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Home Front: WoT
Maximum sentence sought for ex-sailor who leaked Navy secrets
2009-04-03
A former Navy sailor faces sentencing in Connecticut for leaking details about ship movements. Prosecutors want Hassan Abu-Jihaad of Phoenix to get the maximum 10 years in prison when he is sentenced Friday in federal court in New Haven. Prosecutors label him a traitor who was trying to help foreign terrorists replicate the October 2000 bombing of the USS Cole, which killed 17 American sailors. Abu-Jihaad’s attorneys had not filed sentencing papers as of Thursday.

U.S. District Judge Mark Kravitz last month overturned last year’s conviction of Abu-Jihaad on a charge of providing material support to terrorists, citing the language of the law. He upheld his conviction for disclosing classified national defense information.
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Home Front: WoT
Judge tosses ex-sailor's terror-support conviction
2009-03-05
A federal judge on Wednesday threw out one conviction against a former Navy sailor accused of passing along information about ship movements, dealing a post-mortem blow to a Bush administration that had praised the case as a success.

U.S. District Judge Mark Kravitz overturned last year's conviction of Hassan Abu-Jihaad, of Phoenix, on a charge of providing material support to terrorists, citing the language of the law. He upheld his conviction for disclosing classified national defense information. Abu-Jihaad was a signalman aboard the USS Benfold. He was accused of passing along information including the makeup of his Navy battle group and a drawing of the formation the group would use to pass through the dangerous Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf in April 2001.

Kravitz said that Abu-Jihaad received a fair trial and denied a motion for a new trial. But he said he was overturning one of the convictions "for reasons largely related to the language" of the law.

To convict Abu-Jihaad of providing material support to terrorists, the jury had to find that he provided personnel or physical assets. But Kravitz said there was no evidence that would allow the jury to conclude Abu-Jihaad provided personnel or willfully caused the battle group document to be placed on a computer floppy disc, which could be considered a physical asset. But in upholding the other charge, the judge said Abu-Jihaad had motive, citing his praise of the attack on the USS Cole as a "martrydom operation," that he had access to the secret information and that he was in frequent communication with the suspected terrorism supporters. "This was not an open and shut case," Kravitz wrote. "In many ways, it was a difficult case for the government to prove."

Dan LaBelle, Abu-Jihaad's attorney, said the ruling pleased him. "It's very thorough and thoughtful," he said.

Abu-Jihaad's conviction was hailed last year by top national security officials and federal investigators as a model of cooperation among government agencies. Prosecutors say they are reviewing the latest ruling.

Abu-Jihaad, who was honorably discharged in 2002, faced up to 10 years in prison on each count. He sought a new trial in October, saying prosecutors lacked evidence and inflamed the jury by playing videos he bought that promoted violent jihad, or holy war. Prosecutors say investigators discovered files on a computer disk recovered from a suspected terrorist supporter's home in London that included the ship movements, as well as the number and type of personnel on each ship and the ships' capabilities.

Abu-Jihaad was charged in the same case that led to the 2004 arrest of Babar Ahmad, a British computer specialist accused of running Web sites to raise money, appeal for fighters and provide equipment such as gas masks and night vision goggles to terrorists.

Ahmad, who lived with his parents, where the computer file was allegedly found, and was arrested in London, is to be extradited to the U.S.
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Home Front: WoT
Sailor seeks new trial in terrorism case
2009-01-07
A federal judge is deciding whether to grant a new trial to a former Navy sailor convicted of leaking details about ship movements to suspected terrorist supporters.

U.S. District Court Judge Mark Kravitz questioned both sides Tuesday about the level of evidence that led a jury last March to convict Hassan Abu-Jihaad of providing material support to terrorists and disclosing classified national defense information. Judge Kravitz said he was not sure when he would issue his ruling on the defense request for a new trial. Judge Kravitz said he did not want to interfere with the role of the jury,
... then don't ...
but has to make sure there was sufficient evidence against Mr. Abu-Jihaad.

