Los Angeles Times

Bin Laden relative appears in U.S. court

- He rejected any large security concerns, as were voiced the last time, saying, “If you are in federal court here in New York, you go from the holding pen to the courtroom undergroun­d.” Jim Riches, a former deputy New York fire chief whose police officer

By Richard A. Serrano and Tina Susman

NEW YORK — In jailhouse blues, hands cuffed behind his back, the son-inlaw of Osama bin Laden pleaded not guilty in Manhattan on Friday to a federal charge of conspiring to murder Americans — reigniting the debate over where alleged terrorists should be prosecuted.

Sulaiman abu Ghaith, a 47-year-old senior Al Qaeda leader who for the last decade had been hiding in Iran, now may become the first defendant to be tried in a U.S. civilian court on charges related to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, just blocks from where the World Trade Center towers were destroyed.

Abu Ghaith is also part of a broader political drama that once again pits the Obama administra­tion, which eventually wants to close the prison for terrorism suspects at the U.S. naval base on Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, against Republican­s demanding its continued use.

Three years ago, the ad-

ministrati­on attempted to have five alleged Sept. 11 plotters tried in New York as well, only to be blocked by congressio­nal legislatio­n prohibitin­g any Guantanamo prisoners from being transferre­d to civilian courts.

Abu Ghaith was seized in Turkey recently and flown to the U.S.

“We’re putting the administra­tion on notice,” warned Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.). “We think that sneaking this guy into the country, clearly going around the intent of Congress when it comes to enemy combatants, will be challenged.”

But sources in the Department of Justice said they were confident the case against Abu Ghaith would pass muster in federal court. They said they reviewed classified informatio­n related to the case to ensure it could be properly handled.

They also alerted New York officials that the case was pending, hoping to avert the backlash that erupted in 2010 when Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. tried to get alleged Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and four others moved from Guantanamo to the same courthouse in New York.

“There was a lot of due diligence done here,” said one source close to the case.

Much of it appeared to have paid off.

“It’s the federal government’s choice,” said New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, speaking to New Yorkers in his weekly radio interview. whose brother Charles was the pilot of the plane that crashed into the Pentagon, said Holder had provided a platform for Abu Ghaith to espouse his views.

“He’s going to make maximum use of that stage a few blocks from ground zero,” she said. Of Holder, she said, he “has really made a hash of this.”

Tim Sumner, whose brother-in-law, firefighte­r Joseph Leavey, was killed at the World Trade Center, warned that this “will come back to bite America.”

In court, Abu Ghaith appeared thinner and older than he did in the videos and photograph­s that emerged through the years, which showed him espousing Al Qaeda propaganda through a microphone, often with a rif le nearby, and sitting beside Bin Laden. The turban he once wore was gone, revealing a balding head. The thick, black beard had gone gray. The f lowing tunics were replaced by a prison jumpsuit.

He sat quietly beside his court-appointed attorney, Philip Weinstein, as U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan repeated some of Abu Ghaith’s words from the videos back to him.

He is accused of swearing allegiance to Bin Laden and asking others to do so, and, on the morning after Sept. 11, appearing in a video with Bin Laden calling on the “Nation of Islam” to battle “the Jews, the Christians and the Americans.”

During the arraignmen­t, Assistant U.S. Atty. John P. Cronan announced the defendant had given a 22-page “extensive post-arrest statement” to authoritie­s. He did not reveal the contents.

Graham and Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.) said a full interrogat­ion of Abu Ghaith at Guantanamo would be more valuable than bringing him to justice in a U.S. court. Otherwise, Ayotte said, “we lose valuable intelligen­ce that can be used to prevent future attacks — can be used to understand further who also is involved in Al Qaeda and what they’re planning against our country.”

Republican­s also questioned whether the overarchin­g conspiracy charge against Abu Ghaith was brought to keep the case out of Guantanamo. Standalone conspiracy cases are not considered war crimes and are not permitted in military tribunals.

Wells C. Bennett, a Brookings Institutio­n expert in national security law, said the restrictio­ns Congress passed after the Mohammed controvers­y “in no way prohibited” the administra­tion from bringing Abu Ghaith directly to trial in the U.S. The law “explicitly left open the option of civilian trials for foreign terrorists apprehende­d abroad,” he said.

The Obama administra- tion has not moved any new prisoners to Guantanamo since the president took office in January 2009.

During that time, Abu Ghaith is only the second Al Qaeda militant captured overseas and brought to the U.S. Thousands more purported militants have been killed in drone strikes.

And with the slow pace of cases at Guantanamo, going there was clearly “an extremely unattracti­ve option for the administra­tion,” Bennett said.

The charges against Abu Ghaith at this point portray him as a spokesman for Al Qaeda, who after the Sept. 11 attacks warned in the videos of a “storm” of planes to follow. He also encouraged Muslims and anti-Americans not to board planes or live in high-rise buildings. As a close relative to Bin Laden, he is said to have “assisted” the Al Qaeda leader, who was killed in a U.S. raid in Pakistan in 2011.

In 2002, after the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks, Abu Ghaith smuggled himself into Iran and, according to U.S. intelligen­ce officials, hid there until recently, when he showed up in Turkey. He was held brief ly, and then taken into custody by U.S. officials.

 ?? Elizabeth Williams
Associated Press ?? SULAIMAN ABU GHAITH, Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law, is depicted listening as his attorney, Philip Weinstein, speaks in federal court in Manhattan.
Elizabeth Williams Associated Press SULAIMAN ABU GHAITH, Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law, is depicted listening as his attorney, Philip Weinstein, speaks in federal court in Manhattan.

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