OK, they didn't do it.  Maybe it's not significant.



  10   Dr. Lloyd got up there and testified.  Dr. Lloyd said to you



  11   that it is significant.  And he said the reason it is



  12   significant is because the more TNT that you find means that



  13   the person that was handling it more than just happened to



  14   accidentally come into contact with it or somehow become



  15   contaminated.  That's important.  Think about it.  If you're



  16   handling the TNT, you're going to have more of it on you.



  17            Now, you are looking for proof beyond a reasonable



  18   doubt.  Hold on to that courage that I talked to you about.



  19   You are looking at the scientific fact.  The government



  20   doesn't tell you we found TNT on Mohamed Odeh's clothes.  They



  21   just tell you we found TNT.  They don't tell you how much they



  22   found.  If you want to be accurate and fair, then you say,



  23   well, it might be a nanogram.  That's what Dr. Lloyd called



  24   it, a nanogram.  It might just be that nanogram.  It might be



  25   just a little tiny piece or speck, something so tiny, so tiny.







                                                                5777







   1   That's what it might be.  But there's no proof that it's not.



   2   The government wants you to accept that because there is TNT



   3   residue, yes, that he had the ability to do it.  I am



   4   suggesting to you that when you come before a jury and you



   5   have a case of this sort, they don't have to use any



   6   investigative technique that I suggest.  I am just suggesting



   7   to you that as a quantum of proof you want more proof than



   8   that.  You want more than just to have to guess, to surmise,



   9   to try to understand what it is.  Put it in the lab, test it,



  10   OK, on his clothes we found X amount of TNT.  Large amount?



  11   We found a milligram of TNT.  Large amount?  What we really



  12   found was a nanogram.  What we really found was something that



  13   we don't have the capability of measuring, it was so small.



  14   But you'll never know.  They just want you to say TNT,



  15   conviction.  It doesn't work like that.  There is some



  16   question that has to be asked there.



  17            And by not quantifying it, it really maximizes the



  18   effect of that evidence.  Now you've got maximum return on a



  19   little bit of evidence.  We are talking about maybe a speck



  20   all the way to conviction, because we don't know how much it



  21   is.



  22            This is important, ladies and gentlemen.  It's really



  23   important because the evidence that connects Mohamed Odeh to



  24   these crimes that the government is relying on is not



  25   overwhelming, it's underwhelming, and if you pay close







                                                                5778







   1   attention to it and analyze it, which you must, it makes a



   2   difference.



   3            You know, when you really look at this evidence, this



   4   TNT evidence, it turns from a damning piece of evidence into



   5   the microscopic speck that it really is.  And you ask



   6   yourselves, well, gee, you know, Mr. Karas stood up in his



   7   summation and said to you -- and I was really surprised by



   8   this because Judge Sand hasn't said anything, Mr. Ricco hasn't



   9   said anything.  But Mr. Karas said Mohamed Odeh's defense



  10   argues to you, says to you, they make the argument to you,



  11   they discuss the fact that the TNT got on Mr. Mohamed's



  12   clothing maybe by contamination in Kenya, right, when it was



  13   handled by the Kenyan authorities, maybe from being on a



  14   table, maybe from being on the lap of a Tyvex suit.  That's



  15   nice.  It's not our theory.  The first time I am suggesting



  16   any view of the evidence to you is now.  Yes, we did ask



  17   questions.  Yes, we did want to know what the chain of custody



  18   was.  It's important.  You need to know that in assessing and



  19   making a determination as to how much weight, how much value



  20   you decide to give to this evidence.



  21            The burden of proof is on the government.  Mr. Odeh



  22   has to prove nothing.  When you look at the evidence in this



  23   case, we know from Mr. Mohamed's statement -- and I am just



  24   suggesting it to you.  We will get to the point I will tell



  25   you where I think the evidence shows you these traces of TNT







                                                                5779







   1   came from.  But Mr. Mohamed Odeh in his statement tells you



   2   that the bag and pair of paints were given to him by Saleh,



   3   and that Saleh and Harun stayed out all night on August 5.  At



   4   page 27 of the statement, he says probably at Harun's house,



   5   43 Runda Estates, the place that Harun rented, the place where



   6   there were significant traces of TNT recovered, aluminum,



   7   pieces of wire detonators, all evidence being significant with



   8   a place where a bomb was constructed.  Further, Harun's truck



   9   also had traces of TNT recovered from it.



  10            The chain of custody becomes important because the



  11   government is saying to you trust this evidence, the traces of



  12   TNT found on Mohamed's clothes, because it was preserved and



  13   tested in an uncontaminated state once it came into the



  14   possession of the FBI.  However, there are several problems



  15   with that.  Chain of custody, as is every chain, is only as



  16   strong as its weakest link.  Notwithstanding the FBI using



  17   Tyvex suits and gloves, vacuuming items recovered from the



  18   bag, signing items in and out, there are weak links in the



  19   chain.



  20            First, the items recovered from Mohamed were received



  21   by Kenyan CID officer named Mutunga when Mohamed was delivered



  22   from Pakistan to Kenya.  Agent Mutunga didn't wear a Tyvex



  23   suit or gloves, and he visited the bomb site.  That is a



  24   potential source of contamination.  All I am telling you is



  25   that this chain of custody is not as strong as it appears to







                                                                5780







   1   be.  Mutunga took the items and placed them in his locker,



   2   somewhere other than CID headquarters.  He placed them on a



   3   table that was not protected with forensic paper, as it was



   4   when Agent Whitworth and Agent McLaughlin took pictures of the



   5   items, again a potential for contamination.  No one had



   6   anything on their feet or Tyvex suits on when the items were



   7   turned over in Ed Muchari's office from Kenyan CID to the FBI.



