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Feds ask to halt inmate access at Supermax after letter leaks | ||||||||||
2008-02-03 | ||||||||||
A group of Denver law students fighting to overturn some regulations at the Supermax prison in Colorado has found that the very rules they are fighting might bar them from continuing to represent the convicted terrorists.
The government is now arguing that the rules, called special administrative measures, or SAMs, should also forbid prison visits by University of Denver law students who are representing two of the terrorists in a civil-rights lawsuit against the government. The suit, filed in Denver's U.S. District Court, alleges that the measures violate the inmates' civil rights. In January, Judge Wiley Y. Daniel granted the students access to Nidal Ayyad and Mahmud Abouhalima over the objection of the U.S. attorney's office. But on Wednesday, the government asked the judge to reconsider and filed a motion to put the students' access on hold while an appeal is pending. The government argues that, because the students aren't yet lawyers, they might be more willing to pass messages from the terrorists to outside contacts. Even if caught, the reasoning goes, they would not lose their licenses to practice.
Former U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales first imposed the special administrative measures in March 2005 after he learned letters sent from Supermax were being used to recruit suicide bombers in Spain.
One of Mohammad Salameh's letters was found in possession of Mohamed Achraf, the leader of a radical Muslim cell who is charged with plotting to blow up the National Court in downtown Madrid. Salameh is serving 116 years in Supermax for his role in the 1993 attempt to blow up the World Trade Center. Originally, the special administrative rules were to be in effect for just one year, but they have been extended annually since then. The inmates say that they now only receive certain newspapers, such as USA Today but the classified ads and editorial-page letters are cut out.
The prisoners, through their student legal representatives, have argued there was never a hearing to decide whether the letters they sent to Spain contained messages of violence.
After the special administrative measures were imposed in 2005, Salameh stopped eating for 89 days. When the rules were extended in 2006, he fasted for 72 days and again for 20 days, his lawsuit says. Salameh has retained his own private attorney in the suit against the rules. "Mr. Salameh was subjected to more than 100 force-feedings via naso-gastric tube," the suit says.
Ayyad, an American citizen serving 117 years in prison for procuring chemicals used in the World Trade Center bombing, said that he wrote to a prisoner in Spain for one year and that he gave his letters to prison staff for review before he sent them.
Eid says the government has a responsibility to make sure that inmates do not continue to commit crimes or influence terrorist attacks. "When we have a known threat, we have to be prudent," he said. "The public expects that of us. We are supposed to see justice through from the beginning until they leave the system." | ||||||||||
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32 Indicted in Spain for Courthouse Plot |
2006-03-21 |
MADRID, Spain (AP) -- A Spanish judge indicted 32 people for allegedly plotting to drive a truck packed with explosives into a courthouse that has been the hub of anti-terrorism investigations, authorities said Tuesday. The 32 men, mostly Algerians, were charged with membership in a terrorist organization, conspiracy to commit a terrorist attack and forgery of public documents, Judge Fernando Grande-Marlaska said in his March 13 ruling. The suspects include Mohamed Achraf, the alleged mastermind who was extradited from Switzerland to Spain in April. Spanish authorities suspect Achraf was planning to ram a truck loaded with 1,100 pounds of explosives into the court in downtown Madrid. |
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9/11 plotters go on trial at special court in Spain |
2005-04-23 |
EUROPE'S biggest trial of al-Qaeda suspects allegedly linked to the attacks of September 11, 2001, opened yesterday in a specially built court in Madrid. No one has been successfully prosecuted for a direct role in the attacks on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon. If convicted, Eddin Barakat Yarkas, the Syrian-born alleged ringleader of a Spanish cell, faces some 60,000 years in jail 25 for each person killed. Mr Yarkas, also known as Abu Dahdah, is said to have helped to fund the operation and set up a meeting at a Spanish resort attended by Mohammed Atta, the presumed leader of the hijackers, and couriers sent by Osama bin Laden, al-Qaeda's leader, to finalise plans for the US attacks. More than a hundred armed police officers were deployed as the 24 accused were led handcuffed into the court in a park on the outskirts of the capital. All but one defendant, Tayssir Alluni, sat behind bullet-proof glass. Mr Alluni, a journalist with al-Jazeera, the Qatar-based cable news channel, who interviewed Mr bin Laden after the attacks, is accused of being a member of the terrorist network. The prosecution is expected to accuse some of the key figures of using trips to Britain to smuggle money to al-Qaeda agents across Europe. Mr Yarkas, 41, is alleged to have visited Britain more than 20 times, often bringing young recruits to meet leading militants, including Abu Qatada, the London-based radical cleric. The alleged recruits included some of the men accused of planning and taking part in last year's bombing of four trains in Madrid. Baltasar Garzon, the prosecuting magistrate, is expected to give details of some of Mr Yarkas's visits, including one where he is