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US government makes closing arguments in frame-up of New York
attorney Lynne Stewart
By Peter Daniels
5 January 2005
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The extraordinary six-month trial of Lynne Stewart, the New
York criminal defense attorney accused of terrorist conspiracy
in connection with her representation of Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman,
moved toward its conclusion just before the New Year with the
presentation of the governments summation to the jury. Abdel
Rahman is the Egyptian cleric who is currently serving a life
sentence in the US after his 1995 conviction on charges of conspiring
to bomb various New York City landmarks.
Stewart was arrested nearly three years ago, in April 2002.
She was charged with making false statements and conspiring to
defraud the government. Also arrested at that time were co-defendants
Ahmed Abdel Sattar, a postal worker who had served as a paralegal
assisting Stewart in the 1995 trial, and Mohammed Yousry, the
interpreter used by Stewart in her legal discussions with Abdel
Rahman in prison. Stewart, 65, is a veteran civil liberties defense
attorney who has made no secret of her radical views She faces
up to 20 years in prison.
The governments case was based on illegal spying on confidential
attorney-client communications. The prosecution presented as evidence
tape-recorded phone conversations and prison visits. The charge
was that Stewart, who had been forced to agree to draconian rules
restricting Abdel Rahmans communications with the outside
world, had nevertheless relayed messages to the media from the
imprisoned cleric.
The political character of the charges against Stewart was
clear from the beginning. Although the heart of the governments
case deals with a May 2000 meeting between Stewart and her client
at the Federal Medical Center in Rochester, Minnesota, nothing
was done about this until six months after the September 11 attacks.
Apparently, the Justice Department, which later declared it
had been monitoring Stewarts discussions with Abdel Rahman
since 1998, decided to prosecute Stewart after the attacks in
order to send an intimidating message to any attorneys who agree
to represent defendants in cases alleging terrorist-related offenses.
Another line of the prosecution attack was an effort to contrast
Stewarts role with that of other lawyers who had represented
Sheik Abdel Rahman. Former US Attorney General Ramsey Clark, as
well as Abdeen Jabara, who assisted the defense, had both refused
to relay Abdel Rahmans messages, according to the government.
The trial has nonetheless exposed the trumped-up character
of the governments case. Each of the defendants took the
stand to deny support for terrorism or any intentional violation
of legal restrictions. Stewart testified that she believed she
was doing her job as defense attorney to keep the sheiks
name and views before the public, and that the main aim was to
facilitate a transfer to an Egyptian prison, where his language
and traditions would be understood.
The government never attempted to show why, if she was part
of a terrorist conspiracy, Stewart had openly spoken to the press
about Adbel Rahmans views immediately after her visit to
him in Minnesota in May 2000.
The vicious character of the governments prosecution
in this case was on display in the lengthy summation to the jury
by prosecutor Andrew Dember beginning on December 29. Dember dismissed
Stewarts testimony denying support for terrorism. She
supports violence, she wants it carried out, he declared.
At another point, referring to Egyptian-born co-defendant Sattar,
who became a naturalized US citizen in 1989, the prosecutor sarcastically
stated that Its hard to believe the defendant
was an American. Michael Tigar, Stewarts main attorney,
complained that Dember smirked at the jury in an obvious
attempt to whip up prejudice.
Dembers comments were so provocative that Judge John
G. Koeltl twice informed the jury in the Federal District Court
that they should be ignored. The judge rejected two motions for
a mistrial, however. Such motions are very rare in the summation
phase of a criminal case, after all the evidence has been presented.
Speaking outside the courthouse during a break in the prosecution
summation, Stewart reiterated her position. It sounds a
little more like a screenplay than what we heard in the evidence,
she declared of Dembers claims. She stressed that the prosecution
had been unable to point to any violent acts that resulted from
her efforts to represent her client.
The defense objections slowed down the prosecution summation
significantly, forcing it into a third day on January 3, the opening
day for the courts in 2005. The prosecution will be followed by
the defense summation, after which the case will go to the jury.
The prosecution of Lynne Stewart on charges of abetting terrorism
represents a fundamental attack on civil liberties. The attempt
to impose a lengthy prison sentence on an outspoken and courageous
lawyer is designed to intimidate other attorneys.
It immediately threatens all of those who have volunteered
their services in the habeas corpus cases involving prisoners
who have been held incommunicado for up to three years under conditions
of abuse and torture at the US base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The
case is aimed at establishing police state conditions under which
those caught up in an anti-immigrant dragnet, as well as those
fighting these attacks, are denied an opportunity to defend themselves.
Such a precedent can and will be used against all opponents of
imperialist war and attacks on democratic rights.
See Also:
New York law students
honor attorney framed on terrorism charges: Dean bans award at
graduation ceremony
[29 April 2003]
US indicts Sheik Rahmans
lawyer, escalating government attack on democratic rights
[11 April 2002]
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