20 July 2004
Source: Digital file from Southern District Reporters Office; (212) 805-0300.

This is the transcript of Day 24 of the proceeding and Day 15 of the trial.

See other transcripts: http://cryptome.org/usa-v-ssy-dt.htm

Lynne Stewart web site with case documents: http://www.lynnestewart.org/


                                                                           3792
             47JSSAT1
        1    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
        1    SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
        2    ------------------------------x
        2
        3    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
        3
        4               v.                           S1 02 Cr. 395 (JGK)
        4
        5    AHMED ABDEL SATTAR, a/k/a "Abu Omar,"
        5    a/k/a "Dr. Ahmed," LYNNE STEWART,
        6    and MOHAMMED YOUSRY,
        6
        7                   Defendants.
        7
        8    ------------------------------x
        8
        9
        9                                         New York, N.Y.
       10                                         July 19, 2004
       10                                         9:15 a.m.
       11
       11    Before:
       12
       12                          HON. JOHN G. KOELTL
       13
       13                                            District Judge
       14
       15
       16
       17
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JSSAT1
        1                              APPEARANCES
        1
        2    DAVID N. KELLEY
        2         United States Attorney for the
        3         Southern District of New York
        3    ROBIN BAKER
        4    CHRISTOPHER MORVILLO
        4    ANTHONY BARKOW
        5    ANDREW DEMBER
        5         Assistant United States Attorneys
        6
        6    KENNETH A. PAUL
        7    BARRY M. FALLICK
        7         Attorneys for Defendant Sattar
        8
        8    MICHAEL TIGAR
        9    JILL R. SHELLOW-LAVINE
        9         Attorneys for Defendant Stewart
       10
       10    DAVID STERN
       11    DAVID A. RUHNKE
       11         Attorneys for Defendant Yousry
       12
       12
       13
       14
       15
       15
       16
       17
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3794
             47JSSAT1
        1             (Trial resumed)
        2             (In open court; jury not present)
        3             THE COURT:  Good morning all.  Please be seated.
        4             I received this morning a letter from Ms.
        5    Shellow-Lavine raising some issues with respect to the prison
        6    visits.  I haven't had an opportunity to review the letter
        7    and -- it's from Mr. Tigar.  And the final line is that we are
        8    corresponding with the government about the way in which the
        9    admissibility proceeding should be handled and the parties
       10    should let me know if there is something that I have to decide
       11    on that and, if so, when.  Plainly if there is an issue I
       12    should decide it and have whatever information I need in
       13    advance.
       14             MS. BAKER:  Judge, I just received these letters a few
       15    minutes ago, both the letter that is addressed to your Honor
       16    and also a letter addressed to us, the U.S. Attorney's Office.
       17    I haven't had time to digest the entire letter to your Honor
       18    but I did want to address two portions of it.  I know that your
       19    Honor still needs to read it as well, but I think it would help
       20    your Honor to have this in mind in reading it.
       21             The front page of it includes four bullet-pointed
       22    items.  The second bullet-pointed item on the first page asks
       23    for production of all parts of the February 2000 recordings,
       24    including those redacted or minimized for any purpose by any
       25    person or entity, including the FISA court.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1             I will represent to the court, as I advised Ms.
        2    Shellow-Lavine earlier this morning when I received the letter,
        3    that throughout the course of this case on several different
        4    occasions the defense attorneys have been provided with various
        5    forms of recordings of the prison visits.  Early in the case it
        6    was on VHS tape.  Later in the case it was on DVD, but repeated
        7    sets of recordings produced by our wall team, specifically the
        8    correspondence would have been from AUSA Gary Stein or from
        9    AUSA Carl Metzner or from paralegal Jaleen Orange.  Any
       10    recordings that came from the wall team, specifically including
       11    recordings of the February 2000 prison visit, were completely
       12    complete, meaning nothing had been minimized out.  Nothing had
       13    been redacted out from those recordings that came by way of the
       14    wall team.  So that second bullet point item in this letter is
       15    already addressed.  The defense has had those recordings for a
       16    very long time.
       17             The third bullet point item in the letter asserts a
       18    belief on the part of defendant Stewart that the FBI agents
       19    exceeded the scope of the FISA warrant and therefore concludes
       20    with a request for the FISA warrant application and FISA court
       21    order.  I just wanted to remind the court for the record of a
       22    fact that the court is already well aware of, which is in
       23    response to the defendants' pretrial motion to suppress the
       24    FISA evidence, the court specifically reviewed the way the FISA
       25    surveillance had been carried out and the court specifically
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1    found in denying that motion to suppress that the FISA
        2    surveillance in this case, including the surveillance of the
        3    prison visits, was not only lawfully authorized by the FISA
        4    court but also lawfully conducted by the FBI, which means that
        5    the court has already found that the FBI agents did not in fact
        6    exceed the scope of the FISA warrant and the court already
        7    specifically denied a defense request for the FISA applications
        8    and orders and the government respectfully submits that there
        9    is nothing new in the record, no reason for the court to
       10    revisit those issues that were previously decided.
       11             Now, turning to the defense letter addressed to the
       12    government, and what, if any, issues that creates that might
       13    require intervention by the court, unfortunately we may already
       14    be at the point of needing the court's intervention.  The
       15    letter, which is addressed to my office, states in pertinent
       16    part that the Jencks material that we provided as to a certain
       17    witness "Leads us to seek a hearing on what was recorded, what
       18    was redacted, and how the redactions were done.
       19             "Second, the hearing would deal with the various
       20    techniques to record, edit, alter, copy, and otherwise deal
       21    with this material.
       22             "Third, we will be wanting to know what technology
       23    exists to alter this type of data.
       24             "Fourth, we will want to know the extent, if any, to
       25    which digital technology was used."
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1             THE COURT:  Okay.  Hold on.
        2             You say that already we are at the point where you
        3    need court intervention.  The letter is a letter from defense
        4    counsel to the government and says that defense counsel either
        5    seeks a hearing, and I can't recall the specific way in which
        6    it said seeks a hearing, may seek a hearing.  So far I don't
        7    have a letter from the defendants asking to seek a hearing.
        8             It's reminiscent to me of on the other side when
        9    shortly before trial, if memory serves me right, there was a
       10    letter from defense counsel with respect to the court with
       11    respect to transcript issues and the prior letter by the
       12    government had said we are willing to talk about these issues
       13    and as soon as the defendants got that letter, I got the file
       14    of correspondence back and forth and said it would be helpful
       15    for your Honor to decide these four issues.  Well, it turned
       16    out it was not necessary because the parties constructively
       17    worked it out.
       18             Whether the defendants do seek a hearing or whether
       19    the issues can be resolved between you, I don't know.  So far
       20    the defendants haven't sought it before me and, yes, the issues
       21    have to be looked at promptly if these witnesses are going to
       22    testify this week and there is something that is being sought
       23    before the witnesses testify.  But right now I don't have that
       24    request.  I suggest that at least the parties talk about it and
       25    then I need a request.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, I am not really sure what the
        2    parties would talk about.  The government is prepared to call
        3    before the jury, which we believe is the appropriate approach,
        4    the witnesses who will authenticate the original recordings and
        5    a witness who will explain how redacted recordings, redacted
        6    copies of the recordings, were made, and that is the approach
        7    that the government submits is appropriate under the
        8    circumstances.
        9             We don't expect, based on everything that has happened
       10    to date, that there would be any stipulation to replace the
       11    testimony of those witnesses.  Therefore, we decline to provide
       12    free advance rehearsal for the cross examination of the
       13    witnesses.  We believe that we should simply be permitted to
       14    present their testimony in front of the jury.  So if nothing
       15    else I would ask the court to accept my statements here as the
       16    government's declination to consent to the defense request for
       17    a hearing out of the presence of the jury.  We don't believe
       18    that that is necessary or appropriate.
       19             THE COURT:  Okay.
       20             Mr. Tigar.
       21             MR. TIGAR:  If your Honor please, the letter in
       22    question was sent to Mr. Dember, who has just arrived, in
       23    answer to a letter that Mr. Dember sent to me.  I would be
       24    pleased that the purpose of my letter was to have a discussion
       25    with Mr. Dember about suggestions I made.  I look forward to
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1    that, your Honor.
        2             THE COURT:  Okay.
        3             MR. TIGAR:  Now, with respect to my letter, it is my
        4    understanding that the government -- that the FBI in addition
        5    to recording at the prison did some other recordings in
        6    Minneapolis that were not authorized by the FISA court.  That
        7    is my understanding.  I don't want to invade anyone's privacy
        8    by anything we do here.  That is not my intention.  But if that
        9    happened, then we have not received the results of it or even a
       10    statement as to what happened and when it happened.  If it
       11    happened that would bring us to the point of wanting to see
       12    everything that was done in that surveillance which had an
       13    unitary purpose so that we could exercise our rights.
       14             If it happened, and if the recording was done without
       15    FISA court authorization, then the fact that recordings took
       16    place on that visit without court authorization would represent
       17    the violation of the act elements of two federal criminal
       18    statutes, passing the question of intent.  That is the purpose
       19    of my letter.
       20             Nothing that Ms. Baker says addresses that.  It is a
       21    serious matter.  How it should be addressed, it seems to me, as
       22    well as the other issues here, which are quite independent of
       23    that, is something as to which if the government has a position
       24    I think perhaps they could send a letter or we could take time,
       25    because it's not an immediate issue, when we could address it.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JSSAT1
        1             But that is the state of play, your Honor, with
        2    respect to this request.
        3             THE COURT:  All right.
        4             Let me take care of the other issues.
        5             Coming in this morning I saw some jurors from a
        6    distance in the corridor and I followed my own instructions to
        7    just walk away, so I take it they won't consider that, if they
        8    saw me with my clerk, a sign of impoliteness.
        9             I got a letter -- not a letter, I was advised by the
       10    District Executive that we have a request by an instructor at
       11    the Columbia University, American Legal Language Program, to
       12    have for class of 30 students observe the trial on July 26th,
       13    2004.  I bring that to your attention.  There is room.  No
       14    special arrangements have to be made and I intend to tell the
       15    representative of the District Executive that it's all right.
       16    The courtroom is an open place.  It's not as though any special
       17    arrangements or anything has to be made, but I just bring that
       18    to your attention.
       19             Second, I had correspondence on Government Exhibits
       20    2757T and 2757.  The government objects to my proposed
       21    instruction in a letter dated July 16.  The instruction that I
       22    said I would give was these documents are not admitted for the
       23    truth of anything that is said in these statements and you may
       24    not consider them for the truth of what is there.  And my
       25    recollection is that the defendants agreed to that instruction
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1    and the government objected.  And the government submitted a
        2    letter explaining why the statements had no truthful content in
        3    any event.
        4             Is that correct?
        5             MR. BARKOW:  Yes, your Honor.
        6             THE COURT:  Mr. Ruhnke.
        7             MR. RUHNKE:  Yes, your Honor.
        8             THE COURT:  I am prepared to rule on that.
        9             All right.
       10             I continue to find that the instruction is correct,
       11    that the exhibits are not admitted for the truth of anything
       12    that is said.  The defendants disagree with that instruction.
       13    The defendants do not disagree with that instruction.  The
       14    government asks me to reconsider it.
       15             The government argues that threats are not hearsay
       16    because in the words of Stratton, they are not "offered for
       17    their truth.  The threats are verbal acts."   United States
       18    against Stratton, 779 F.2d 820, 830 (2d Cir. 1985).  The
       19    government argues that the statements have no content that the
       20    jury could mistake for their truth and that therefore no such
       21    instruction is warranted.
       22             The government suggests an alternative instruction
       23    that indicates the various uses of the statements.  But if, as
       24    explained in Stratton, threats are not offered for their truth,
       25    there is no prejudice to the government from telling the jury
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1    exactly that.  Moreover, there are other parts of the
        2    statements that discuss such things as prison conditions which
        3    are also plainly not being offered for their truth.  A simple
        4    instruction that the statements are not offered for their truth
        5    accurately describes the limitation on the use of these
        6    statements.