   8   Another possible source of potential contamination.  The



   9   integrity of the chain of custody is challenged by the



  10   disappearance, separation, whatever you want to call it, of



  11   Mohamed Odeh's money from his other personal belongings, the



  12   money, the watch and the eyeglasses.  Somehow they get



  13   separated.  Somehow, in 1999 the money is in a safe in Kenya



  14   and Mohamed Odeh is here in America, in custody.  Everything



  15   is together.  Remember the list we went through with Mr. Ricco



  16   on cross-examination of Mr. Mutunga, money, eyeglasses, watch.



  17   Somehow it gets separated.  It gets back together because



  18   Agent Doran makes a phone call and writes a letter.  Suddenly,



  19   oops, here's the money, the money comes back in.



  20            Agent Doran also puts a little chink in the chain of



  21   custody.  She signs the same letter.  Same evidence, same



  22   time, two different dates.  What happened?  Mistake.  OK, it



  23   was a mistake, fine.  Mistakes happen.  Even with the FBI



  24   mistakes happen.  I didn't do that to try to embarrass the



  25   agent.  I did it to show you mistakes happen.  And when







                                                                5781







   1   mistakes happen, you don't have a reliable chain.  Remember,



   2   Mr. Ricco asked Mr. Mutunga, where did this jacket come from?



   3   It's a big green jacket.  I don't know how it was missed.



   4   Somehow this jacket was missed.  And Mr. Ricco asked him, was



   5   it a mistake?  And he said no.  How do you explain it?  I



   6   don't know.  But we do know that the list covering the



   7   transfer indicated that the jacket wasn't there.



   8            Another opportunity for unexplained contamination.



   9            This becomes important.  You know, when mistakes



  10   happen, OK, sometimes they don't mean that much.  But when



  11   we're talking about the potential for contamination from a



  12   microscopic particle, it is very important that we keep these



  13   situations contamination-free, that we don't allow that



  14   opportunity to happen.  Didn't happen here.



  15            But, you know, I suggest to you, I submit to you that



  16   the evidence in this case shows you where the traces of TNT



  17   and PETN found on those items of clothing came from.  The



  18   evidence in this case shows you that this exhibit right here



  19   was used to grind TNT and PETN and mix them together,



  20   whatever.  Traces of both of those were found.  And where was



  21   this recovered from?  Tanzania.  Whose fingerprint is on that



  22   grinder?  Fahad.  The man who has $6,000 to spend on an



  23   explosives training course, his fingerprint is found on that



  24   grinder.  OK, what does it mean?  It means the following.



  25   Amongst the items found in Mr. Mohamed Odeh's bag was a







                                                                5782







   1   magazine called Humsafar.  On the Humsafar magazine was a



   2   fingerprint.  Whose fingerprint?  Fahad's, who was traveling



   3   on the same plane as Mr. Mohamed Odeh.  Where was the magazine



   4   found?  In the bag.  Where was the clothing found that had



   5   traces of TNT?  The bag.



   6            We asked the experts, if these items were in the bag



   7   and they came in contact with one another, was it possible,



   8   likely, that the contamination would go from the contaminated



   9   items to the uncontaminated?  Yes.  You can see the ridges on



  10   your hands and your palm.  We are talking about stuff that



  11   could fit inside the ridges that you still couldn't see that



  12   were on that magazine that was put in that bag and got on to



  13   Mr. Odeh's clothing.  The government sits there and tells you



  14   there wasn't any PETN in the Nairobi bombing.  Absolutely



  15   correct.  Absolutely correct.  But if the traces of PETN and



  16   TNT that were found on Mr. Odeh's clothing came from him



  17   traveling with Fahad and Fahad sticking that magazine in his



  18   bag, those microscopic particles of TNT and PETN, that's where



  19   it came from.  That's the argument that we are telling you



  20   about.  There is no discussion about maybe it came from Kenya.



  21   No.  Remember what I said?  You've got forensic evidence here.



  22   We are not trying to play a game.  This is where it came from.



  23   It's an accurate inference, not a reasonable inference.  We



  24   know Fahad was handling that TNT and the PETN.  We know Fahad



  25   handled that magazine.  We know that when you handle TNT and







                                                                5783







   1   PETN, especially when you grind it, your hands get loaded.



   2   Remember I asked the experts?  Your hands get loaded.  He



   3   handled that magazine.  The more reasoned and accurate



   4   inference is that the TNT and PETN found on Mohamed's clothes



   5   came from Fahad.



   6            I want you to do the following, ladies and gentlemen.



   7   When Mr. Fitzgerald stands up in his rebuttal, ask him, why



   8   didn't the government tell you about Fahad's fingerprints on



   9   the grinder in Tanzania when they were doing its summation?



  10   Why didn't the government tell you about the PETN found in



  11   Tanzania when they were doing their summation?  Why didn't the



  12   government tell you about the Fahad fingerprint on the



  13   magazine when they were doing their summation?  Ask him, was



  14   it because it didn't fit your theory?  I submit to you that's



  15   why.  But ask him anyway.  Ask him.  Of course you can't ask



  16   the question, but have that in your mind.  Let him tell you



  17   how it got there and why they didn't tell you this.



