At Padilla terror trial, a witness's surprise effect

http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0521/p03s03-usju.htm

A witness for the US government has painted a less-than-menacing picture of
a terrorist training camp.

Federal prosecutors had high hopes that Yahya Goba would emerge as a key
witness in the trial of suspected Al Qaeda recruit Jose Padilla. 

Now they are hoping he doesn't. 

When Mr. Goba was arrested in September 2002, he was portrayed as America's
worst nightmare. Government officials said he was a member of an Al Qaeda
sleeper cell who was recruited for jihad, went to Afghanistan to train in
the use of weapons and explosives, and returned to Lackawanna, N.Y., to
quietly await further instructions from Osama bin Laden. 

It was the same path that prosecutors say was followed by Mr. Padilla.
Goba's detailed telling of his story was seen by federal prosecutors as a
winning trial strategy, an opportunity to show the jury firsthand how a
Muslim-American could wind up in a terrorist training camp run by Al Qaeda. 

But the picture of Goba that is emerging from the witness stand at Padilla's
trial is less menacing than federal prosecutors had hoped. Rather than
boosting the government's case, his testimony appears to be helping Padilla
make his. 

Goba began his testimony on Friday and is expected to continue on the
witness stand Monday morning. 

He is appearing at the trial under a plea agreement and is seeking to have
the government reduce his 10-year prison sentence. Goba, who is married with
a 4-year-old daughter, has a strong additional incentive to cooperate in
every way with the government. He wants to avoid being designated an enemy
combatant and diverted out of the criminal justice system into indefinite
military detention. 

Padilla was held and interrogated for three years and eight months in
military custody as an enemy combatant before being named in the current
criminal case. 

The Miami indictment charges that Padilla and his two codefendants formed a
terror support cell that provided money, equipment, and recruits to Islamic
militants. Padilla is portrayed as a willing recruit. 

His lawyers say he is a devout Muslim who traveled to the Middle East to
advance his religious study. They deny that he attended a terror training
camp in Afghanistan. 

Goba as a stand-in for Padilla

The irony of Goba's testimony is that defense attorneys appear to be doing
to the prosecution with their own witness what prosecutors set out to do to
the defense. They are using Goba as a stand-in for Padilla. 

In his opening statement to the jury, Assistant US Attorney Brian Frazier
said that Goba would explain "just what kind of training Jose Padilla
wanted" at the camp in Afghanistan. 

Defense lawyers objected. And US District Judge Marcia Cooke sustained their
objection. It was a preview of what was to come.

When the government announced last week that Goba would be the next witness,
defense lawyers argued that prosecutors would try to hold Padilla
accountable for Goba's conduct by implying to the jury that both were
members of a single, massive Islamic conspiracy. 

Judge Cooke rejected the government's broad Islamic conspiracy theory,
saying there was no evidentiary connection between Goba's cell in Lackawanna
and the alleged South Florida cell. The judge limited Goba's testimony to
his own personal experiences at the Al Farooq training camp in Afghanistan.
He could testify about filling out a "Mujahideen Data Form" identical to the
form that the government says Padilla filled out. 

But the judge barred prosecutors from showing the jury a 30-second film of
Mr. bin Laden visiting the Al Farooq camp while Goba was there. The judge
ruled it wasn't relevant to Padilla's case because Padilla is alleged to
have attended the camp 10 months earlier. 

Cooke's limitations set the stage for a dramatic turnabout. 

Testimony has limitations

Instead of Goba discussing the radical, violent, terrorist goals of many of
his fellow recruits and their Al Qaeda hosts at Al Farooq, his testimony has
been limited to his own experiences and beliefs. He told the jury under
questioning by defense lawyers that he never intended to join Al Qaeda,
engage in terrorism, or harm anyone. 

He attended the training camp because he'd been told by an Islamic preacher
that it was a religious duty to prepare for jihad to assist Muslims
struggling against oppression in places like Bosnia, Kosovo, and Chechnya. 

"Are you now, or have you ever been a terrorist?" Padilla defense lawyer
Michael Caruso asked. 

"No," Goba answered.

"You felt that it was necessary to do this training so that if called upon,
you could help your [Muslim] brothers and sisters facing atrocities all over
the world?" Mr. Caruso asked. 

"Yes," Goba said.

Defense lawyers asked Goba to explain his beliefs about jihad, or Islamic
holy war. He agreed that jihad can represent an inner struggle within a
Muslim and that when it takes the form of physical fighting, it is only
acceptable in defense of Islam and Muslims. 

"So murder is not jihad?" asked William Swor, a lawyer for a Padilla
codefendant. "Unfairly injuring someone is not jihad?"

"Yes," Goba answered to both questions. 

By the end of the cross-examination, prosecutors knew they were in trouble:
When the jury was dismissed for the day, Mr. Frazier asked Cooke to allow
him more leeway to explore what Goba was told about Al Qaeda's view of
jihad. 

"The impression is left that the only reason people go to this camp [in
Afghanistan] is peaceful – the inner struggle," Frazier said. 

Defense lawyers urged the judge to hold firm to her earlier ruling.
"[Frazier's] goal is to get Al Qaeda's credo into this trial through this
witness," said Jeanne Baker, a lawyer for another Padilla codefendant. 

The episode is significant because it has enabled defense lawyers to
introduce some of their core arguments to the jury using an important
government witness. It has allowed defense lawyers to paint the case in
finer shades of gray rather than the black-and-white approach adopted by the
government. 

It also highlights the severe constraints faced by federal prosecutors who
have attempted to cobble together a criminal case against Padilla without
jeopardizing sensitive intelligence sources and methods. There is no
shortage of Al Qaeda officials in US custody at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, with
direct knowledge of the purpose of the Al Farooq training camp. But even if
they agreed to testify, to transport them into the United States would
empower them with certain legal protections and would open a door to permit
an investigation of the harsh interrogation tactics allegedly used against
them overseas. 

Even in its constrained form, Goba's testimony has been important for the
government. Under direct questioning from Frazier, Goba said that prior to
entering the training camp he filled out a Mujahideen Data Form identical to
the form prosecutors say Padilla filled out. 

But Padilla allegedly attended the same camp 10 month earlier. Prosecutors
acknowledge that they have been unable to locate anyone who was at the
training camp with Padilla. "If they exist, we don't know where they are,"
Frazier told the judge outside the jury's presence. 

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