        7             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, I didn't mean to cut the
        8    court off if the court was still ruling.
        9             THE COURT:  No, I am finished.
       10             MR. BARKOW:  Since the court is going to give that
       11    instruction, we would just ask, and I don't know if the exact
       12    contours of the instruction were set out yet, but we would ask
       13    the court do include the language of the matters asserted or of
       14    the matters asserted therein in the court's instruction to
       15    track the actual rule, which we think might lessen the
       16    confusion that we were speaking about in our letter.
       17             THE COURT:  I have no problem saying "not offered for
       18    the truth of the matters asserted."
       19             Mr. Ruhnke?
       20             MR. RUHNKE:  That is acceptable, your Honor.
       21             THE COURT:  Next is the newspaper clippings and
       22    Exhibit 2031.  The newspaper clippings are 2004, 2005, 2006 and
       23    2007.  I have read the correspondence.
       24             Anyone else want to be heard?
       25             No?  All right.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JSSAT1
        1             And 2031, which are contained in the same
        2    correspondence.
        3             With respect to the newspaper clippings, the parties
        4    agree to the admissibility of Government Exhibits 2002 and
        5    2003.  The government also asks the court to overrule the
        6    objections by Ms. Stewart and Mr. Yousry and to admit
        7    Government Exhibits 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007, or at the very
        8    least to allow redacted versions of 2004, 2005 and 2007.
        9             I reviewed the exhibits.  I will sustain the
       10    objection.  The asserted relevance of the articles is to show
       11    Mr. Sattar's state of mind in that he was aware of convictions,
       12    but that is plain from Government Exhibit 2003, which was
       13    contained in his file.  It is also established from the tapes
       14    that have already been admitted in evidence in which Mr. Sattar
       15    discusses the conviction and the issues raised and the appeal.
       16             The danger of unfair prejudice is that the articles
       17    unnecessarily attempt to trade on the use of terms such as
       18    "terror trial."  The articles are also cumulative of the facts
       19    of which the court took judicial notice and the articles which
       20    are admitted without objection.
       21             The government responds that the fact that Mr. Sattar
       22    clipped several additional articles is relevant to his state of
       23    mind and thus the three additional articles are not cumulative.
       24    Whatever slight relevance this fact has -- and it is difficult
       25    to afford it much weight -- is outweighed by the danger of
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1    unfair prejudice and waste of time.  I leave open the one
        2    possibility that the list in Government Exhibit 2005 of the
        3    other defendants who were convicted may have relevance to
        4    Mr. Sattar's state of mind but that would have to be
        5    demonstrated in a far more specific proffer than it has thus
        6    far been made.  Thus, I will sustain the objections to
        7    Government Exhibits 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007.
        8             With respect to Government Exhibit 2031, the exhibit
        9    is in evidence subject to limiting instructions.  The
       10    government seeks to read Government Exhibit 2031 up to and
       11    including the "terms explained."   Those are several portions
       12    of the book and may be read.  Of course, any of the defendants
       13    may seek to read other portions in their own case if they
       14    choose to do so.  Obviously the defendants have no obligation,
       15    requirement, at all to introduce anything or to present any
       16    case.
       17             I have also reviewed 508 redacted.  I reviewed the 508
       18    series and I would be prepared to rule on the 508 series also.
       19             Anyone want to be heard on that?
       20             MR. RUHNKE:  No, thank you, your Honor.
       21             THE COURT:  I have considered all of the arguments of
       22    the parties relating to the 508 series of documents.  For the
       23    reasons already explained in granting the government's motion
       24    in limine with respect to the admissibility of the fatwah, this
       25    evidence is highly relevant and the 403 considerations do not
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1    indicate that the fatwah should be excluded.
        2             The same considerations apply to the admissibility of
        3    the report of the interview with Mr. Taha.  It is highly
        4    relevant on the same issues and the relevance is not outweighed
        5    by any danger of unfair prejudice.  As the court explained, and
        6    is now confirmed by the exhibit themselves, the evidence is not
        7    unduly graphic and the references to Osama Bin Laden do not
        8    render the evidence unfairly prejudicial.  Moreover, unlike
        9    other evidence relevant to Count 2, the government consented to
       10    a limiting instruction that this evidence is "admitted only
       11    against defendant Sattar," and with respect to this evidence
       12    cannot be considered against defendants Stewart or Yousry.
       13             The transcript of Government Exhibit 1002X
       14    sufficiently authenticates the fatwah published in the August
       15    15, 1998 Al-Quds newspaper as the fatwah Taha signed and Taha
       16    adopted the interview with him and recommended it for
       17    distribution and Sattar, similarly, acknowledged the article.
       18    See generally Wagstaff v. Protected of Harold Corp. of America,
       19    760 F.2d 1074, 1078 (10th Cir. 1985); In Re Columbia Securities
       20    Litigation, 15 FRD 466, 478 (S.D.N.Y. 1994).
       21             Sattar expressed his familiarity with the article and
       22    thus it and the fatwah would be admissible for his state of
       23    mind and intent.  The fatwah itself is a threat and would be
       24    admitted as a verbal act and not for its truth.  See United
       25    States against Stratton, 779 F.2d 820, 830 (2d Cir. 1985).
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1    While it is true that the interview itself reflects some
        2    statements about Taha's intent and state of mind, which are not
        3    hearsay under 803(3), this would include such statements as "we
        4    will continue our hostility to the United States so long as the
        5    Americans are hostile to our nation and as long as they hold
        6    our sheikh in its prisons and as long as they continue to
        7    support the Zionist entity in our Palestine, in our Jerusalem."
        8             The interview also contains statements that go beyond
        9    Taha's state of mind to describe what the Islamic Group has
       10    done and how the Egyptian government responded.  These
       11    statements if offered for their truth could be admissible, as
       12    the government proffers, against Mr. Sattar alone as statements
       13    of a co-conspirator during and in furtherance of a conspiracy
       14    of which Sattar and Taha were members.  See United States
       15    against Tracy, 12 F.3d 1186, 1199 (2d Cir. 1993); United States
       16    against Geaney, 417 F.2d 1116, 1120 (2d Cir. 1969).
       17             The fact that the statements were made before the
       18    Count 2 conspiracy charged in the indictment would not prevent
       19    their admission as co-conspirator statements so long as the
       20    government eventually shows under Tracy and Geaney that the
       21    requirements of a co-conspirator statement in accordance with
       22    Rule 801(d)(2)(g) are satisfied.  See also Stratton, 779 F.2d
       23    at 829.  The appropriate instruction for this evidence is "I
       24    will take it subject to connection, which means you can
       25    consider the evidence unless I subsequently instruct you to
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1    disregard it."
        2             Therefore, the appropriate instructions for this
        3    evidence is as follows:
        4             Government Exhibit 508 redacted, 508T redacted, 508T2
        5    unredacted, and 508 T3 redacted, are admitted in evidence.  You
        6    will note that certain portions of Government Exhibits 508,
        7    508T and 508T3 have been redacted.  That simply means that
        8    parts have been taken out or blacked out or removed.  That is
        9    done for legal reasons that do not affect your consideration
       10    and you should not be concerned about that.  These exhibits are
       11    admitted only against Mr. Sattar and not against Ms. Stewart or
       12    Mr. Yousry and you cannot consider those exhibits against Ms.
       13    Stewart or Mr. Yousry for any purpose.
       14             With respect to Mr. Sattar, the exhibits are admitted
       15    only as to Counts 2 and 3 and you may assign to these exhibits
       16    whatever weight you consider appropriate in your consideration
       17    of Counts 2 and 3.  However, I instruct you that Exhibit 508T
       18    is received subject to connection with respect to the truth of
       19    any matter asserted in it.  That means you can consider the
       20    article for the truth of any statements made in the article
       21    unless at some point I instruct you to disregard them.
       22             Finally, I have reviewed the redactions.  The
       23    redactions are appropriate.  The article itself should be
       24    redacted by taking out the photograph of Bin Laden.  The text
       25    does not have to be redacted because it is not otherwise
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JSSAT1
        1    readable, unless I hear an objection that suggests that the
        2    remainder of the article should be redacted to conform to the
        3    redacted transcript.
        4             The translation of 508T should be redacted as
        5    indicated except the following redactions should also be added
        6    or redacted:  In addition to the redactions already in the
        7    article, on page 2, the first two full paragraphs, should be
        8    redacted beginning with "the signing" and ending with "from
        9    different Arab countries."   And the sixth full paragraph on
       10    page 2 should also be redacted beginning with "the sources" and
       11    ending with "collective leadership."
       12             Are we ready to bring in the jury?
       13             MR. BARKOW:  I wanted to let the court know that what
       14    we were going to do was start by finishing the speech that was
       15    being read at the end of the day and then there is one more
       16    that I think was admitted yesterday or, rather, Thursday.  We
       17    were going to read that.
       18             At the end of that point I was going to offer into
       19    evidence a series of Sattar search exhibits that are not
       20    objected to and I didn't know if the court wanted me to list
       21    those now just so the court and the parties are aware of which
       22    ones I am going to be listing, or I can just do it when we get
       23    to that point.  We are not going to publish them.  We are just
       24    going to offer them.
       25             THE COURT:  If there are no objections I will take
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        1    your representation and I don't have to take a list now.
        2             All right.
        3             Bring in the jury.
        4             (In open court; jury present)
        5             THE COURT:  Please be seated all.
        6             Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.
        7             Good to see you all.
        8             All right, I believe when we left on Thursday we were
        9    in the middle of a document.
       10             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, if I may, I would like to
       11    publish briefly the first page of the exhibit just so the jury
       12    can see the exhibit number and then pick up with page 5, with
       13    the top of page 5.  This is from the Sattar search evidence.
       14    And it's a speech of Abdel Rahman.
       15             Your Honor, if I may, if we can publish page 5.  We
       16    had finished page 4 on Thursday.
       17             THE COURT:  All right.
       18             MR. BARKOW:  May I proceed by reading the exhibit?
       19             THE COURT:  Yes.
       20             (At this point the reading of Government Exhibit 2077T
       21    in evidence was continued)
       22             MR. BARKOW:  At this point Mr. Dember, with the
       23    court's permission, is going to read Government Exhibit 2079.
       24             THE COURT:  All right.
       25             MR. DEMBER:  Your Honor, may we publish Government
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JSSAT1
        1    Exhibit 2079T?
        2             THE COURT:  Yes.
        3             Ladies and gentlemen, I gave you the instruction to
        4    consider on 2077 and 2079.  The exhibits are admitted only
        5    against Mr. Sattar and not against Ms. Stewart or Mr. Yousry.
        6    They are admitted solely with respect to the knowledge and
        7    intent and state of mind of Mr. Sattar and Omar Abdel Rahman
        8    and you may consider them solely for that purpose.
        9             MR. DEMBER:  Your Honor, this is an exhibit from the
       10    Sattar search.
       11             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2079T in evidence
       12    was read to the jury by Mr. Dember)
       13             (Continued on next page)
       14
       15
       16
       17
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47JLSAT2
        1             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, at this point the government
        2    would offer into evidence and seek to publish to the jury
        3    government Exhibit 2031.
        4             THE COURT:  All right.  My recollection was this was
        5    subject to the limine instruction.
        6             MR. BARKOW:  Yes, your Honor.
        7             THE COURT:  That is offered solely against Mr. Sattar
        8    and not against Ms. Stewart or Mr. Yousry.  And it's being
        9    offered only with respect to the knowledge, intent and state of
       10    mind of Mr. Sattar, and you may consider it only for that
       11    purpose.  All right?
       12             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, may we publish it to the
       13    jury, the first portion, and read it as we publish it?
       14             THE COURT:  All right.
       15             (Government's Exhibit 2031 received in evidence)
       16             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2031, in evidence,
       17    was displayed and read to the jury)
       18             MR. BARKOW:  May I have just a moment, your Honor, to
       19    confer with Miss Shellow-Lavine?
       20             THE COURT:  All right.
       21               (Off the record)
       22             MR. BARKOW:  At this point, I'll just offer a series
       23    of exhibits from the Sattar search and publish them at a later
       24    time.