  18            You know, an unknown microscopic amount, a nanogram



  19   of explosives the source of which could have been several



  20   different origins, clearly such evidence cannot provide a



  21   pillar upon which you, the judges of the facts, can rely upon



  22   to find Mohamed Odeh guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.



  23   Therefore, if the government is relying upon this evidence,



  24   which it is, the microscopic traces of TNT found on Mohamed's



  25   clothes, for any purpose, then I submit to you that you should







                                                                5784







   1   reject that proof as insufficient.  You should reject that



   2   proof as not rising to proof beyond a reasonable doubt, and



   3   then you must find Mohamed Odeh not guilty.



   4            I am going to turn to one of the more interesting



   5   pieces of evidence in this case, this diagram, this book,



   6   Government's Exhibit 704.  You know, a lot, a lot, a lot has



   7   been said about this sketch, what it means, has to mean.  This



   8   was a sketch of the embassy, this is a sketch of the embassy,



   9   this is a sketch of, as Mr. Karas referred to it, a bomb



  10   blast.  That's what the government said.  The government seeks



  11   to argue by inference that Government's Exhibit 704,



  12   particularly these particular pages, somehow is a sketch of



  13   the embassy and a bomb blast which was created during



  14   surveillance of the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi and used to



  15   facilitate the bombing.  Otherwise it doesn't make any sense.



  16   That is what they have to argue for these little sketches to



  17   make any sense.  The sketch is inaccurate, both the so-called



  18   embassy portion and the bomb portion.



  19            Mr. Francisco, would you be kind enough to put up



  20   Government's Exhibit 805G.  If you look at 805G, in that



  21   circle you see a box.  Do you see the box?  Everybody see the



  22   box.  You look here on the enlargement, there's a box.



  23   Corroboration, embassy.  Drawing of the embassy.  One small



  24   point.  Remember when Ambassador Bushnell was testifying and I



  25   asked her the question, these tents and things that you see







                                                                5785







   1   there, were they up before the blast?  Her answer was no.



   2   Nothing in that circle.  What does it mean then?  If you want



   3   to argue that this is the embassy, a drawing of the embassy,



   4   it's not accurate.  The box wasn't there.  There is no way,



   5   even if this was supposed to be a sketch of the embassy, that



   6   Mr. Odeh could possibly have known that they were going to put



   7   a tent up there.  No way.  Impossible.



   8            The bomb portion, the so-called bomb portion is



   9   inconsistent with Mohamed Odeh AA, and Mohamed Odeh AA was



  10   created by the government's expert, depicting the shock wave



  11   pattern of concentric circles going outward, not the snow cone



  12   shape depicted here.



  13            It is important when you compare this document -- we



  14   had it enlarged for a reason, two very important reasons.  You



  15   see, if you look right here, there is a 2 in a circle, a 3 in



  16   a circle, a 5 in circle.  Somebody numbered these pages.



  17   Somebody numbered the pages to make sure that they didn't get



  18   lost, and if they did get misplaced, you know that they came



  19   from this book.  They were shuffled around, they were tested.



  20   Now when you look at it you say OK, first thing I need to know



  21   is where is page 4, right?  The government argued that they



  22   were the next pages in their summation.  3, 5.  Somewhere I



  23   learned that 4 comes between 3 and 5.  So they are not the



  24   next pages, number 1.  OK.  When you look at this exhibit, and



  25   you will have the actual exhibit in the back, somebody







                                                                5786







   1   numbered it and put the number 4 on one of these pages.  So



   2   you say OK, there's the number 4, what is Wilford all excited



   3   about?  What I am excited about is that when you compare the



   4   page that has 4 on it, it doesn't match, because this writing



   5   is not there.  It's not there.  It's not the page 4.  I don't



   6   know.  Maybe it's no big thing.  But I don't think it is



   7   enough to rely on to say somehow this is the next page, this



   8   is what it means.  There is a missing page.  Ask the



   9   government to tell you where that missing page is.



  10            This is a major case.  There is no evidence in this



  11   case that the handwriting in this book matched Mohamed Odeh's



  12   handwriting, none.  None whatsoever.  None whatsoever.  You



  13   heard a witness who was a handwriting expert come in and



  14   testify.  Mr. Osborn testified that as far as he knew the FBI



  15   had at least 21 document examiners.  He told you that they had



  16   the ability to do handwriting analysis based on Arabic



  17   writing.  Was there a comparison done in this case?  If there



  18   was, we don't know about it.  There is no evidence of it



  19   before you.  No evidence to say that this handwriting is



  20   Mr. Odeh's.  But wait a minute, did they have it in Mr. Odeh's



  21   handwriting?  Could we show that exhibit, please.  This item,



  22   Odeh 83 in evidence, was recovered from Mohamed Odeh's home.



  23   It has his handwriting on it.  He signed it.  The government



  24   could very easily have taken this document and this document,



  25   given it to a handwriting expert and said do these matches







                                                                5787







   1   match?  Did they do it?  No.  But Mohamed Odeh, he's a



   2   technical adviser, found in his home.  Wait a minute.  A case



   3   of this magnitude, this importance, we are not going to say



   4   where is a handwriting match?  Mr. Fitzgerald had this guy



   5   write some stuff down and compare it from something that was



   6   supposed to be of Mr. El Hage right here in this courtroom,



   7   from things as small as an ampersand sign, and the expert was



   8   able to do it right here in the courtroom.  What about these



   9   21 experts?  Why didn't the government take one of those 21



  10   experts, give them the known sample of Mr. Odeh's and say



  11   look, we think this belongs to Mr. Odeh, it's his writing,



  12   tell us if it's right?  Did it happen?  No, didn't happen.