alleged to have handed over $11,000 (£5,750) to Abu Qatada, who the Spanish judge described as "al-Qaeda's spiritual ambassador in the EU". The cleric is one of 12 suspected terrorists under house arrest in Britain. Mr Yarkas is also said to have stayed at mosques and at the homes of other terrorist suspects, including that of Zacharias Moussaoui, the so-called 20th hijacker who pleaded guilty in an American court yesterday. Also in court in Madrid yesterday was Ghassub al Abrash Ghaylun, who is said to have taken detailed films of the twin towers and the Pentagon. The tapes were then allegedly passed on to "operative members of al-Qaeda and would become the preliminary information on the attacks against the twin towers", the indictment said. Jose Luis Galän, the only Spanish-born defendant and a convert to Islam, was the first to be questioned by prosecutors. He is accused of undergoing terrorist training at a camp run by al-Qaeda but he denies having any links to the organisation. He described himself as peace-loving and said: "I absolutely condemn all terrorist acts, all violent acts, the spilling of blood of children, women and the elderly." This trial is the culmination of an eight-year investigation by Señor Garzón, who reckoned that Muslim militants were leading quiet lives as businessmen, labourers or waiters. He said they had operated freely in Spain for years, recruiting men for terrorist training in Afghanistan, preaching holy war and laundering money for al-Qaeda. All 24 defendants deny the charges against them. Bin Laden is charged with them, but Spain does not try suspects in their absence. Prosecutors will attempt to prove that some of the accused are linked to the September 11 attacks and the Madrid train bombings. The trial is expected to last for two months and was adjourned until Monday. As it was getting under way yesterday, another al-Qaeda suspect was being extradited from Switzerland to Spain. Mohamed Achraf's group of Spanish-based extremists is suspected of plotting to bomb the National Court in Madrid. |
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Supreme court 'bomber' is extradited to Spain |
2005-04-22 |
![]() Achraf was detained in September 2004 in Zurich on unrelated immigration charges, after going underground about a year earlier following a failed asylum bid, according to Swiss authorities. He was known to have been using several different identities, according to investigators. Switzerland's supreme court had opened the way for his extradition earlier this month by rejecting Achraf's appeal against the Swiss government's decision in January to hand him over to Spain. |
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Spain's supreme court 'bomb plotter' to be extradited from Switz. | ||
2005-04-15 | ||
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Home Front: WoT |
1993 WTC bombers writing letters calling for further attacks |
2005-03-01 |
It was 12:18 p.m. on Feb. 26, 1993, lunchtime, when the van exploded. The massive bomb rattled the World Trade Center, leaving a giant crater in the underground garage. Six people were killed, and more than 1,000 were wounded. At the time, it was the worst act of terrorism ever committed on American soil. Three Islamic extremists were among those convicted, each sentenced to more than 100 years in prison. Former prosecutor Andy McCarthy convicted others involved in the attack. "It's difficult to imagine people who are more evil or inclined to do more mass homicide," says McCarthy. So the men were sent to America's most secure federal prisons, eventually ending up at Supermax in Colorado, supposedly unable to do further harm. Or so we thought. Letters and articles obtained by NBC News show that while behind bars, the 1993 bombers continued their terrorist activities. They wrote letters to other suspected terrorists and brazenly praised Osama bin Laden in Arabic newspapers. According to confidential Spanish court documents obtained by NBC, at least 14 letters went back and forth between the World Trade Center bombers and a Spanish terror cell. In February 2003, bomber Mohammed Salameh writes: "Oh God! Make us live with happiness, make us die as martyrs, may we be united on the Day of Judgment." The recipient, Mohamed Achraf, later allegedly led a plot to blow up the National Justice Building in Madrid and is awaiting trial. In July 2002, a letter Salameh sent from prison is published in the Al-Quds newspaper, proclaiming "Osama Bin Laden is my hero of this generation." "He was exhorting acts of terrorism and helping recruit would-be terrorists for the jihad," says McCarthy, "from inside an American prison." The letters to the bombers spoke of the need to "terminate the infidels" and said, "The Muslims don't have any option other than jihad." Among those corresponding is a man charged with recruiting suicide operatives in Spain. Spanish officials accuse him of using letters to and from the U.S. bombers as a recruiting tool. All this while the Bureau of Prisons reassured the public that terrorists were under control. "We have been managing inmates with ties to terrorism for over a decade by confining them in secure conditions and monitoring their communications closely," said Harley Lappin, the Bureau of Prisons director, in October 2003. Today, federal prison officials refuse to comment directly on what other law enforcement officials call a horrible lapse, saying only that inmates' letters are "monitored" and "inspected." So how did this happen? Federal officials tell NBC that the Justice Department failed to restrict communications to and from the three bombers because key officials didn't consider them all that dangerous. Michael Macko lost his father, Bill, in the trade center bombing and attended the 12th anniversary memorial on Feb. 26. "If they are encouraging acts of terrorism internationally, how do we know they're not encouraging acts of terrorism right here on U.S. soil?" asks Macko. That's just one of the many questions now being scrutinized by the Justice Department. |
