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| Allah is not unaware of what you do, and neither are we. | ||||||
Padilla heard on intercepted calls, agent says
Stick a fork in this freak. From AP:
The tapes form the backbone of the federal case against Mr. Padilla and his two co-defendants, Adham Amin Hassoun and Kifah Wael Jayyousi. Jurors in the trial of the three men are expected to begin hearing the tapes and reading translations from Arabic to English in the coming days. Prosecutors say they will show that Mr. Hassoun, Mr. Jayyousi and others plotted -- often using code words -- to raise money, funnel supplies and identify recruits for violent Islamic causes around the world. Attorneys for Mr. Hassoun and Mr. Jayyousi contend they were simply helping oppressed and persecuted Muslims. They really need to collaborate and work on a more original excuse, don't they? This one is pretty worn out.
Mr. Padilla, a 36-year-old former Chicago gang member who converted to Islam, was arrested in May 2002 at O'Hare International Airport on suspicion that he was on a mission to detonate a radioactive "dirty bomb" in the United States. He was held for 3? years as an enemy combatant and charged in late 2005 in the Miami case, which does not include the dirty-bomb accusations. The terror-support cell investigation began years before Mr. Padilla came on the scene. FBI Agent Kent Hukill testified yesterday that about 14,000 of the calls made by Mr. Hassoun and Mr. Jayyousi were considered "pertinent" to the investigation, which began in 1994. Prosecutors are submitting as trial evidence 123 calls, a tiny fraction of the total collected. Mr. Hukill said he has spoken with Mr. Hassoun, who worked as a computer programmer in the suburb of Sunrise, on four occasions and was familiar with the sound of his voice. "It's the same voice. He has a very distinctive laugh. It's the same tone," he testified. Defense lawyers attempted to raise doubts about which phone intercepts were chosen by the FBI for evidence out of such a huge number. "You don't know what's in the tapes that were not summarized?" asked William Swor, one of Mr. Jayyousi's attorneys. "Not specifically, I don't," Mr. Hukill replied. All three defendants face life in prison if convicted. 2007-05-23 09:14:30 GMT
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