  13   But because we say it, because it's our theory, it works.



  14   Wait a minute.  We are talking about proof beyond a reasonable



  15   doubt here.  We are talking about being courageous here.  It's



  16   easy enough to do.  Mr. Fitzgerald did it in five minutes



  17   right in the courtroom.  You mean to tell me we got all this



  18   investigation going on and it can't be done?  It wasn't done,



  19   we know that.



  20            Or maybe they did one and it didn't match.  I don't



  21   know.



  22            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection, your Honor.



  23            THE COURT:  Sustained, stricken.



  24            MR. WILFORD:  There is no evidence in this case to



  25   establish that the handwriting in that book with Mustafa's







                                                                5788







   1   fingerprint on it is the handwriting on Mohamed Odeh.  None.



   2            You have the opportunity, not as experts but as human



   3   beings, to make the comparison, because we put in other



   4   evidence from Mohamed Odeh's home that has writing on it, that



   5   has numbers on it, that has 3's on it.  None of those 3's



   6   match what the government tells you is a 3.  Well, I don't



   7   know, let's turn it this way.  Or maybe let's turn it this



   8   way.  We can make it whatever we want it to be.  They tell you



   9   that's a 3.  I don't know what it is.  And then they argue



  10   that this is a 3 because it is the number of meters of the



  11   flatbed.  There is examples here.  We know this is Mohamed



  12   Odeh's handwriting.  It deals with the fish business.  There



  13   is fish and lobsters, a lot of examples of this, and a



  14   notebook that contains a lot of these particular items is G3.



  15   There is a series of them.  Compare the numbers.  When you



  16   look at A3, which is the first document I showed you, it has a



  17   signature on it, and there are measurements on that page.



  18   Maybe, I don't know.  The government wants this to be a 3.  If



  19   that's inches and feet that match with the drawing, how could



  20   that be meters?  You will see there is no mixing of metric and



  21   nonmetric in Mr. Odeh's work.  They want you to believe that



  22   because that's their theory.



  23            It is also logical that directional points on this



  24   drawing should match with the embassy.  They put 252, I



  25   believe, next to 704, the page numbered 5, and it matches the







                                                                5789







   1   embassy.  And you put this one next and it's supposed to



   2   match.  You know, if it fits the theory, it matches.  But is



   3   that proof beyond a reasonable doubt that is going to satisfy



   4   you?  The only testimony in this case about anything about a



   5   truck, when a truck was purchased by Swedan.  He didn't ask



   6   how long was the truck going to be.  He asked how much could



   7   it hold.  Sheik Swedan asked how much can it hold.  He didn't



   8   say is it three feet long.  If this is supposed to be used as



   9   some sort of guide for people to blow up an embassy, don't you



  10   think there would have been a question about how long it was,



  11   if this is supposed to be a 3?



  12            And think about this.  You know, it's amazing.



  13   Mohamed Odeh is in Witu.  In his statement he tells you he had



  14   to go to Malindi to Mombasa, by bus from Mombasa to Nairobi.



  15   This is supposed to be the sketch.  We need this sketch so



  16   that we can know what the embassy looks like, so that we can



  17   say hey, you have to go down this road, make this left, put



  18   the truck here, boom.  What the heck is it doing in Witu when



  19   this is in Nairobi?  And the government says yes, this sketch,



  20   this is the bomb sketch.



  21            I ask you a real simple question.  If it is supposed



  22   to be used by the people who're going to blow up the bomb,



  23   there is no testimony that somebody asked can we see the



  24   sketch?  This sketch is found in a room in a book with



  25   Mustafa's fingerprint on it on August 25, 1998.  It is not







                                                                5790







   1   found in the hotel, and it is not found in Mohamed Odeh's bag.



   2   But the government is still going to tell you yeah, it matches



   3   up, this is it, boom, we got it.  And this, this blast cone?



   4   I don't know if it's a snow cone, a fishing net hanging off



   5   the back of a boat to catch fish.  It can be whatever you want



   6   it to be.  But we are not talking about that.  We are talking



   7   about what the evidence proves in this case.



   8            You know, the government also argued that they



   9   couldn't even ask Mr. Odeh about the handwriting, about the



  10   book, the sketches in the book, because they didn't have it.



  11   Well, small problem with that.  They had it on August 25.



  12   Yes, it was still in custody in Kenya on August 25.  Mohamed



  13   Odeh.  Guess who was still being questioned on August 25.  And



  14   I suggest to you that it is not only reasonable and accurate



  15   to infer that he was still being questioned, because when he



  16   was asked to get on a plane to come to America, the testimony



  17   is that he was still being questioned.  Bomb sketch.  It's



  18   his.  Show it to him.  Hey, buddy, check this out.  He has



  19   told everything else, this is this, this is that, I know these



  20   people, I did this, I did that.  Ask him about this.  It



  21   wasn't done.  You don't have that?  We had it, just didn't ask



  22   him about it.



  23            They never even had an expert come in here and



  24   testify to you about what this means.  They had Agent Gorman



  25   come in and tell you by looking at the documents taken from







                                                                5791







   1   Harun's house in the Comoros that this document had something



   2   to do with explosives.  Gee, Agent Gorman, take a look at



   3   this.  What does it mean?  Wasn't done.



   4            The government made a very interesting argument.



   5   They said on the one hand, Mohamed Odeh is an explosives



   6   expert.  On the other hand, he is so silly in his explosives



   7   knowledge that he thinks a bomb is going to blow up like this.