       25             THE COURT:  All right.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JLSAT2
        1             MR. BARKOW:  2002, 2003, 2010S, 2013, 2013T, 2020,
        2    2020T, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2023T, 2025, 2026, 2028, 2029, 2029T,
        3    2037, 2041, 2046A, 2046B, 2046D, 2052, 2057, 2057T, 2066,
        4    2066T, 2067, 2068, 2070, 2070T-A, 2073, 2083, 2083A.
        5             THE COURT:  All right.  No objections.  Those exhibits
        6    are received in evidence.
        7             (Government's Exhibits 2002, 2003, 2010S, 2013, 2013T,
        8    2020, 2020T, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2023T, 2025, 2026, 2028, 2029,
        9    2029T, 2037, 2041, 2046A, 2046B, 2046D, 2052, 2057, 2057T,
       10    2066, 2066T, 2067, 2068, 2070, 2070T-A, 2073, 2083, 2083A
       11    received in evidence)
       12             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, at this time the government
       13    recalls Scott Kerns.
       14             THE COURT:  Before we move to a witness, this may be a
       15    convenient time for our morning break.  Please remember my
       16    continuing instructions not to discuss the case.
       17             All rise, please.  Follow Mr. Fletcher into the jury
       18    room.
       19               (The jury exits the courtroom)
       20             THE COURT:  All right.  Please be seated, all.  One
       21    thought occurred to me which was on 508-T, I didn't see an
       22    objection with respect to the translation.  Is the translation
       23    subject to a stipulation or is it just not objected to as a
       24    stipulation -- as a translation?
       25             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, we had not had a chance to ask
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             47JLSAT2
        1    defense counsel about that.  Since your Honor rejected the
        2    other objections, it was our intention to put that question to
        3    defense counsel during this break.
        4             THE COURT:  Okay.
        5             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, with respect to Agent Kerns,
        6    who is the next witness to come, and having in mind the Court's
        7    sustaining of the government's motion in limine on GX 1300,
        8    which is the exhibit he will sponsor, there is a file,
        9    19990702_161314, containing 33,576,763 bytes.  On the discovery
       10    file, the file name is the same, and contains only 1,654,511
       11    bytes.  I would ask the Court's permission to inquire of Agent
       12    Kerns, because these are both VOC files, containing the same
       13    file name, what, if any, explanation there is for that
       14    disparity.
       15             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, this is one of the several
       16    issues on which your Honor granted the government's motion in
       17    limine to avoid wasting time and confusing the jury.  The
       18    explanation -- and obviously I'd have to check with Agent
       19    Kerns, but the explanation would be that in the mass production
       20    of the very large number of files in discovery, there were
       21    certain files that were misnamed, and on the trial DVD's, the
       22    signal-related information, the nonaudio data that appears in
       23    each file on the trial DVD's, makes clear that each file on the
       24    trial DVDs are what the government claims they are as far as
       25    the dates and times of the calls.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JLSAT2
        1             Without looking specifically at the prior file to
        2    which Mr. Tigar is referring, I can only infer from all of the
        3    circumstances that the file previously produced in discovery
        4    was misnamed, and to go into the production of files in
        5    discovery and the steps that the FBI took to produce
        6    approximately 85,000 files all at the same time in various
        7    different sets brings us precisely back to the time wasting and
        8    confusion that the government sought to avoid by virtue of its
        9    motion in limine.  So we would ask the Court to adhere to its
       10    prior ruling and not permit that cross-examination.
       11             MR. TIGAR:  My first observation is since counsel
       12    doesn't know what the problem is, it's hard to know whether or
       13    not this is relevant, what the government is doing.
       14             My second observation is that in addition to what
       15    counsel has described as a discovery problem, if you take a
       16    look at the very first file listed on 1300L, which is the list
       17    of files that the government is proceeding to put in evidence,
       18    you find that the signal-related information gives us a
       19    creation time of January 1st, 1970.  And that's a date, your
       20    Honor.
       21             I'm not going to go into the rest of the ones listed
       22    here, but of course I have a few more.  That's not covered by
       23    the motion in limine, but I'm trying to indicate I think we
       24    have a problem here.  I'm trying to do the responsible thing
       25    and bring it to the Court's attention.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JLSAT2
        1             THE COURT:  The first item -- in response to what
        2    Ms. Baker said, you raised another issue which doesn't appear
        3    to be covered by the motion in limine.  So that's not, so far
        4    as I can tell, at issue.
        5             I would allow a limited number of questions with
        6    respect to the VOV files.  The main thrust of the motion in
        7    limine was the files produced in MP3 format and .wav format
        8    rather than the VOC format, and, as I say, I would allow a
        9    limited number of questions, if they go to the trial DVD and
       10    the authenticity, reliability of the trial DVD.
       11             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, I have a request which goes to
       12    whether there is a good faith basis for the cross-examination
       13    that Mr. Tigar proposes to conduct.  If I am correct, and the
       14    file produced in discovery that had the same name as the file
       15    that we're now offering was misnamed when it was produced in
       16    discovery, the signal-related information in the copy produced
       17    in discovery would make that clear.  And so I would request
       18    that Mr. Tigar make the discovery disk available so that we can
       19    see whether the signal-related information in that previously
       20    produced file makes clear that it's a different call, because
       21    if it does make clear that it's a different call and the
       22    problem was with the naming of some other call produced in
       23    discovery, then there's not a good faith basis for asking this
       24    witness now whether there was some change in the same recording
       25    from when it was produced in discovery till now, because it
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             47JLSAT2
        1    would obviously be clear that it was, in fact, two different
        2    recordings, and the problem was a problem of a naming of a file
        3    in discovery which has nothing to do with the accuracy or
        4    authenticity of the recordings on the trial.
        5             MR. TIGAR:  The government presumably has a copy of
        6    what it produced to us and can look at it.  We'll bring a copy
        7    and the government can look at our copy if they want, but what
        8    Ms. Baker says about file naming isn't quite right.  We have
        9    now, your Honor, the Lockheed Martin -- what was purported to
       10    be the Lockheed Martin materials.  Well, they're not.  The
       11    government produced a diskette to us and I look now, for
       12    example, at the -- a call on -- their proposed Exhibit 1300L.
       13    Let's just take as an example, Item Number 2 there, which is a
       14    1999 call, on the Lockheed Martin materials produced to us.
       15    There's a file creation date of July 10th, 2004.  So that's not
       16    helpful to us to identify.  The file name on the Lockheed
       17    Martin production is the same file name as in 1300L, but with a
       18    DDR suffix, not a VOC suffix.  When we opened the Lockheed
       19    Martin file, we find that the header and footer information
       20    that purports to tell the date of the call is not there, which
       21    means that file naming must have been a manual process done by
       22    human beings because from the most original -- the originals
       23    having been destroyed -- the Lockheed Martin compressed files
       24    do not contain signal-related information that would permit you
       25    to get all the information that is characterized as
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                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JLSAT2
        1    signal-related on the trial DVD.
        2             And then if we turn to the trial DVD, we have all
        3    these other problems of missing dates and so on.  So I just
        4    want to ask about that.  And I will, if I may.
        5             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, the files on the disk that
        6    Mr. Tigar was recently given that are the files in the Lockheed
        7    Martin format are copies of the files in the Lockheed Martin
        8    format.  The modified date that appears when you look at the
        9    list of files, either on screen in a Windows environment, or
       10    printing out a list like this (indicating).  The last modified
       11    date is supplied by Windows.
       12             So that date is a reflection of when a Windows
       13    operating computer was used to burn those files to DVD, and it
       14    has nothing to do with when those files were originally
       15    created, which was the date and time that the calls occurred.
       16             I don't know what software Mr. Tigar used to look at
       17    the Lockheed Martin files, but when I looked at them, using
       18    Notepad to open each file, there is, in fact, nonaudio
       19    signal-related information at the beginning of each file which
       20    includes the telephone number and the date, although I will
       21    proffer to Mr. Tigar maybe he didn't recognize it as the date
       22    because it's a date in a different format.  It's a string of
       23    digits, which is the telephone number.  It -- immediately at
       24    the end of that string of digits is another string of digits
       25    which is a two-digit year, a three-digit Julian date, and then
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JLSAT2
        1    a six-digit time.  And when I say Julian date, I mean it's a
        2    dating system in which you -- the days of the year are
        3    consecutively numbered, 1 through 365, or 366 in the case of a
        4    leap year.  And so, for example, a date of a particular file
        5    might show as 99117, and then a six-digit time, so that would
        6    be the 117th day of the year 1999.
        7             All of that has nothing to do with the question that
        8    he just said that he wanted to ask Agent Kerns on
        9    cross-examination, and I still request that -- I mean,
       10    Mr. Tigar is right:  I have a copy of whatever was produced in
       11    discovery.  It's obviously not here in the courtroom; I don't
       12    know which particular disk or set of discovery disks he's
       13    talking about.  And I ask that he not be permitted to ask that
       14    cross-examination until we've had an opportunity to determine
       15    whether that original question he proposes to ask has a good
       16    faith basis.
       17             THE COURT:  Well, Mr. Tigar is alerted to your concern
       18    as to whether there's a good faith basis for asking the
       19    question.  I can't decide that, based upon what I've heard
       20    here.  Certainly -- and some of the arguments obviously have
       21    nothing to do with the original question that was asked.  They
       22    raise other questions with respect to individual items on the
       23    Government Exhibit 1300.  And obviously I'll listen to whatever
       24    the cross is and, if necessary, the redirect on it.
       25             If there is a good faith basis to ask questions about
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                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JLSAT2
        1    whether a file in the VOC format identified on Government
        2    Exhibit 1300 is, in fact, accurately identified, that would be
        3    a reasonable subject for cross.  It goes -- it goes beyond the
        4    motion in limine which said, Look, essentially, we have 200 to
        5    250 calls which we're attempting to authenticate.  They've been
        6    recorded on the trial DVD in the way in which it's been
        7    explained.  Going into the production of 85,000 calls in
        8    various other formats over a period of time and glitches in
        9    that production would be unnecessarily confusing and a waste of
       10    time.
       11             These questions appear to be directed directly to the
       12    trial DVD, items identified on the trial DVD in the same format
       13    as the trial DVD, and frankly, it doesn't seem to me to be a
       14    big deal.  If in fact the facts are whichever way the parties
       15    posit, whether there was another file with the same number or
       16    whether this number on this DVD may refer to another file name
       17    and there is an explanation for that, that would normally be
       18    something developed on cross and then by redirect.  It doesn't
       19    go into another format.  It doesn't go into the production of
       20    the 85,000 records and any gaps in that production.  It relates
       21    to the calls on Government Exhibit 1300.
       22             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, with all due respect, it did
       23    go into the production of the 85,000 files in the VOC format,
       24    because when they were produced in the VOC format, they were
       25    retrieved en masse.  They were renamed through the running of a
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3820
             47JLSAT2
        1    software application because, as I think Agent Kerns testified
        2    when he was here last time, on the magneto optical disks, the
        3    files are merely named sequential numbers, all on one MO disk.
        4    So on one particular MO you have files named from 1 through --
        5    I don't know, whatever thousand.  So for purposes of people who
        6    are using them, being able to recognize which files are which,
        7    this software script was run on each one, which was supposed to
        8    take the signal-related information from inside the header and
        9    generate this file name that had meaningful information in it.
       10             When the 85,000 files were produced en masse in
       11    pretrial discovery in any format, including when they were
       12    produced the last time in VOC format, because of the very large
       13    number of files all being produced together, nobody did
       14    anything to check individual files to ensure that each file's
       15    newly-generated file name matched the signal-related
       16    information, whereas in this much, much smaller universe of
       17    files that are on the trial DVD's, that is not the case, and,
       18    in fact, there has been a determination that these file names
       19    match the signal-related information in each file.
       20             So it does bring up the issue of the production of the
       21    85,000 files, and how that was done and how the doing of that
       22    differed from the preparation of this disk.