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Imam with 'links to terror groups' arrested in Spain | ||
2004-11-24 | ||
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Spain Nabs 4 in Connection to Terror Plot | |||
2004-11-04 | |||
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Terror suspect appeals against extradition to Spain |
2004-10-25 |
A Swiss-held prisoner who stands accused of links to terrorist activities has appealed against his extradition to Spain. The move comes one day after Switzerland opened its own investigation into Mohamed Achraf, who is suspected of masterminding an alleged plot to blow up the National Court in Madrid. Officials confirmed on Sunday that Achraf was being detained by the Swiss Federal Prosecutor's Office. But they declined to say whether he had been moved from a detention centre for illegal immigrants at Zurich airport. Achraf told the Swiss authorities on Friday that he would fight any attempt to extradite him to Spain. The Spanish government said a formal extradition request had been issued, but a spokesman for the Swiss justice ministry said the suspect had the right to lodge an appeal and that the legal wrangling coud drag on for "several months". |
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More details of Spain boom plot revealed |
2004-10-25 |
![]() Members of a cell of Islamic radicals accused of plotting to blow up Spain's national court were planning to build the bombs in a rented flat, legal sources said Friday. The Islamic extremists tried to rent the flat in Almeria, in southern Spain and attack the Audiencia Nacional, the country's highest criminal court which hears terrorist cases. Meanwhile, a suspected Islamic extremist detained in Switzerland on suspicion of plotting the same bomb attack has opposed his extradition to Spain, Swiss authorities said Friday. The Swiss federal justice department said that the suspect's refusal during a hearing in Zurich followed the arrest warrant filed by Spanish authorities. Madrid must now make a formal extradition request within 40 days. After the Swiss justice department rules on the Spanish move, the suspect will have the opportunity to appeal against the extradition to Switzerland's supreme court. Spanish authorities have named the man as Mohamed Achraf, a 30-year-old Algerian national believed to be a member of the Islamic Armed Group (GIA). In Madrid, Judge Baltasar Garzón, Spain's top anti-terrorist judge, was expected to hear evidence from ten Islamic suspects at court Friday. But the judge has delayed the hearing until later Friday while he examines police evidence about the alleged bomb plot. Garzon has to read ten volumes of evidence and examine various items seized by police in raids earlier this week. The judge has ordered that the suspects should be isolated in various prisons. Among those who were due to give evidence are Kamara Birahima, a Mauritian national. A second suspect is Baldomero Lara, a Spaniard of gypsy origin, who is alleged to be the head of the group of Islamic radicals who were planning the attack on the court. Another suspect due to appear before the judge is Algerian Said Afis, who claims to be an iman and was detained before in 2002. He has ordered other Islamic prisoners to pray 24 hours a day. Other suspects include Addila Mimon and Karim Faiz, who have allegedly organised other Islamic radical prisoners. The remaining suspects are Eddebdoui Taoufik, Hoari Jera and three other suspects who were convicted by the Audiencia Nacional in 2001 for membership of the Algerian Isamic Armed Group, (GIA). They were named as Abdelkrim Bensamail , Mohamed Amine Akli and Bachir Belhakem. |
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3 Inmates Questioned on Alleged Spain Plot |
2004-10-21 |
![]() Lamari has been identified as being among seven suspects who blew themselves up April 3 as police investigating the bombings prepared to arrest them in an apartment outside Madrid. A police spokesman declined to comment on Lamari's relationship with the three isolated inmates. But the newspaper La Vanguardia quoted one investigator as saying: "It is not that the three knew Lamari. Rather, they were his people." The alleged leader of the court bombing plot, Mohamed Achraf, is said to have recruited cell members while jailed in Spain for credit-card fraud. Eight suspected cell members were arrested in Spain this week on the basis of testimony from an informant who was in contact with Achraf. One of those eight detainees, Madjid Sahouane, was arrested in Spain in September 2001 on suspicion of links to terror suspects elsewhere in Europe, but a judge freed him on bail a month later and threw out the case in February of this year, citing lack of evidence. |
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Suspected cell leader plotted suicide attack in Spain |
2004-10-20 |
The suspected leader of a Muslim cell plotted to devastate Spain with a suicide bombing that would kill senior judges and destroy case files at a court that serves as a center for investigating Islamic terror, officials said Wednesday. Police also said they had intercepted hundreds of letters from suspected cell members in which they said they were willing to stage suicide attacks. A report from the National Police intelligence unit, obtained by The Associated Press, quotes a protected witness who had been in contact with United Arab Emirates-born Mohamed Achraf, who Spain says was recently arrested in Switzerland. Authorities in Switzerland deny this. |
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