   8   Well you just can't have it both ways.  It's one way or the



   9   other.  I submit to you, ladies and gentlemen, the evidence



  10   doesn't support the interpretation that the government forces



  11   for that document.



  12            You know, clear example.  When the government



  13   introduced this document, they didn't have any expert come in



  14   here, say what they did with that trace evidence.  When they



  15   thought they had something that could be forensically



  16   supported, they promptly and prominently displayed it to you



  17   through an expert.  Not with that document.  What the



  18   government does, to coin a phrase, is tapdance, choreographs a



  19   dance around the document to make it what they want it to be,



  20   because there is no identification of the author of that



  21   document being Mohamed Odeh.  There is no connection with that



  22   document being of Mohamed Odeh, except for it being found in



  23   his house.



  24            You know, Arabic is read from right to left, but the



  25   government turned the sketch around.  I didn't hear anybody







                                                                5792







   1   testify or say that you have to read Arabic upside down to



   2   make sure it works.  It's not there.  Talk about tapdance.



   3   That's what you do when you try to make a theory fit in the



   4   absence of solid forensic truth.



   5            When you ask the government these questions in



   6   relation to that -- I am going to repeat them but I want you



   7   to remember them.  Nothing at all was asked of Mohamed about



   8   these drawings.  Why?  Where is page 4?  I repeat, where is



   9   page 4?  Where is page 4?  Where is the page 4 that goes in



  10   this book, that fits between this 3 and this 5?  Not any page



  11   4, that page 4.



  12            Ask yourself, when Mr. Fitzgerald gets up in his



  13   rebuttal, why did they say the sketches were the next page



  14   when they're not?  Remember, Mr. Odeh didn't put those tiny



  15   numbers on that book.  I didn't.  Those numbers were put there



  16   by the FBI in order to keep track of what was going on.



  17   However, the government never brought those numbers to your



  18   attention.  They never said this is page 3 and this is page 4.



  19   They couldn't, because it's 3 and 5.  Never happened.



  20            I want to reiterate one thing.  Did you ever hear any



  21   expert talk about a blast cone, any expert?  The first time we



  22   heard anything about a blast cone was when Mr. Karas stood up



  23   and said this is a blast cone.  I never heard that expression



  24   before.  We had a lot of experts up here.  They could have



  25   called.  I submit you don't have to and you should not accept







                                                                5793







   1   this proof.  Why didn't they ask Agent Gorman about it?



   2            You know, the government argues that Mohamed's



   3   statement reflects what is in this sketch, because it



   4   discusses in his statement that the truck was positioned



   5   incorrectly.  However, a close examination makes it crumble



   6   under the weight and the reality of the truth.  Remember,



   7   Mohamed Odeh was flying to Pakistan when the bomb exploded in



   8   Nairobi.  He was taken into custody immediately upon landing.



   9   He was taken from Pakistan to Nairobi.  He was held, and here



  10   is the word again, in communicado from that time on.  In other



  11   words, not only did he not speak to anybody other than law



  12   enforcement personnel, he didn't see any TV, he didn't hear



  13   any radio.  He didn't have any intimate access.  He had no



  14   knowledge what was going on in the outside world except what



  15   he was told.  He had no way of knowing the number of deaths,



  16   the number of injuries, whether the driver coordinated the



  17   blast, where the truck was kept prior to the blast, or



  18   anything else about the bombing unless it was provided to him



  19   by his interrogators.  How would he know?  How could he know?



  20   Many times in fact, the accurate inference is that Mohamed



  21   received this information from his interrogator, who had



  22   received this information during his interrogation of others



  23   and used during his questioning of Mohamed.



  24            Mohamed responded to the questions posed to him based



  25   on the information the government provided.  The government







                                                                5794







   1   turns around and says because he gave us the answers he must



   2   be guilty.  Well, he got the information from you.  It's a



   3   circular argument and you'll miss it, because it's so



   4   seductive.  But it's the wrong conclusion.



   5            There is so much I got to say to you.  I could go on



   6   for days and days and days about this.  But Mr. Ricco has some



   7   things he wants to say to you and I just want to wind it up.



   8            The evidence, the forensic evidence doesn't stand for



   9   the proposition put forth by the government, and without that



  10   forensic evidence, there is no proof beyond a reasonable doubt



  11   that Mohamed Odeh is guilty.



  12            You know, the forensic evidence gives you the power,



  13   each and every one of you the power, armed with that evidence



  14   and your courage, to do what's right and to do what's proper



  15   and what's just, and that is to show the world, to show



  16   Mohamed Odeh, to show the country, to show yourselves, to show



  17   the government, to show everyone and everybody that our system



  18   of justice requires all people who come before our courts to



  19   be acquitted -- it's important -- all people who come before



  20   our courts to be acquitted unless the prosecution can



  21   establish their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, so matter how



  22   horrible the crime, and Lord knows this was a horrible crime,



  23   no matter who the accused may be or where he may be from, the



  24   standard is always, always the same:  Proof beyond a



  25   reasonable doubt.  And in this case the forensic evidence put







                                                                5795







   1   forth by the government as the proof beyond a reasonable doubt



   2   that Mohamed Odeh is guilty falls woefully short of that



   3   standard, and you, each and every one of you as the judges of



   4   the facts, abiding by your oath and analyzing this evidence



   5   dispassionately and courageously, must find Mohamed Odeh not



   6   guilty.  That's what the evidence requires.