       23             THE COURT:  But that doesn't -- Agent Kerns has
       24    already testified to the existence of 85,000 files, and I
       25    believe has testified to the production to the defendants.  If
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3821
             47JLSAT2
        1    not, it would be -- if defendants open it up, it's something to
        2    be -- that could be responded to.  He already said the reasons
        3    for retrieving 85,000 files was for production purposes, unlike
        4    cross-examination directed to the production of the 85,000
        5    files and gaps in the production or problems with the
        6    production, and the parties can ask themselves if there's a
        7    good faith basis for it in view of everything that they've
        8    heard, but it goes to a very limited subject, which is the
        9    naming of a specific file on Government Exhibit 1300, how that
       10    came about, and what the basis for its authenticity is for
       11    that.  And if there's a question raised with respect to the
       12    naming of that file, it will be subject to explanation as to
       13    why that's true.  And it doesn't seem to me at all to raise the
       14    kinds of general issues that I decided on the motion in limine.
       15             You can consider whether there's a good faith basis.
       16    I'll take 10 minutes.
       17               (Recess)
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JSSAT3
        1             (PAGES 3822-3823 SEALED)
        2             (In open court; jury not present)
        3             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, shall I bring in the witness?
        4             THE COURT:  Yes, thank you.
        5             All right, let's bring in the jury.
        6             (In open court; jury present)
        7             THE COURT:  Please be seated all.
        8             THE COURT:  The government can call its next witness.
        9             MS. BAKER:  The government recalls Scott Kerns.
       10             SCOTT L. KERNS - recalled
       11             THE CLERK:  Agent Kerns, having been previously sworn
       12    the government reminds you you are still under oath.
       13             THE WITNESS:  I understand.
       14             THE COURT:  Ms. Baker, you may continue.
       15             MS. BAKER:  Thank you, your Honor.
       16             MS. BAKER:  May I approach the witness?
       17             THE COURT:  Yes.
       18    DIRECT EXAMINATION
       19    BY MS. BAKER:
       20    Q.  Good morning, Agent Kerns.  Let me remind you again to
       21    please try to speak into the microphone so everyone will be
       22    able to hear you.
       23             I have handed you two items that are marked for
       24    identification as Government Exhibits 1300 and 1301.  Let me
       25    ask you to look first please at Government Exhibit 1300.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3825
             47JSSAT1                 Kerns - direct
        1             Do you recognize that item?
        2    A.  Yes, I do.
        3    Q.  What is it?
        4    A.  This is a DVD that I created for the U.S. Attorney's
        5    Office.
        6    Q.  How are you able to recognize it as a DVD that you created?
        7    A.  By my handwriting, signature, and the date on which I
        8    created the DVD.
        9    Q.  In what color writing does that information appear on the
       10    DVD?
       11    A.  It's in black at the bottom.
       12    Q.  What is on that DVD?
       13    A.  There are telephone calls that the U.S. Attorney's Office
       14    asked me to put on for this trial.
       15    Q.  I want to ask you about the process that you went through
       16    to put those recordings on that DVD.  Would it help you in
       17    explaining that to refer to one of the diagrams that you used
       18    during your previous testimony?
       19    A.  The one we used last Monday that had the servers, as well
       20    as the process along, yes.
       21             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I place Government Exhibit
       22    1310A, which is already in evidence, on the ELMO and publish
       23    it?
       24             THE COURT:  Yes.
       25    Q.  Agent Kerns, do you have 1310A now on the screen in front
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3826
             47JSSAT1                 Kerns - direct
        1    of you?
        2    A.  Yes, I do.
        3    Q.  If you would by referring to Government Exhibit 1310A,
        4    please explain to the jury the process you went through to make
        5    the DVD which is marked as Government Exhibit 1300.
        6    A.  What I did was with 1300 some of the calls came off of the
        7    5 servers that are listed at the top.  The majority of the
        8    calls for this particular DVD came off of the MOs which are
        9    listed next to position one.  From there whether it was servers
       10    or whether it was the MOs, I would copy it to position number
       11    2, which was the computer that had a DVD burner on it, at which
       12    point I would then burn the DVD.
       13    Q.  When you copied the files from magneto optical disks to the
       14    computer shown in computer number 2, were those exact copies?
       15    A.  Yes, they were.
       16    Q.  When you copied files from the servers to the computer
       17    shown in position number 2, were those exact copies?
       18    A.  Yes, they were.
       19    Q.  And then when you used computer number 2 to burn the DVD,
       20    were those exact copies from the computer burned onto the DVD?
       21    A.  Yes, they were.
       22    Q.  Now, the DVD marked as Government Exhibit 1300, is that DVD
       23    the outcome, the output of that third stage in the process, the
       24    DVD represented in the diagram in position number 3?
       25    A.  Position 3, yes.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3827
             47JSSAT1                 Kerns - direct
        1    Q.  Now, for the particular calls that are on the DVD marked as
        2    Government Exhibit 1300, were some of those calls originally on
        3    electromagnetic tape?
        4    A.  Yes, they were.
        5    Q.  And were those calls put onto MO disks through the same
        6    conversion process that you described in your testimony last
        7    time?
        8    A.  The same process, yes.
        9             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I approach the witness
       10    again?
       11             THE COURT:  Yes.
       12    Q.  Agent Kerns, I have handed you two documents marked for
       13    identification as Government Exhibits 1300L and 1301L.  Let me
       14    ask you to look first at Government Exhibit 1300L.  Do you
       15    recognize that document?
       16    A.  Yes, I do.
       17    Q.  What is it?
       18    A.  This is a printout of all the files that are listed on
       19    Government Exhibit 1300.
       20    Q.  And how many files is that altogether?
       21    A.  There are 47 on this particular DVD and 47 listed on
       22    Government Exhibit 1300L.
       23    Q.  Before you came to court, did you compare the actual
       24    contents of the DVD marked as Government Exhibit 1300 with the
       25    list of files on Government Exhibit 1300L?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3828
             47JSSAT1                 Kerns - direct
        1    A.  Yes, I did.
        2    Q.  Did they match?
        3    A.  Yes, they did.
        4    Q.  Did you indicate that somehow on the DVD and on the list?
        5    A.  Yes, I did.
        6    Q.  What did you do?
        7    A.  On the DVD I initialed and dated it in red right up at the
        8    top here, and with 1300L I just signed my name and dated it as
        9    well.
       10    Q.  Let me ask you to set aside 1300 and 1300L for now and turn
       11    to the DVD marked as Government Exhibit 1301.  Do you recognize
       12    Government Exhibit 1301?
       13    A.  Yes, I do.
       14    Q.  What is it?
       15    A.  This is what I labeled as Sattar Trial DVD number 3, once
       16    again calls requested by the U.S. Attorney's Office.
       17    Q.  Did you make that DVD?  Did you put the calls on there?
       18    A.  Yes, I did.
       19    Q.  Referring again to the diagram which is Government Exhibit
       20    1310A, would you explain to the jury the process that you went
       21    through to create that third DVD which is marked as 1301?
       22    A.  On this one there is -- there are only a few calls and I
       23    used the MO disks.  Whether they were from the conversion, from
       24    the Lockheed Martin system or the Raytheon system, I just
       25    copied them straight across.  I did not use the servers for
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3829
             47JSSAT1                 Kerns - direct
        1    this particular operation.  I copied it to the computer that
        2    has a DVD burner at which point then I burned the DVD.
        3    Q.  And, again, when you were copying the files from the MO
        4    disks onto the computer with the DVD burner, were those exact
        5    copies of the recordings?
        6    A.  Yes, they were.
        7    Q.  And when you then copied the files onto the DVD, burned the
        8    DVD, were those, again, exact copies of the recordings?
        9    A.  Yes, they were.
       10    Q.  Let me ask you to look please at the document marked as
       11    Government Exhibit 1301L.  Do you recognize that document?
       12    A.  Yes, I do.
       13    Q.  What is that?
       14    A.  This is a printout of the 12 files that are currently on
       15    Government Exhibit 1301.
       16    Q.  Before you came to court, did you compare the list of files
       17    with the actual files that are on Government Exhibit 1301, the
       18    DVD?
       19    A.  Yes, I did.
       20    Q.  Did they match?
       21    A.  Yes, they did.
       22    Q.  And did you indicate that somehow?
       23    A.  Yes, I did.  The same process as with Government Exhibit
       24    1300 in red I put my initials and the date, and on the piece of
       25    paper I signed it and dated it right on the Government Exhibit.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3830
             47JSSAT1                 Kerns - direct
        1    Q.  Turning back to the DVD for the moment, I don't remember if
        2    I asked you this:  Are your initials and the date on the DVD,
        3    Government Exhibit 1301, twice?
        4    A.  Yes.
        5    Q.  They are there in black once and in red once?
        6    A.  Yes.
        7    Q.  What do your initials and the date in black signify?
        8    A.  That, along with the title, is the date that I actually
        9    burned this DVD.
       10    Q.  On each of the instances when you burned a DVD, 1300 on one
       11    occasion, and then 1301 on another occasion, did you burn at
       12    the same time multiple copies or duplicate originals of those
       13    DVDs at each occasion?
       14    A.  Yes, I did.
       15    Q.  Agent Kerns, in the process of preparing the second trial
       16    DVD, the one that is marked as Government Exhibit 1300, did you
       17    do something that allowed you to determine what the last
       18    modified date of each file represents?  That is something you
       19    were asked about during your previous testimony.
       20    A.  Yes, I did.
       21    Q.  Could you explain what you did and what that caused you to
       22    figure out about what "last modified date" means?
       23    A.  Sure.
       24             Can I go back to the Government exhibit and just look
       25    at that real quick?  Because I need the date.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3831
             47JSSAT1                 Kerns - direct
        1    Q.  Yes.
        2    A.  On one file based on the questioning from last Monday, what
        3    I did was I was curious on the last modified date because I
        4    didn't know exactly how that date came about.  One of the calls
        5    on here on page number 2, I found the original MOs and what I
        6    did was I copied it from position number 1 to position number
        7    2.  When I did that, it gave me the last modified date of the
        8    date and time on that computer when it was copied.  So that was
        9    how that last modified date came about.
       10    Q.  So based on that work that you did and that observation
       11    that you made, what do you now understand the last modified
       12    date of each file to represent as far as which stage in the
       13    process for each file it corresponds to?
       14    A.  It is between stages 1 and 2, moving from the UNIX system
       15    where I am searching for the file and actually copying once I
       16    find it, copying that file to number 2, which I stated
       17    previously was a Windows computer, and it put in the last
       18    modified date as it appeared on that computer.
       19    Q.  And just so that the record is clear, when you were copying
       20    any file on any one of the trial DVDs from the MO using that
       21    UNIX computer system to the Windows computer with the DVD
       22    burner, did you in any way modify the audio recording inside
       23    any file?
       24    A.  No.
       25    Q.  Did you in any way modify the nonaudio signal-related
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3832
             47JSSAT1                 Kerns - direct
        1    information inside any file?
        2    A.  No.
        3             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I have a minute to confer?
        4             THE COURT:  Yes.
        5             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, at this time the government
        6    offers the two DVDs, which are Government Exhibits 1300 and
        7    1301, and specifically each of the audio files on each of the
        8    DVDs and the number of each audio file, the Government exhibit
        9    number is shown on the corresponding list.  The lists are 1300L
       10    and 1301L.  We also offer the lists.
       11             And as to each of the audio files themselves as
       12    previously, the government specifically offers the
       13    signal-related information contained in each file and those
       14    portions of the audio in each file that correspond to the
       15    excerpted transcripts that the government will use at trial.
       16             THE COURT:  All right.
       17             MS. BAKER:  And I have no further questions of the
       18    witness.
       19             THE COURT:  All right.
       20             MR. TIGAR:  May I inquire, your Honor?
       21             THE COURT:  Yes.
       22             MR. TIGAR:  May I please have 1310A.
       23             Thank you.
       24    CROSS EXAMINATION
       25    BY MR. TIGAR:
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3833
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    Q.  Agent Kerns, I am not going to go back over everything that
        2    we talked about before, but I wanted to ask, first, do you over
        3    there in your office have a program called Gold Wave?
