http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/14/national/14cleric.html?

Scholar Is Given Life Sentence in 'Virginia Jihad' Case
 

By ERIC LICHTBLAU

Published: July 14, 2005

ALEXANDRIA, Va., July 13 - An influential Muslim scholar, whom 
prosecutors called a "purveyor of hate and war," was ordered on 
Wednesday to spend the rest of his life in prison for inciting his 
young followers in Northern Virginia to wage war against the United 
States in the days after the Sept. 11 attacks.
The scholar, Ali al-Timimi, was defiant to the end, telling a 
federal judge as he was about to be sentenced that he considered 
himself a "prisoner of conscience" who was being persecuted for his 
strong Muslim beliefs. 
"I will not admit guilt nor seek the court's mercy," Mr. Timimi told 
a hushed courtroom filled with more than two dozen Muslims who have 
rallied around him. "I do this simply because I am innocent."
The federal district judge hearing the case, Leonie M. Brinkema, 
ordered the life sentence grudgingly, saying she was bound by 
federal guidelines. 
While Judge Brinkema said there was significant evidence that Mr. 
Timimi had incited his followers toward violence, she said she 
considered the prison terms mandated by the guidelines under four 
counts of the conviction to be "very draconian." She said she had no 
choice but to impose the life sentence after refusing a defense 
request to set aside the guilty verdicts.
Mr. Timimi, an Iraqi-American cancer researcher who lectured at a 
mosque in Northern Virginia and circulated his religious writings on 
the Internet, is the most prominent Muslim prosecuted in connection 
with what federal prosecutors have labeled the Virginia jihad 
network. 
Prosecutors portrayed Mr. Timimi as a spiritual and intellectual 
leader of the young men in the network, as they traveled to foreign 
training camps and prepared to wage a holy war in defense of Islam 
by playing paintball and gathering weapons and explosives. 
Gordon Kromberg, the lead prosecutor in the case for the Justice 
Department, called Mr. Timimi "a purveyor of hate and war" in court 
on Wednesday.
"Al-Timimi hates the United States and calls for its destruction," 
Mr. Kromberg said in urging lifelong imprisonment. "He's allowed to 
do that in this country. He's not allowed to solicit treason. That's 
what he did. He deserves every day of the time he will serve."
At one dinner meeting on Sept. 16, 2001, Mr. Timimi told some of the 
men in the group that it was their Muslim duty to fight for Islam 
overseas and to defend the Taliban in Afghanistan against American 
forces, according to testimony at his trial. And in an Internet 
message in 2003, he described the destruction of the space shuttle 
Columbia as a "good omen" for Muslims in an apocalyptic conflict 
with the West.
Defense lawyers for Mr. Timimi argued that his language, while 
offensive to many, was free speech protected by the First Amendment. 
At Wednesday's hearing, the defense lawyers used that argument and 
others in seeking to have the judge set aside the guilty verdicts 
handed up by a jury in Alexandria in April. 
The jury convicted Mr. Timimi on charges of conspiracy, attempting 
to aid the Taliban, soliciting treason and soliciting others to wage 
war against the United States, and aiding and abetting the use of 
firearms and explosives. The last charge carried a mandatory life 
sentence. 
Judge Brinkema said she found the free-speech defense "unpersuasive" 
and refused to throw out any of the verdicts.
"This was not a case about speech; this was a case about intent," 
she said, specifically Mr. Timimi's intent to incite others to 
commit crimes against the United States. 
She said the testimony "did strongly support" the legitimacy of the 
verdicts. 
Several Muslim supporters of Mr. Timimi wept as the life sentence 
was imposed. Mauri Saalakhan, a leader of a Maryland human rights 
group called the Peace and Justice Foundation, which supports 
Islamic causes, said outside the courthouse that the sentence was "a 
tragedy not just for Dr. Timimi but for all of us."
Edward B. MacMahon Jr., one of the defense lawyers, described Mr. 
Timimi as "a gentle man" and said he was "not a criminal," but Mr. 
MacMahon acknowledged that the life sentence was the only possible 
penalty once Judge Brinkema refused to throw out the convictions. 
Mr. Timimi delivered to the court an impassioned and often eloquent 
speech that lasted nearly 10 minutes, touching on Greek and Roman 
philosophy, religious history and the United States Constitution. 
Quoting Aaron Burr, Mr. Timimi said the idea that a cancer 
researcher like himself would incite his followers to violence was 
the stuff of "crudities and absurdities." He said that he and other 
Muslims had been "denied justice" for speaking about controversial 
religious ideas and that his prosecution reflected an abandonment of 
an American tradition of protecting individual liberties.
"And that which is exploited today to persecute a single member of a 
minority," he said, "will most assuredly come back to haunt the 
majority tomorrow."
Lawyers for Mr. Timimi, who had been free on bond since days after 
his indictment in September 2004, sought to have him remain out of 
custody pending his appeals, but Judge Brinkema refused the request. 
"It is time," she said in ordering him into custody.
Mr. Timimi thanked the judge, then flashed a smile and waved to 
relatives in the courtroom as he was led away.







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