   7            Now I am going to turn it over to Mr. Ricco for a



   8   final windup.  Thank you very much for your time and



   9   attention, ladies and gentlemen.  I really appreciate it.



  10            MR. RICCO:  OK, ladies and gentlemen.  We are really



  11   near our end, and I know it's been tough.  The reality is that



  12   you have been talked at for a week.  I don't like people



  13   talking at me for 15 minutes, and I know it's been tough.  But



  14   we really are wrapping this thing down.  We should be



  15   finishing in 15 minutes.



  16            Mr. Wilford is driving home a point.  You see this



  17   here?  You see this, this torn out page?  Do you see the



  18   writing on that torn out part?  When you go in the back and



  19   deliberate, take the book out.  You are going to find another



  20   torn out page on here that somebody put another 4 on the back



  21   of.  So you will find a 4.  But that number 4 does not match



  22   this, because the writing is not on the flip side of the tab.



  23   Does everybody understand?  No.  Let me just take a moment to



  24   show you.



  25            If you go in the back you are going to see this







                                                                5796







   1   document, this page.  This page on the back, somebody wrote in



   2   a small number 4.  So you would think that when you take this,



   3   if you put it behind that and flip it around, this should



   4   match up.  What you are going to find, if I put it on the Elmo



   5   and hold down that tab, what you see is that the writing is



   6   not there.  It's gone.



   7            Some may argue that, well, maybe the writing went



   8   away when they did the test.  But look at the rest of the



   9   book.  There is all the writings, all of them except this.



  10            Sikander Juma told us about a page being torn out of



  11   a book, and I'm not getting spooky because I don't think this



  12   document reflects that case, but this document does not



  13   reflect what the government purports it to be.  They took a



  14   gamble on it.  Maybe it could go into evidence without an



  15   expert, maybe you wouldn't care to ask.  But it didn't add up.



  16            I am going to show you exactly how it played out.



  17   You remember Mr. Karas in his closing remarks when this was



  18   up, the other enlargement, when he was explaining, you know,



  19   the performance thing?  They connected them.  When he said



  20   was, Mohamed Odeh is not saying that he is not unhappy about



  21   how the Americans were killed, because things didn't work out



  22   according to the plan, and he put up evidence of the plan,



  23   because that's what this says.



  24            We are taking the position that that is an argument



  25   that is not supported.  What the government did is very







                                                                5797







   1   subtle.  They said Mohamed Odeh is not happy about the



   2   Americans.  They put up this chart and everybody was taken



   3   aback by that, because that's the theory of the case.  He



   4   doesn't care about the Americans.  He says there is nowhere in



   5   this statement that he says anything about the Americans, he



   6   only cares about the Kenyans.  Do you read, the Americans,



   7   this information that he could not have had, that's the



   8   argument, and then they said later on we got the diagram and



   9   that put it all together.



  10            First of all, Mohamed Odeh testified that he was



  11   concerned about everybody that was killed, and at 1747 of the



  12   transcript, my question to Agent Anticev was -- I am sorry,



  13   this was Mr. Fitzgerald's question.



  14            My question then is, with regard to Mr. Odeh



  15   indicating his being upset and angry with the number of people



  16   who were killed, isn't it fair to say that Mr. Odeh did say



  17   that he was affected that the bombing had affected buildings



  18   around the embassy and killed many people?  Yes.  Question by



  19   Mr. Fitzgerald.  Did he ever indicate that he was concerned or



  20   upset by Americans in the embassy that had been killed?



  21   Answer, no.



  22            So it fits the theory.  Problem.  That's only part of



  23   it.  Mr. Ricco on recross.  Mr. Fitzgerald just asked you



  24   questions as to whether or not he expressed any concern that



  25   Americans were killed.  Isn't it a fact that Mohamed Odeh







                                                                5798







   1   didn't make any distinction between Americans or Kenyans, he



   2   was upset that the people were killed; isn't that right?



   3   Answer, I don't know what he was thinking when he made that



   4   statement.  Made what statement?  Question, made what



   5   statement, that he was concerned that people were killed?



   6   Answer, I truly believe, truly believe that he was concerned



   7   that people were killed, innocent people were killed.  So my



   8   question was a simple question.  He never made a distinction



   9   to you that he was concerned because they were only Kenyans



  10   and not Americans, did he?  That was never said by him, was



  11   it?  No, he never specifically said that he broke it down, I'm



  12   upset, Kenyans are killed and Americans are not.



  13            That was his testimony, what the agent truly believed



  14   he was saying.  Now look at the argument that was made in



  15   support of that.  First it said, as that chart is in front of



  16   you as it is now, you will not see in there once a statement



  17   of remorse about the dead Americans.  That's not bothering



  18   Mr. Odeh.  That was Mr. Karas's remarks.  He went further.  It



  19   says he's not saying that he is unhappy about the Americans



  20   who were killed, what he is telling the FBI, what he is



  21   telling the FBI is that that was not the plan.  But the FBI



  22   doesn't have this diagram at the time.  Just like I said, when



  23   he gives the statement, the statement is partly true just as



  24   it sits there, and the complete truth comes when you compare



  25   the statement to this diagram.