        4    A.  Yes, we do.
        5    Q.  And what is your understanding of what Gold Wave does?
        6    A.  It's an audio player.
        7    Q.  Do you understand that you can edit audio files on Gold
        8    Wave?
        9             MS. BAKER:  Objection.
       10             THE COURT:  Basis?
       11             MS. BAKER:  It assumes a fact not in evidence.
       12             THE COURT:  Overruled.
       13    Q.  I am not trying to trap you, sir.
       14             Do you understand whether or not you can?  I guess
       15    that is the deal.
       16    A.  I have never done any editing on Gold Wave.  I use it
       17    strictly to play audio.
       18    Q.  Now, you testified here about this signal-related
       19    information, correct?
       20    A.  That is correct.
       21    Q.  Now, the Lockheed Martin files, that is where this began,
       22    correct?
       23    A.  For some of them, yes.
       24    Q.  For some of these recordings.
       25             MR. TIGAR:  May I show him 1310A, your Honor?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3834
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1             THE COURT:  Yes.
        2    Q.  And we have heard before that from the hard disk somebody
        3    made these electromagnetic tapes, correct?
        4    A.  That is correct.
        5    Q.  And then eventually the information winds through the
        6    various stages that are shown on this exhibit, correct?
        7    A.  Correct.
        8    Q.  Now, for your work today, the 1300 and 1301, you copied
        9    some files from a server and some from MO disks, correct?
       10    A.  Correct.
       11    Q.  And what was the difference?  Why some from a server and
       12    why some from the MO disks?
       13    A.  Due to the fact that I had some of the information from
       14    previous discovery on those servers, which I stated in prior
       15    testimony that in DVD number 1 a good amount of it came from
       16    the servers.  However, it became easier just to go back to the
       17    MOs and do it that way because I stated before the servers, the
       18    conductivity lines had to be established in order to copy the
       19    information.
       20    Q.  The what?
       21    A.  The conductivity lines.  These are stand-alone.  The
       22    servers were stand-alone, which means they are not connected to
       23    anything other than themselves.  And I needed to connect them,
       24    which is why I drew the lines, from there to 2.  The
       25    conductivity already existed from 1 to 2.  So it was just much
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3835
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    easier to do it that way.
        2    Q.  By conductivity, you mean one wire stuck into one machine
        3    and one wire stuck into another machine?
        4    A.  Correct.
        5    Q.  All right.
        6             Now, at what point in this process did these files get
        7    a name?
        8    A.  Once they came to computer number 2.
        9    Q.  And that is this computer hard drive here right by my
       10    finger, correct?
       11    A.  That is correct.
       12    Q.  And the name you chose was a 4-digit year, correct?
       13    A.  Correct.
       14    Q.  Would you like to have a copy of the exhibit to look at?
       15    A.  Sure.
       16             MR. TIGAR:  May I show him the exhibit, your Honor?
       17             THE COURT:  Yes.
       18    Q.  This is not in evidence yet, Agent, but that is a copy --
       19    oh, you have the original one, all right.  If you will look at
       20    yours, I will look at mine.
       21             There is a 4-digit year, correct?
       22    A.  Correct.
       23    Q.  And then a date, such as 0702, correct?
       24    A.  Correct.
       25    Q.  An underscore, and then is that a time of day?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3836
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    A.  Yes, it is.
        2    Q.  And then the next thing is a telephone number, correct?
        3    A.  Correct.
        4    Q.  Now, for the files that were done on the Lockheed Martin
        5    system, where did you get that information for the date and
        6    time?
        7    A.  Well, for the Lockheed Martin system after they were
        8    converted they were converted into VOC and that information was
        9    taken out of the VOC header.
       10    Q.  Out of the VOC header?
       11    A.  Yes.
       12    Q.  Now in the Lockheed Martin format, the date and time
       13    information is different than this, isn't it?
       14    A.  Yes, it is.
       15    Q.  In the Lockheed Martin format they don't have an actual day
       16    of the month in there, do they?
       17    A.  The one call that I looked at, no, it was not.
       18    Q.  And you say the one call that you looked at.  So you didn't
       19    look at all the calls?
       20    A.  No.
       21    Q.  Well, if it didn't have the actual day of the month in the
       22    Lockheed Martin file, how did you get the day of the month to
       23    put in here?
       24    A.  The conversion process, as I stated previously and you
       25    questioned me on, I do not know how the SRI data was pulled
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3837
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    from the Lockheed Martin during the conversion and was put in
        2    the header once it was converted.  As to the exact process, I
        3    don't know.
        4    Q.  But you have looked at Lockheed Martin files, correct?
        5    A.  In their original format?
        6    Q.  Yes, sir.
        7    A.  One, yes.
        8    Q.  One, okay.
        9             Now, is that one of the ones that you gave to us on a
       10    diskette?
       11    A.  No, I gave it to you on a CD.
       12    Q.  I call it a DVD, a diskette.  It's one of the ones you gave
       13    to us, correct?
       14    A.  That is correct.
       15             MR. TIGAR:  May I approach, your Honor?
       16             THE COURT:  Yes.
       17             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I also approach so I will
       18    see what he is showing to the witness?
       19             THE COURT:  All right.
       20             MR. TIGAR:  Yes, please.
       21    Q.  This is the Lockheed Martin DVD you made, right?
       22    A.  It's the CD, yes.  That is the one I created.
       23    Q.  So we are going to put it in here and now I have loaded the
       24    directory, correct?
       25    A.  Correct.  You are looking at it in I believe it's "My
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3838
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    Computer".  So it shows all the files that are there.
        2    Q.  Do you remember which one you opened to look at?
        3    A.  No, I don't.
        4    Q.  Well, can we just do one?
        5    A.  Sure, open any one of them.
        6    Q.  Open any one, okay.
        7             We are opening it in Notepad, correct?
        8    A.  Correct.
        9    Q.  Now, what the Notepad is going to do is give us only the
       10    hexidecimal information and not the audio, correct?
       11    A.  It gives you text, correct, or what it says, what it can
       12    determine is text within the file.
       13    Q.  Is that also known as hexidecimal?
       14    A.  I don't really know.  I don't think I have ever referred to
       15    it as that.
       16    Q.  Okay.  Well, it's text, right?
       17    A.  It's text.
       18    Q.  And we can read it?
       19    A.  We can read it.
       20    Q.  All right.
       21             And here we can read a phone number, correct?
       22    A.  That is correct.
       23    Q.  And then is the next number a year?  What do you understand
       24    that to mean there?
       25    A.  Let's see here.  I just need to be able to see it better.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3839
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1             When we looked at this file or when I looked at the
        2    file and we went through the first part of it from 1 it states
        3    the numbers, the way they go are 17184423513, which I
        4    understand is the telephone number.
        5    Q.  Right.  In fact, then, when somebody named the file, they
        6    gave it a file name that included that information, correct?
        7    A.  During the conversion process, correct.  That is how it
        8    would work.
        9             The next two numbers, 99, is what is supposed to be
       10    the year of that particular call.
       11    Q.  Now, how do you know that?
       12    A.  Because that is how -- based on my just looking at it I
       13    don't know for a fact but that is what I understand how these
       14    were named.
       15    Q.  My question is how do you understand that?  Where did you
       16    learn it?
       17    A.  I just looked at the file and said, oh, this is how it's
       18    named.
       19    Q.  It says 99 so somebody then made the 99 into a 1999,
       20    correct?
       21    A.  That is correct.
       22    Q.  Who did that?
       23    A.  That was whoever built the conversion program.
       24    Q.  Not you?
       25    A.  No, not me.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3840
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    Q.  Now, then, the next thing we see in the file name is a
        2    0126, et cetera, right?
        3    A.  Correct.
        4    Q.  And the file name, what does that mean?
        5    A.  Are you referring to here?
        6    Q.  Looking up here.
        7    A.  Up here, this would be 0126, which would be January 26.
        8    Q.  Of 1999?
        9    A.  That is correct.
       10    Q.  And the next information is 054634, 5 hours, 46 minutes, 34
       11    seconds?
       12    A.  05 o'clock in the morning, correct.
       13    Q.  05.
       14    A.  05, correct.
       15    Q.  Like military time?
       16    A.  It is military time.
       17    Q.  Now, where is the January 26 information?
       18    A.  It's right after the 99.  It says 026.
       19    Q.  026.  So your interpretation is it just counts the number
       20    of days since the beginning of the year?
       21    A.  Julian date, that is correct.
       22    Q.  So that information somebody used to make this file header?
       23    A.  That is correct.
       24    Q.  And that file name with a different suffix is the same file
       25    name that is on Exhibit 1300 if that call is on there, correct?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3841
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    A.  That is correct.
        2    Q.  Now, was there a computer program that assigned these file
        3    names with these dates or did a human have to do something?
        4    A.  Are you referring to these particular DVDs?
        5    Q.  Yes.
        6    A.  On these particular DVDs I actually went through and opened
        7    up the file in Notepad and then typed out the file name.
        8    Q.  So you did it manually, correct?
        9    A.  I did it manually for these two DVDs, that is correct.
       10    Q.  So you tell me you opened -- what file did you open in
       11    Notepad?
       12    A.  The VOC file.
       13    Q.  And then you gave it a file name, correct?
       14    A.  Then I renamed that file to the SRI data, correct.
       15    Q.  What name did it have before?
       16    A.  These, as I believe I testified earlier, are sequentially
       17    numbered on their MOs.  So, in fact, I believe it is Government
       18    Exhibit 1301 is a good example.  One DVD had one of the calls
       19    as 000026 .VOC, which I copied over to the computer.  I went to
       20    another MO looking for a particular call requested of me.  When
       21    I found the call it was listed on that MO as 0000026 .VOC.  If
       22    I copied that file it would overwrite on the computer.  So what
       23    I had to do was rename the first one properly, then I copied
       24    it, then I renamed it so I wouldn't overwrite it.  That is why
       25    we had to rename all the files other than the fact that you
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3842
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    would have no idea what you were looking at unless you opened
        2    every single file in Notepad.
        3    Q.  So it is the case that the FBI in your office has the
        4    ability to rename files?
        5    A.  Sure, yes.
        6    Q.  And do you also have the ability to go in and change the
        7    text information in the file?
        8    A.  If somebody wanted to do that, yes, because it is text.
        9    They could change the text.
       10    Q.  In other words, all you would have to do is if you want to
       11    change the text is you put your MO disk or you open it up in
       12    the hard drive and open it up in a program like Notepad,
       13    correct?
       14    A.  Once they moved it to a Windows computer, sure, they can do
       15    that.
       16    Q.  Now, the computer on which you did these things here, is
       17    that computer number 2?
       18    A.  That is correct.
       19    Q.  What platform was that?
       20    A.  It's a Windows platform.
       21    Q.  And are the servers Windows platform too?
       22    A.  No, sir, they are UNIX.
       23    Q.  So some of the files on 1300 are in a UNIX platform and
       24    some of the files in 1300 come from UNIX servers and some from
       25    Windows, right?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3843
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    A.  No, everything came -- position number 1, that system is
        2    also UNIX.  That is the operating system that we use for the
        3    Raytheon system.  So what we did was everything was copied over
        4    but I copied it to a Windows computer because that is where the
        5    DVD burner was.  But the servers and position number 1, all
        6    those systems are UNIX.
        7    Q.  The server up in position -- you say where you wrote the
        8    word "servers", correct?
        9    A.  Right.
       10    Q.  Okay.
       11             The files that are on 1300 that came from the servers,
       12    those files on the servers were in a Windows environment?
       13    A.  No, the server is UNIX.
       14    Q.  But the DVD that is in front of you, 1300, all the calls
       15    are in Windows, correct?
       16    A.  Yes, because that computer is Windows, that is correct.
       17    Q.  That meant then that you had to convert, did you not, from
       18    a UNIX-based VOC system to a Windows VOC-based system?
       19    A.  I don't know.  You had mentioned that previously.  I don't
       20    know a difference between UNIX VOC and Windows VOC.  I never
       21    heard that before.  I don't know if that is --
       22    Q.  I am only asking a question.
       23    A.  I am going from one operating system to another operating
       24    system, that is correct.