Mr. Abu-Jihaad, who was a signalman aboard the USS Benfold, was accused of passing along information that included the makeup of his Navy battle group, its planned movements and a drawing of the formation the group would use to pass through the dangerous Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf on April 29, 2001. He allegedly told his contacts, "They have nothing to stop a small craft with RPG [rocket-propelled grenade] etc., except their SEALs' stinger missiles." The ship wasn't attacked.

Mr. Abu-Jihaad, who is from Phoenix, sought a new trial in October, saying prosecutors lacked evidence and inflamed the jury by playing videos he had purchased that promoted violent jihad, or holy war.
Jury thought the prosecution had enough evidence ...
Judge Kravitz did not issue any ruling, but said he believes the videos were relevant and that he took steps to limit any prejudicial effect. The judge pressed prosecutors on a defense argument that documents Mr. Abu-Jihaad allegedly supplied his contacts were full of errors that an insider would not have made. "There are gross errors," Judge Kravitz said. "There is some information in this document that no sailor would get wrong."

Prosecutors said the leaked documents closely matched what Mr. Abu-Jihaad would have had access to as a signalman. Prosecutors said Mr. Abu-Jihaad was the only member of the military communicating with the group and had access to the classified information. Authorities also noted that the leaked information ended with a bold plea, "Please destroy message," which they said is further evidence that it came from an insider.

But Judge Kravitz questioned how prosecutors could reconcile the call to destroy the message with their contention that Mr. Abu-Jihaad helped provide a physical asset, a computer disk, to terrorists. "That to me is the weakest part of the case," Judge Kravitz said. "Does that suggest we have a confused jury?"
No, it suggests we have a bleeding-heart judge ...
Prosecutors said the jury could have decided that Mr. Abu-Jihaad knew the volume of information he provided would likely be saved and passed on to others. Prosecutors say investigators discovered files on a computer disk recovered from a suspected terrorist supporter's home in London that included the ship movements, as well as the number and type of personnel on each ship and the ships' capabilities.

Mr. Abu-Jihaad was charged in the same case that led to the 2004 arrest of Babar Ahmad, a British computer specialist accused of running Web sites to raise money, appeal for fighters and provide equipment such as gas masks and night vision goggles for terrorists. Mr. Ahmad, who lived with his parents where the computer file was allegedly found, is to be extradited to the U.S. Mr. Abu-Jihaad, who was honorably discharged in 2002, is scheduled to be sentenced in February and faces up to 25 years in prison.
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Home Front: WoT
Former US sailor/muslim convert guilty of aiding terrorists
2008-03-06
Those who met Hassan Abu-Jihaad describe him as mild-mannered, polite and unobtrusive; a California native who converted to Islam while living in Phoenix in 1997.

But, on Wednesday, Abu-Jihaad became something more sinister: the face of treason and homegrown Islamic terrorism - and a reminder that the Internet can inflame radical violence halfway around the world.

He chose a surname that means "father of holy war." Eight months later, he enlisted in the Navy.
A federal jury in Connecticut took less than 24 hours to convict the former U.S. Navy sailor on charges he slipped classified details of American fleet movements to a Web site accused of assisting the terrorist group al-Qaida. advertisement
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Home Front: WoT
Notes from the trial of Hassan Abu-Jihaad
2007-11-29
A former sailor accused of disclosing information about Navy ships to a terrorism supporter made coded reference to Osama bin Laden in a recorded phone call with friends, prosecutors said Wednesday.

Phone calls were played in a court hearing to decide whether to admit the evidence in the case against Hassan Abu-Jihaad. Lawyers for Abu-Jihaad have argued that the calls and other evidence, such as e-mail searches, should be thrown out after a judge's ruling in September that struck down portions of the USA Patriot Act.

In one phone call between the sailor and some friends, Abu-Jihaad is heard making what prosecutors said is a coded reference to bin Laden, using the phrase "under the black leaves." He is also heard talking about the different techniques of American and Islamic snipers.

Abu-Jihaad, 31, of Phoenix, pleaded not guilty in April to charges he provided material support to terrorists with intent to kill U.S. citizens and disclosed classified information relating to the national defense. He has been held without bail since his arrest in March in Phoenix.

The hearing on whether to admit the evidence is expected to last three days.
More at the link.
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