                                                                5799







   1            And the reason why this becomes important is because,



   2   number one, to say that Mohamed Odeh was not concerned that



   3   Americans die is a mischaracterization of his statement as



   4   testified to by Agent Anticev.  Two, to compare it to



   5   information that he could not have had unless he was there



   6   further distorts the evidence against Mr. Odeh.  It is very



   7   subtle, because what it means is this:  If he is held in



   8   communicado, then the only way he knows this information is if



   9   what?  He was a part of the plan.  Right?  If he was a part of



  10   the plan.  But the fact of the matter is, he could not have



  11   known where the truck was left, whether or not somebody died



  12   or not, from the plan.  But if you believe that he was held in



  13   communicado, it doesn't matter.



  14            So the setup is complete for you to turn towards



  15   Mr. Odeh, look at that diagram for whatever it's worth, even



  16   if that is a 3 -- if that's a 3, then what's that and what's



  17   this? -- and say gotcha.  That's how it works.  His testimony



  18   was different than the argument that was advanced, but you



  19   need it to change it to fit it together with the piece to make



  20   it work.



  21            Now let me say this.  Mr. Odeh never said Harun's



  22   house, 43 Runda Estates, right?  If you go to his report, his



  23   report says Harun's house.  So Mr. Wilford misspoke a little



  24   bit, and it becomes important.  He don't know 43 Runda Estates



  25   from 40 Runda Estates.  But he knows Harun lives in Mombasa







                                                                5800







   1   because he knows that he was affiliated with MIRA -- Nairobi.



   2   Thank you, Mr. Wilford.  People misspeak all over.



   3            And it is important to note that the FBI did



   4   determine that the PETN was microscopic, microscopic, and



   5   that's very important.  Here, too, the book and the bag,



   6   contamination.  It's the only reasonable and accurate



   7   inference that can be drawn from the evidence in this case,



   8   because there is no PETN anywhere else other than where Fahad



   9   has been.



  10            (Continued on next page)



  11



  12



  13



  14



  15



  16



  17



  18



  19



  20



  21



  22



  23



  24



  25







                                                                5801







   1            MR. RICCO:  (Continuing) Now, there's been a lot of



   2   talk in the case about what Bin Laden said, and Mr. Odeh is



   3   charged by the government in the conspiracy with aiding and



   4   abetting others.



   5            Mr. Bin Laden has made some outrageous statements.



   6   He's made statements that have influenced many.  To ask a



   7   young man to get in a truck with a thousand pounds of TNT



   8   behind him is powerfully irresponsible, powerfully -- look at



   9   the results.  Look at the people that are here today.  You



  10   want to hurt the Americans?  Those people over there are



  11   Kenyans and Tanzanians and some Americans.  And I started this



  12   case talking to you about their great loss, our great loss,



  13   and I meant it then and I mean it now.



  14            This case calls for you to evaluate the evidence in a



  15   serious way.  Don't leave out the fingerprints from Tanzania.



  16   That's shading and pushing the evidence in a direction.  Don't



  17   miscategorize the testimony.  When you go in the back, I want



  18   you to remember it is Mr. Odeh's state of mind that you have



  19   to determine on the issue of his guilt.



  20            And the judge is going to instruct you on what



  21   evidence you may or may not consider in connection with that,



  22   and we remain confident that when you review that evidence you



  23   will find that Mr. Odeh is the man we told you he was -- no



  24   more, no less.  His state of mind and the evidence that points



  25   to his state of mind, the flight of everybody from Nairobi







                                                                5802







   1   with their families, and his pregnant wife and child being



   2   left behind is powerful evidence that goes to his state of



   3   mind.  All of the organizers left, and they also wanted to



   4   take with them a guy who could tell them about the Comoros,



   5   London, Somalia and everything else, even if he was what some



   6   of them may have considered a fool.



   7            Now, Mr. Wilford said he was kept out of the loop,



   8   and as I explained to you earlier, he was kept out of the loop



   9   for the planning, the execution, the bomb and the cleanup.  He



  10   was also kept out of the loop, I forgot to say this morning,



  11   with the surveillance, because the government's theory is that



  12   the surveillance in this case took place when Amriki and the



  13   rest of the people came and they were staying with Kherchtou.



  14   Now, maybe they are implying that there was some other



  15   surveillance, and maybe there was, but there's no evidence of



  16   that.



  17            And so we come to a close with Mohamed Odeh, and it's



  18   important that you remember something that Mr. Wilford touched



  19   on:  That this is our nation.  And it is a broad nation.  It's



  20   present in this courtroom.  It's present in you, your faces,



  21   the faces of the defense, the prosecution, the court



  22   personnel, when you look around this courtroom, and when the



  23   people from overseas come over here and they see so much



  24   effort being put on behalf of people who are charged with



  25   doing something so terrible, they see what our fathers and







                                                                5803







   1   some of us put their lives on the line for.



   2            Mr. Karas touched on a statement by Mr. Odeh saying



   3   "planning, thinking, patience," and I will submit to you what



   4   we have in our nation, what you see before you is the result



   5   of planning, thinking, patience, wisdom and a few wars thrown



   6   in.



   7            We also took a pledge, like the defendants, Mohamed



   8   Odeh, bayat.  When we were children, we took a pledge.  We



   9   pledged "allegiance to a flag, the United States of America,



  10   and to the republic for which it stood, one nation, under God,



  11   indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."  But that



  12   pledge does not mean, just like bayat, that we somehow turn



  13   into something that we're not because somebody points us to a



  14   village where there are innocent civilians, or somebody asks



  15   us to engage in activity that deprives us of our human



  16   dignity.  With the pledge, we still conduct ourselves in



  17   accordance with the laws of our nation and our belief in God,



  18   if we so choose.