       25    Q.  I am not trying to testify here.  I don't know.  But you
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3844
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    did say you went from one system to another?
        2    A.  Absolutely.
        3    Q.  Do you know whether or not you can open up in the UNIX
        4    environment with a text editor, such as Notepad or the
        5    equivalent, and edit text?
        6    A.  It does have a text editor function.  I have never tried to
        7    do it.  But if it had a text editor function I am sure you can
        8    probably open the file in a text format and edit text.
        9    Q.  All right, sir.
       10             Now, would you take a look please at 1300 and do you
       11    see on there a file name 1990702 underscore 161314?
       12    A.  Yes.
       13    Q.  All right, sir.
       14             MR. TIGAR:  May I approach, your Honor?
       15             THE COURT:  Yes.
       16             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I also approach?
       17             THE COURT:  Yes.
       18    Q.  Now, would you hand me -- oh, here is 1300, correct?
       19    A.  Yes.
       20    Q.  I put 1300 in there.  Now we are going to go into Windows
       21    Explorer and is that the file I was just asking you about,
       22    0702?
       23    A.  Yes, it is.
       24    Q.  All right.  Let's see what happens.  We have opened --
       25    let's look here.  It's a big file.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3845
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    A.  It takes a while to open the big files in a text editor.
        2    Q.  There we go.
        3             Now, I am going to maximize that screen, all right?
        4    A.  Okay.
        5    Q.  And I want you to look here.  It starts with various
        6    information, correct?
        7    A.  Correct.
        8    Q.  And this information is more extensive, is it not, than the
        9    header information on the equivalent Lockheed Martin file?
       10    A.  In this format, I didn't go through the whole Lockheed
       11    Martin but, yes, this seems to be more than -- that is also due
       12    to the fact that it was converted to VOC and this information
       13    is necessary.
       14    Q.  In the Lockheed Martin file we looked at the header
       15    information was basically the date in some specific format and
       16    then the time, correct?
       17    A.  Right.  And there was other information as in case file and
       18    some of the other information.
       19    Q.  All right.
       20             Now, I hit "control end."  Now, you notice here at the
       21    end of the file there are lines and lines and lines of footer
       22    information, correct?
       23    A.  Yes.
       24    Q.  Now, do you know whether or not in a Lockheed Martin file
       25    in the DDR format there is footer information like this?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3846
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    A.  I don't know.
        2    Q.  Well, I am not going to load and unload this.  We will look
        3    at that in a minute.  But let's just look at -- for example,
        4    this says creation time, right?
        5    A.  Yes, it does.
        6    Q.  Do you see a date there?
        7    A.  Yes, I do.
        8    Q.  And what year is that?
        9    A.  It says 1970.
       10    Q.  And then it says V start time, correct?
       11    A.  Correct.
       12    Q.  And that is a 1970 year also, right?
       13    A.  Yes, it does.
       14    Q.  Do you know what that means?
       15    A.  No, I don't.
       16    Q.  Okay.  So you don't know why there would be a 1970 date in
       17    a file about a 1996 conversation, correct?
       18    A.  I don't know.
       19    Q.  I am going to take the exhibit out.
       20             THE COURT:  Are we talking 1996 or '99?
       21             MR. TIGAR:  1999.
       22             Thank you very much, your Honor.
       23    Q.  Amending it to the year you don't know that either, right?
       24    A.  Right.
       25             MR. TIGAR:  Thank you, your Honor.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3847
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    Q.  Now, do you know how that information that I showed you at
        2    the end of that file got in there?
        3    A.  No, I don't.
        4    Q.  Do you know whether a human put it in or whether the
        5    computer generated it itself?
        6    A.  I don't know.
        7    Q.  How many of the files, audio files on GX 1300, did you open
        8    and listen to?
        9    A.  I don't know.  I mean, the only time I ever opened files
       10    was if I needed to make sure that the DVD worked or if a
       11    linguist had a question.  But I don't sit there and listen to
       12    this.
       13    Q.  And with respect to all of the Lockheed Martin original
       14    files that are on 1300 and 1301, is it your testimony that you
       15    supervised the conversion from A to 1?  That is, from the
       16    electromagnetic tape to the magneto optical disk?
       17    A.  Correct.
       18    Q.  And to do that you used a program, correct?
       19    A.  That is correct.
       20    Q.  That is a conversion program?
       21    A.  That is correct.
       22    Q.  Now, that conversion program -- withdrawn.
       23             The files in the Lockheed Martin format are DDR files,
       24    correct?
       25    A.  I don't know where that name came from.  That was just when
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3848
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    it was provided to me by the engineers that that was what they
        2    had named them.  I don't know what that means.
        3    Q.  Now, a little while ago we looked at the Lockheed Martin
        4    diskette, correct?
        5    A.  Correct.
        6    Q.  That you provided.  Is it your testimony that that diskette
        7    was prepared by engineers and not by you?
        8    A.  Oh, I was on my honeymoon.  It was not prepared by me.
        9    Q.  All right.
       10             When did you become aware that it had been prepared?
       11    A.  Let me see, I testified on the 12th.  On the 11th I came in
       12    to the office after returning and I spoke to the engineers that
       13    were going to provide this that they were going to make a copy
       14    from -- and they had a list of calls from the U.S. Attorney's
       15    Office and that they were going to provide that to me, which I
       16    was then going to provide to the U.S. Attorney's Office.
       17    Q.  And that was why you wrote on it and signed it, correct?
       18    A.  Correct.  What you have is a copy of what I made, which I
       19    believe I did -- I would have to look at the date on it but I
       20    was here all day on Monday.  I believe I did it either on
       21    Monday or Tuesday of last week.
       22    Q.  With regard to the Lockheed Martin conversion of the
       23    earlier files, that is, when they were originally placed on the
       24    MO disks for eventual use in this trial, did the engineers do
       25    that conversion or did you?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3849
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    A.  No, I did not do it, neither did the engineers.  They
        2    provided the program and technical personnel in our office were
        3    the ones doing that over a period of time.
        4    Q.  Who provided the program?
        5    A.  It was provided to us from ERF, from the engineering
        6    research facility down in Quantico.
        7    Q.  Did you check the bytes in, bytes out of the conversion?
        8    A.  No, I did not.
        9    Q.  Do you know as you sit there today what proportion or
       10    percentage of VOC bytes is to DDR bytes?
       11    A.  No, I don't.
       12    Q.  And that was something that the Quantico people did, right?
       13    A.  With respect to what?
       14    Q.  They wrote the programs.
       15    A.  Yes, they are the ones that created the program.
       16    Q.  Now, you said a few minutes ago that you had listened to a
       17    call or some calls, right?
       18    A.  Yes.
       19    Q.  Now, in your last appearance here you said you were
       20    concerned about file degradation, correct?
       21    A.  On --
       22    Q.  On some EMT.
       23    A.  On some of the tapes, yes, that is correct.
       24    Q.  Electromagnetic tapes, right.
       25             And you told us what you did to deal with that
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3850
             47JSSAT3                 Kerns - cross
        1    problem, correct?
        2    A.  Correct.
        3    Q.  Now, did you listen to all of the audio files to see
        4    whether or not there were problems in the audio that might have
        5    been due to tape degradation?
        6    A.  No.
        7             (Continued on next page)
        8
        9
       10
       11
       12
       13
       14
       15
       16
       17
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3851
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - cross
        1    BY MR. TIGAR:
        2    Q.  Did you listen to any files to see if there were problems
        3    that might have been due to calls being cut off?
        4    A.  No.
        5    Q.  Have you looked at transcripts prepared by the government,
        6    either the FBI or the U.S. Attorney's office in this case?
        7    A.  No.
        8    Q.  May I approach, your Honor?
        9             THE COURT:  Yes.
       10    Q.  I'm going to show you, Sir, what has been received in
       11    evidence as Government 1002X.  You're familiar with that sort
       12    of format, correct?
       13    A.  Yes.  This is, as I testified earlier, this is what a
       14    technical cut looks like, as I was talking with regard to
       15    pertinent phone calls, when someone actually writes up a call.
       16             MR. TIGAR:  May I show the witness 1002X, your Honor,
       17    on the screen?
       18             THE COURT:  Yes.
       19    Q.  This has been received in evidence, Sir, and you'll notice
       20    that there's some information here at the top, correct?
       21    A.  Correct.
       22    Q.  Can you help us out?  What's the monitor number?
       23             MS. BAKER:  Objection.  Relevance; lack of personal
       24    knowledge.
       25    Q.  If you know.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3852
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - cross
        1             THE COURT:  If you know.
        2    A.  No, I don't know.
        3    Q.  Call direction, is that something you would expect to find
        4    in a header or footer?
        5    A.  It may be in there, I'd have to actually look at the header
        6    or footer to see if the call direction is maintained.  Whether
        7    it's in the actual text or whether it's in the audio, I don't
        8    know.
        9    Q.  Now, call direction is something that's important, correct,
       10    In an investigation?
       11    A.  Yes.
       12    Q.  So if it's unknown, you like to know it, right?
       13             MS. BAKER:  Objection.
       14             THE COURT:  Sustained.
       15             MR. TIGAR:  I'm sorry, your Honor?
       16             THE COURT:  I said sustained.
       17             MR. TIGAR:  Thank you, your Honor.
       18    Q.  Now, a couple more questions.  Here's Line 2, phone
       19    ringing.  It says UI.  That's unintelligible, right?
       20    A.  That's my understanding, yes.
       21    Q.  It's my understanding nobody asked you to go back to those
       22    original files and see why there were these unintelligibles?
       23    A.  No.
       24    Q.  Do you know if anybody in the Federal Bureau of
       25    Investigation was asked to go back into those original
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3853
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - cross
        1    electromagnetic tapes with which you were dealing and try to
        2    see why there were these unintelligibles in there?
        3    A.  No.
        4    Q.  Now, at the end of 1002X, the last words at Line 11
        5    are "recording stopped".  Do you see that?
        6    A.  Yes, I do.
        7    Q.  Do you know what that means?
        8    A.  It means that whoever wrote that, the recording stopped,
        9    and they annotated that.
       10    Q.  Now, based on your knowledge of the call, do you know
       11    whether that means the machine stopped recording or what that
       12    means in terms of the investigation?
       13             MS. BAKER:  Objection.  Lack of personal knowledge.
       14             THE COURT:  If you know.
       15    A.  I have no idea.
       16    Q.  But did anyone ask you to go into these calls where the
       17    recording stopped and look back at the electromagnetic tapes
       18    and see why the calls stopped?
       19    A.  No.
       20    Q.  Do you know how many calls there are that are being used in
       21    this case in which a call stops and then somebody picks it up
       22    again later?
       23    A.  No, I don't.
       24    Q.  That was not part of your job?
       25    A.  No.  The only thing that we worked on was converting tapes
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3854
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - cross
        1    and turning everything over to the U.S. Attorney's office to be
        2    turned over to defense.
        3    Q.  Now, have you worked with the U.S. Attorney's office to
        4    prepare the tapes for trial?
        5    A.  When you say --
        6    Q.  Have you played -- excuse me, bad word.  Have you played
        7    DVDs or CDs on U.S. Attorney's office's machines?
        8    A.  Once they loaded GoldWave and I showed them how to
        9    basically use it.
       10    Q.  The U.S. Attorney's office has GoldWave also?
       11    A.  Yes, they do.  It's the only way you can listen to these.
       12    Q.  Have you ever read the instruction manual on GoldWave?
       13    A.  I believe I've used the Help on it once or twice, but, no,
       14    I have not.
       15             MR. TIGAR:  May I have a moment, please, your Honor?
       16             THE COURT:  Yes.
       17               (Off the record)
       18             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, there is a matter about which
       19    I may wish to inquire of the witness.  However, I would need to
       20    get a diskette that has arrived and look at it.  I don't want
       21    to --
       22             THE COURT:  Okay.
       23             MR. TIGAR:  I'd ask your Honor's assistance.
       24             THE COURT:  We'll take a 10-minute break.  I don't
       25    like to break for lunch at this point, ladies and gentlemen,
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3855
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - cross
        1    because I know your lunch comes at a certain time.  So we'll
        2    take a 10-minute break.  If it goes on more time so that you
        3    run into your lunch hour, I hear that your lunch has arrived,
        4    we'll continue it into the lunch hour.  But otherwise, we'll
        5    just take a 10-minute break.  It will be a good time to
        6    stretch.  Please remember my continuing instructions not to
        7    talk about the case.