  19            Now, here the term "justice" is applied, and justice,



  20   to me, is a meaningless term by itself.  Justice, as I stated



  21   to you when I started this case, has to be served by you



  22   day-in, day-out.  It's late in the day.  Still on your job.



  23   Day-in, day-out.  "Justice" is an empty word, but "justice" is



  24   a promising word.



  25            Justice assumes that there will be people like







                                                                5804







   1   yourselves to see that it is done.  There have been many men



   2   like Mohamed Odeh in our nation's history and throughout the



   3   world.  He chose to fight against oppression and injustice in



   4   Somalia and Afghanistan, but he did so without losing his



   5   human dignity, his sense of what is good and evil, and with



   6   his willingness to serve Allah.  And there's not a single



   7   piece of evidence in this case to the contrary.



   8            Everything that you heard about Mohamed Odeh from his



   9   letters and his statements is that he's a righteous soldier, a



  10   loving husband, a beloved son and a brother and an uncle.  As



  11   I stated probably too many times, to some, he was a fool, but



  12   to the people in Somalia, when people like him showed up, when



  13   we were back home watching T.V., he was a blessing -- I'll say



  14   it again -- because he went to Somalia for the same reasons



  15   that the U.N. went, which is to save lives.



  16            Many young men decide to give up their studies and



  17   endure poverty and live a righteous life.  Today, Mohamed



  18   Odeh's fate, his immediate faith, is in your hands.  I remain



  19   confident that you will serve the ends of justice.  Whatever



  20   you decide is right.  That's not for me to take from you or



  21   anybody in this jury box.  It's your decision, your collective



  22   decision, that counts.



  23            What I suggest to you is to take every document, each



  24   clothing item, each letter, every fingerprint, take a look at



  25   all of the testimony in its entirety and in connection with







                                                                5805







   1   each other.  Pay attention to the law as Judge Sand gives it.



   2   Shut out the wishes of defense counsel -- me, Mr. Wilford.  I



   3   suggest shut out the government's arguments.  The Judge is



   4   going to tell you that you can decide and take them for



   5   yourself if you want.



   6            Shut mine out.  Go back there with the evidence and



   7   come up with your own.  You then have to decide on your own



   8   whether or not the government has proven its case against



   9   Mohamed Odeh, beyond a reasonable doubt, that he conspired to



  10   kill Americans, men, women, children, anywhere in the world



  11   where they could be found.



  12            A long time ago Dr. King talked about justice and he



  13   talked about a notion called the royal arc of justice, and he



  14   said that it moves slowly, it turns slowly, slowly, slowly it



  15   turns towards the truth.  And so it does.  You will decide



  16   what the truth of this case is, what the evidence represents.



  17            You have heard a lot of testimony from Imam Siraj



  18   about religious beliefs, and I agree with Mr. Karas:  This



  19   case is not about Islam.  It's about his state of mind and



  20   whether or not it affected his actions or inactions, period.



  21   Because in the end, you will decide this case on the same



  22   principles of law that every person who walks in a courtroom



  23   in this country is entitled to.  And they're not foreign



  24   principles.



  25            He's entitled to them no matter how many innocent







                                                                5806







   1   people lost their lives, how many dreams were taken, and how



   2   painful it is for the people who suffered through this.  The



   3   greatness of what we have here is our ability to keep you with



   4   an open mind until you decide.  And when you decide,



   5   everybody's got the backup.  And accept that.



   6            If we don't have that, if you are quick to convict,



   7   irresponsible to acquit, we will find ourselves mired in the



   8   same anarchy that existed in Somalia.  Remember Imam Siraj:



   9   "You can't have a society where everybody makes up their own



  10   mind about what's right and wrong."  Your collective wisdom



  11   will come into play in this case.



  12            I am finished.  And I will say to you in the end,



  13   what happened is about 200 years ago a man from Africa was



  14   brought into a court in the United States.  He was unable to



  15   speak the language and he represented a very unpopular cause.



  16   In fact, he was represented by a former president of the



  17   United States, John Quincy Adams, and he was involved in a



  18   cause that ultimately tore the nation apart.



  19            He couldn't speak the language, but he knew one



  20   thing.  He stood up in a courtroom, manacled, and in his own



  21   way said, "Give us free."  And what I'm asking you on behalf



  22   of Mohamed Odeh is to give him free.  Give Mr. Odeh his



  23   freedom and send him back, send him back to that mut hut in



  24   the middle of nowhere, in a village called Witu and a country



  25   called Kenya, because in the end that is the only thing that







                                                                5807







   1   this evidence in this case shows with respect to him.



   2            I want to thank you all.  I want to thank you, Judge



   3   Sand.  I want to thank you for the patience and the



   4   opportunity for giving both sides, both the government and



   5   defense, an opportunity to present the evidence in this



   6   important case so that the jurors here can make a decision on



   7   an issue that is so important to so many people.



   8            Thank you very much on behalf of Mohamed Odeh, on



   9   behalf of Ms. Babcock, Mr. Herman, of course, Mr. Wilford.



  10            Thank you very much.



  11            THE COURT:  Thank you.



  12            Ladies and gentlemen, rather than start another



  13   closing statement, we'll call it a day and we'll resume



  14   tomorrow at 10 a.m.



  15            Have a good evening.



  16            (Jury not present)



  17            MR. COHN:  Thank you, your Honor.



  18            THE COURT:  Anything else?  We're adjourned until 10



  19   a.m. tomorrow.



  20            (Adjourned to 10:00 a.m. on May 8, 2001)



  21



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