        8             All right.  All rise.  Follow Mr. Fletcher to the jury
        9    room.
       10               (The jury exits the courtroom)
       11             THE COURT:  All right.  Take 10 minutes.  Agent Kerns,
       12    you can step down.  You're still on cross-examination, so
       13    please don't talk to anyone about your testimony.
       14             THE WITNESS:  Yes, your Honor.
       15               (Recess)
       16               (In open court; jury not present)
       17             THE COURT:  Please be seated, all.  Are we ready to
       18    proceed?
       19             MR. TIGAR:  Yes, your Honor.
       20             THE COURT:  All right.  Let's bring in the jury.
       21               (Jury enters the courtroom)
       22               (In open court)
       23             THE COURT:  Please be seated, all.
       24             Agent Kerns is still on the stand.  Mr. Fletcher?
       25             DEPUTY CLERK:  Agent Kerns, you understand you are
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3856
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - cross
        1    still under oath.
        2             THE WITNESS:  I understand.
        3             THE COURT:  Mr. Tigar?
        4             MR. TIGAR:  I have no further questions at this time.
        5             THE COURT:  All right.  Ms. Baker, you may examine.
        6             MS. BAKER:  I'm sorry, your Honor, I didn't hear you.
        7             THE COURT:  I said, you may examine.
        8             MS. BAKER:  Thank you.
        9    REDIRECT EXAMINATION
       10    BY MS. BAKER:
       11    Q.  Agent Kerns, during cross-examination, Mr. Tigar asked you
       12    some questions about the information that's in the headers of
       13    the Lockheed Martin files in their original format before
       14    conversion.  Do you remember those questions?
       15    A.  Yes, I do.
       16    Q.  And you had testified that you had only looked at one
       17    example of that file in its original format?
       18    A.  That's correct.
       19    Q.  Mr. Tigar was asking you which, if any, information from
       20    the header of the file in its original format ended up in the
       21    header of the VOC files after the conversion.  Do you remember
       22    those questions?
       23    A.  Yes, I do.
       24    Q.  And the way Mr. Tigar was asking his questions, he was
       25    asking you whether somebody used --
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3857
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - redirect
        1             MR. TIGAR:  Excuse me, your Honor.  "The way Mr. Tigar
        2    was asking --"
        3             THE COURT:  Rephrase.
        4    BY MS. BAKER:
        5    Q.  You were asked whether somebody used certain information
        6    from the original Lockheed Martin header to result in
        7    information being the headers of the VOC files?
        8    A.  That's correct.
        9    Q.  You testified that you didn't personally -- you testified
       10    previously that you didn't personally do any of the conversions
       11    of the Lockheed Martin files to the VOC format, correct?
       12    A.  That's correct.
       13    Q.  But you were present while it was going on?
       14    A.  I was, from when I came onto the squad until this point,
       15    yes, that's correct.
       16    Q.  From what you saw of that conversion process that the other
       17    people were doing, was there any manual transferring of
       18    particular header information from particular Lockheed Martin
       19    files into VOC files, or was it an automated process?
       20    A.  Everything was automated.
       21    Q.  You were asked on cross-examination at one point whether it
       22    would be possible, using a Windows computer, to change
       23    signal-related information in the VOC files, which is
       24    essentially the text in the files.  Do you remember being asked
       25    that?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3858
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - redirect
        1    A.  Yes.
        2    Q.  Did you personally at anytime change any signal-related
        3    information in any file?
        4    A.  No.
        5    Q.  To your knowledge, did anyone else change any
        6    signal-related information in any file?
        7    A.  No.
        8    Q.  Mr. Tigar asked you at one point whether there was -- I
        9    think the word he used was conversion, when a VOC file was
       10    copied from the UNIX operating system to the Windows system on
       11    the computer in Position Number 2 on the diagram.  Do you
       12    remember that question?
       13    A.  Yes.
       14             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, before I continue, may I put
       15    the diagram back up, Government Exhibit 1310A?
       16             THE COURT:  Yes.
       17    Q.  So that we're clear, position Number 1 in the diagram,
       18    which is where the magneto optical disks are read, is that the
       19    UNIX operating system?
       20    A.  It runs on a UNIX platform, yes, it does.
       21    Q.  And then the computer shown in position Number 2, which is
       22    the computer that was used to burn the DVDs, that's a Windows
       23    operating system?
       24    A.  That's correct.
       25    Q.  Were you copying the VOC files from position Number 1 on
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3859
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - redirect
        1    the magneto optical disk to the Windows computer in position
        2    Number 2?
        3    A.  Yes.
        4    Q.  To your knowledge, did that copying from the computer in
        5    position Number 1 to the computer in position Number 2 cause
        6    any change in the audio content of any of the files?
        7    A.  No.
        8    Q.  Did that copying from the computer in position Number 1 to
        9    the computer in position Number 2 cause any change in the
       10    signal-related information inside any of the files?
       11    A.  No.
       12             MR. TIGAR:  Personal knowledge.
       13             THE COURT:  Overruled.
       14    Q.  Mr. Tigar also asked you whether you know if the GoldWave
       15    program or computer application is capable of editing audio
       16    content in files.  Did you ever use the GoldWave software or
       17    application to edit or to fry to edit any of the files in this
       18    case?
       19    A.  No.
       20    Q.  To your knowledge, did anyone else?
       21    A.  No.
       22             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I have a minute?
       23             THE COURT:  Yes.
       24               (Off the record)
       25             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, if I might, I would like to
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3860
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - redirect
        1    approach the witness with a laptop computer and ask him to look
        2    at the contents of one of the files on Government Exhibit 1300
        3    for identification just as Mr. Tigar did.
        4             THE COURT:  All right.  If you want to approach, also,
        5    Mr. Tigar?
        6             MR. TIGAR:  I have a DVD here, your Honor.  So unless
        7    I need, to I'll just do it from here.
        8    BY MS. BAKER:
        9    Q.  Agent Kerns, let me ask you to put in the DVD marked as
       10    Government Exhibit 1300.  And if you would use the my computer
       11    application to pull up the list of the files that are on the
       12    DVD.  And then I'm going to ask you to use Notepad to look at
       13    the signal-related information in the same file that Mr. Tigar
       14    was asking you about, which is the first one.
       15    A.  (The witness complies)
       16    Q.  On cross-examination -- withdrawn.
       17             Let me ask you to go down to the information at the
       18    very end of the file which Mr. Tigar referred to as footer
       19    information.
       20    A.  (The witness complies)
       21             It's just taking a second to load.
       22    Q.  Agent Kerns, right now you have the file open in QuickView
       23    Plus.  Do you want to switch to Notepad?  That might open it
       24    more quickly.
       25    A.  I can.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3861
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - redirect
        1    Q.  Actually, before you go down to the bottom of the file,
        2    once it opens, let me ask you about some of the information at
        3    the top of the file.
        4    A.  Okay.  There it is.
        5    Q.  And you're looking now at the nonaudio or the
        6    signal-related information at the top of the file, correct?
        7    A.  That's correct.
        8    Q.  Which, if any, field or line of data in what you see on the
        9    screen in front of you now indicates the start date and time of
       10    the call?
       11    A.  There's a field three-quarters of the way down called
       12    session start =, which is, I understand, as the start date and
       13    time of this particular call.
       14    Q.  Let me ask you now to go down to the information at the end
       15    of the file.
       16    A.  Okay.
       17    Q.  On cross-examination, Mr. Tigar asked you about two other
       18    date fields that appear in the signal-related information or
       19    nonaudio data at the end of the file.  Do you know what either
       20    of those fields represents?
       21    A.  No, I don't.
       22    Q.  To go back to the field at the top of the file, where it
       23    showed session start?
       24    A.  Correct.
       25    Q.  If you would go back to that.  Does the date and time shown
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3862
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - redirect
        1    in the session start field match the date and time reflected in
        2    the file name of this particular audio file?
        3    A.  Yes, it does.
        4    Q.  You testified that you were the person who gave each of
        5    these files on these DVDs the names that they have now?
        6    A.  Yes, DVD 2 and 3, I named all of them.  And I did that
        7    manually, not through a program.
        8    Q.  When you were naming the files, you were determining which
        9    information to put in the name of each of the files, which
       10    field of that signal-related information were you looking at to
       11    know which information to put in the name of each file?
       12    A.  I would open up the file, just as we have here in Notepad.
       13    I'd look for the session start, which is the first part of the
       14    telephone call which is the date and the time.  I would then
       15    take that and rename the part of the file, and then I would
       16    look up in the t num = field for the telephone number and add
       17    in there, put VOC and then rename that file.
       18             MS. BAKER:  Thank you.  No further questions.
       19             THE COURT:  All right.  You may attend, limited to
       20    redirect.
       21             MR. TIGAR:  Yes, of course.
       22             THE COURT:  Do you want that laptop?
       23             MR. TIGAR:  No, your Honor, this is fine.
       24             THE COURT:  All right.
       25    RECROSS EXAMINATION
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3863
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - recross
        1    BY MR. TIGAR:
        2    Q.  When you manually renamed the files, did you go back to the
        3    Lockheed Martin files to check your work?
        4    A.  No.
        5    Q.  When the Lockheed Martin files were changed to VOC,
        6    everything was automated, correct?
        7    A.  Yes, it was.
        8    Q.  Did you go back and manually check each file?
        9    A.  No.
       10    Q.  Did you manually check each one of the files that's on 1300
       11    and 1301 against the Lockheed Martin files?
       12    A.  The original format?  No.
       13    Q.  So is that basically the same automated process that you
       14    used to produce the discovery files or not?  The conversion?
       15    A.  The conversion, yes.  All the discovery was done using the
       16    conversion, that's correct.
       17    Q.  So the automated process used to produce these files was
       18    the same as the automated process used for the discovery files,
       19    correct?
       20             MS. BAKER:  Objection.  Vague.
       21             THE COURT:  Rephrase.
       22    Q.  Is the automated process that you used to create -- to put
       23    the files in 1300 and 1301 the same automated conversion
       24    process that's used to convert Lockheed Martin files to VOC
       25    files, for discovery?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3864
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - recross
        1    A.  When you say "conversion", are you talking about converting
        2    from a tape to an MO?
        3    Q.  Yes.
        4    A.  Okay, yes, then that absolutely was -- those -- those MO's
        5    that were converted, those were the ones used, both in
        6    discovery as well as in these DVDs.
        7    Q.  And did you participate in the creation or conversion of
        8    the files that were produced in the discovery process?
        9    A.  I did.  The DVDs and some of the CDs were created, more
       10    DVDs and CDs, I was part of that process of burning those and
       11    providing those to the U.S. Attorney's office, yes.
       12    Q.  But you didn't personally do the conversions, correct?
       13    A.  No, I did not do the conversions.
       14    Q.  You were asked on redirect examination whether you changed
       15    any SRI's, correct?
       16    A.  That's correct.
       17    Q.  You were asked whether, to your knowledge, anybody had
       18    changed SRIs, correct?
       19    A.  That's correct.
       20    Q.  You were asked whether you changed any audio files using
       21    GoldWave, correct?
       22    A.  That's correct.
       23    Q.  And you were asked whether, to your knowledge, anybody did,
       24    correct?
       25    A.  That's correct.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3865
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - recross
        1    Q.  Is your testimony today that there is no audit trail file
        2    in the New York field office that requires that if a file is
        3    changed, that there be an audio record of that?
        4    A.  As I attested to previous, I don't believe we have anything
        5    like that, no.
        6             MR. TIGAR:  No further questions.
        7             THE COURT:  All right.  Ms. Baker, limit it to
        8    recross.
        9    REDIRECT EXAMINATION
       10    BY MS. BAKER:
       11    Q.  Agent Kerns, just so there's no confusion about conversion,
       12    what was done and how many times it was done, for any one tape
       13    that was made by the Lockheed Martin system, how many times did
       14    any one tape go through conversion to take the recordings on
       15    the tape and put them into VOC format?
       16    A.  If a tape went through, it was converted once.  That's all
       17    you would have to do it.  If the tape only ran a percentage and
       18    stopped, and -- as I testified to I believe on Monday -- and
       19    the computer crashed, we would then attempt to do it again,
       20    start from scratch.  You always started from the beginning
       21    again.  And once it ran 100 percent, it was done.  The MO's
       22    then were taken out and they were put together with the
       23    original tape.
       24    Q.  Sometime in advance of the trial of this case, were you
       25    involved to some degree in providing copies of all of the
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3866
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - redirect
        1    recordings from the surveillances in this case?
        2    A.  Yes.
        3    Q.  Was it your understanding that copies of those recordings
        4    would be provided --
        5             MR. TIGAR:  Objection.  Personal knowledge, your
        6    Honor.
        7             THE COURT:  All right.
        8             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, it's offered for its effect on
        9    the witness.
       10             THE COURT:  No, overruled -- no, sustained.
       11    BY MS. BAKER:
       12    Q.  When you were involved in that process of making copies of
       13    recordings long ago in advance of trial, were you making
       14    multiple copies of the recordings?
       15    A.  Every single time we did it, yes.
       16    Q.  And to whom were you providing the multiple copies of the
       17    recordings?
       18    A.  To the U.S. Attorney's office.
       19    Q.  What was your understanding of what was being done with the
       20    copies of the recordings?
       21    A.  They were keeping some for themselves.  They were keeping a
       22    set for themselves.  It was being provided to the defense
       23    attorneys.  That was pretty much it.
       24    Q.  And the conversion process from the original Lockheed
       25    Martin tapes to the VOC files did, that occur with each tape
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3867
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - redirect
        1    before any of the recordings were ever copied to those earlier
        2    sets of disks that you provided to the U.S. Attorney's office?
        3    A.  I'm sorry, Miss Baker, I don't -- could you restate that
        4    for me?
        5    Q.  Sure.  Let me withdraw the question and see if I can ask it
        6    a better way.
        7             The conversion of the original Lockheed Martin
        8    recordings from their original format on tape to the VOC
        9    format?
       10    A.  Uh-huh.
       11    Q.  Did that conversion process occur back before any sets of
       12    copies of any of the recordings were ever made, or was that
       13    something that just was done more recently in connection with
       14    copying recordings for use at trial?
       15    A.  No.  The conversion, we had to convert it in order to get
       16    the information into VOC format so that we could then provide
       17    it to the defense.  So that process was ongoing, as tapes were
       18    converted and put on MO's, those MO's were then -- there was a
       19    process of getting the information from this case off those
       20    MO's, putting them on CDs and DVDs and then providing it to the
       21    U.S. Attorney's office.  It was a process that was going along
       22    the whole time.
       23    Q.  And more recently, when you were asked to make certain --
       24    to copy certain recordings to DVD for use at trial, did you go
       25    back -- were conversions redone or were you using MO's that
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3868
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - redirect
        1    resulted from the conversions that had been done previously?
        2    A.  No.  They were all conversions that had been done
        3    previously.  I just -- I found the MO's to be labeled and then
        4    copied the information to position Number 2 on the diagram, and
        5    then burned the DVDs and provided them to the U.S. Attorney's
        6    office.
        7             MS. BAKER:  Thank you.
        8             MR. TIGAR:  May I ask one question, your Honor?
        9             THE COURT:  One.  Limited to redirect.
       10             MR. TIGAR:  May I approach?
       11             THE COURT:  Yes.
       12    RECROSS EXAMINATION
       13    BY MR. TIGAR:
       14    Q.  Placing in front of you what I've now marked as LS20, which
       15    you have previously testified about --
       16    A.  Correct.
       17    Q.  -- from what source were the files on LS20 copied?
       18             MS. BAKER:  May I see it?
       19             THE COURT:  Yes.
       20             MR. TIGAR:  I'm sorry, your Honor.
       21    A.  They were copied from another CD just like this, and I
       22    made, I think, two or three copies and then provided them to
       23    the U.S. Attorney's office.
       24    Q.  They were not copied from EMT's?
       25    A.  No, they were copied from the original tapes.  That's the
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3869
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - recross
        1    only way you could get this information.  They were taken --
        2    it's my understanding they were taken off the tapes and then
        3    copied to a CD that was provided.
        4    Q.  When?  That happened during your honeymoon?
        5    A.  Right.  They started after Mr. Elliott's testimony.  They
        6    came to New York, I was told.
        7             MR. TIGAR:  Thank you, your Honor.  Nothing further.
        8             MS. BAKER:  Nothing further.
        9             THE COURT:  All right.
       10             MS. BAKER:  And the government renews its offer of
       11    1300, 1301 and the portions of each of the recordings thereon
       12    as I described earlier, along with the two lists, 1300L and
       13    1301L.
       14             MR. TIGAR:  We'd like to be heard with respect to the
       15    instruction, your Honor.
       16             THE COURT:  All right.  Ladies and gentlemen, it's
       17    time for lunch.  We will break until 2:00 o'clock.  Please
       18    remember my continuing instructions, not to talk about the
       19    case, keep an open mind.  See you after lunch.  All rise,
       20    please.
       21             Please follow Mr. Fletcher to the jury room.
       22               (The jury exits the courtroom)
       23               (In open court; jury not present)
       24             THE COURT:  Agent, you may step down.
       25             THE WITNESS:  Thank you, your Honor.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3870
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - recross
        1             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, in light of the Court's ruling
        2    on admissibility, and order on admissibility of the prior
        3    diskettes, I can't say that this testimony is materially
        4    different.  I think we have some more questions we would raise,
        5    particularly about the manual creation of SRI's, but I
        6    understood your Honor's ruling to sweep rather broadly across
        7    this area.  Of course, we disagree with it and we've preserved
        8    our position.  But I'm not going to waste the Court's time
        9    unless the Court has questions.  But we would ask if the Court
       10    is going to admit this evidence that it give the same
       11    instruction as it did last time.  We do have questions.  We
       12    have raised them.  We will be putting on something in the
       13    defense case.  And that's where it sits.
       14             THE COURT:  All right.  Does anyone else want to be
       15    heard?
       16             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, I just wanted to note for the
       17    record, there was no testimony about manual creation of SRI.
       18    It was only manual naming of the files.
       19             THE COURT:  All right.  My recollection last time is
       20    that with respect to the lists, which would be the equivalent
       21    of what's now been presented to me as Government Exhibits 1300L
       22    and 1301L, there were no objections to the counterparts to
       23    that, to 1000.  No objections to 1300L and 1301L.  And the
       24    objections with respect to 1300 and 1301 are the same I passed
       25    on with respect to the other equivalent exhibits.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3871
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - recross
        1             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, the reason that I didn't
        2    single out the "L" exhibits is that they are simply a minor
        3    reformatting of what would appear in the directory file of the
        4    relevant diskettes.  I mean, you read right-to-left across, it
        5    contains exactly the same information.  So that if the
        6    diskettes or DVDs are in, we can't maintain an objection to the
        7    "L" exhibits.  We do object to them, but only derivative of our
        8    objection to the DVDs.
        9             THE COURT:  Okay.  Well then for all the reasons that
       10    I've previously explained, I'll admit 1300, 1301, 1300L and
       11    1301L, subject to the same limiting instruction that I gave to
       12    the previous parallel exhibits.
       13             (Government's Exhibits 1300, 1301, 1300L and 1301L
       14    received in evidence)
       15             MR. TIGAR:  And, your Honor, just to -- so that I'm
       16    clear, I had understood that if, as the conversation comes
       17    along, we want to make a hearsay objection or other objection
       18    that's internal to the conversation, that those opportunities
       19    are still there.  Obviously in a case of this kind, that
       20    objection gets done at the end of the day here.
       21             THE COURT:  Well, what I said was, last time, that
       22    it's -- that the objections that I was passing on were
       23    objections that were made.  And those were authenticity
       24    objections.  I specifically accepted objections to the content
       25    of the calls, 106 objections, and any other objections that
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3872
             47JLSAT4                 Kerns - recross
        1    might be made to the content of the call.  Because I
        2    couldn't -- no one had raised those objections at that time,
        3    and I didn't think that the parties had waived any objections
        4    to the content of the calls.  And the parties are welcome to
        5    raise those objections at the time, and any objections should
        6    be raised.  I've already passed on at least one objection.
        7    I've listened to other objections as the calls have gone on.
        8    We've discussed 106 objections.  And so I'm not passing on the
        9    content of the calls, and the defendants are free to raise such
       10    objections at any appropriate time.
       11             MR. TIGAR:  Thank you, your Honor.
       12             THE COURT:  Anyone else want to be heard?  All right.
       13    Can I talk with the lawyers at the sidebar for a moment?
       14               (At the sidebar)
       15             THE COURT:  Mr. Fletcher advises me that juror who
       16    sits in seat Number 10, I believe Juror 146, that a very close
       17    friend of the juror's spouse who's like a parent is terminally
       18    ill and the juror may have to attend a funeral outside the
       19    country, and it's simply something that I will have to add that
       20    to something to be explored with the juror after lunch.
       21             MR. TIGAR:  Thank you.
       22             MR. DEMBER:  Thank you, your Honor.
       23             THE COURT:  Okay.  See you after lunch.
       24               (Luncheon recess)
       25               (Continued on next page)
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3881
             47JLSAT4
        1               (Whereupon, previous pages 3873 - 3880 were sealed,
        2    by Order of the Court)
        3               (In open court; jury not present)
        4             THE COURT:  I'm sorry, Ms. Shellow Levine and
        5    Mr. Barkow is okay, at the sidebar.
        6               (At the sidebar)
        7             THE COURT:  I'm going to seal that portion of the
        8    transcript which talks about the jurors' personal affairs.
        9             MR. BARKOW:  Yes, Sir.
       10             MS. SHELLOW-LAVINE:  Of course.
       11               (In open court; jury not present)
       12             THE COURT:  Thank you.
       13               All right.  Please be seated, all.
       14             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, Mr. Dember and I did have a
       15    chance to talk during the luncheon break, and at the end of the
       16    day today, we've agreed it would be helpful to bring to your
       17    Honor's attention the kinds of issues that are going to arise
       18    here with respect to these prison calls, visits, and so on in a
       19    nonadversarial way, but just to lay out the different
       20    difficulties that we've perceived coming up.
       21             THE COURT:  That's fine.  Let me ask a question.  Are
       22    there -- is there going to be a stipulation with respect to the
       23    transcripts that correspond to Government Exhibits 1300 and
       24    1301?  I raise that just because I can do it in the same way
       25    that I did for 1000 and 1015, which is to say that exhibits
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3882
             47JLSAT4
        1    1000 and 1015 -- I'm sorry, Exhibits 1300 and 1301, 1300L and
        2    1301L, are received in evidence, subject to any objections, any
        3    specific objections, with respect to the content of the
        4    telephone calls.  At such time -- that's the end of the
        5    instruction there.
        6             At such time as 1300, 1301 are played along with
        7    transcripts, I will give the lengthier instruction about the
        8    authenticity and accuracy of recordings and the way in which
        9    the jury is to consider transcripts, which are conversations
       10    not in English, and transcripts of English conversations.
       11             I just -- that's the way I'll do it, because that's
       12    the way it was done the last time, I think.
       13             MS. BAKER:  If your Honor wishes to do it at that way,
       14    the government does not object.  The other alternative that
       15    occurs to me, if your Honor thinks it will be cleaner and
       16    easier, what we really wanted today was to establish the
       17    authenticity, have any objection to the authenticity raised,
       18    and which has been accomplished -- it's not critical to our
       19    purpose today that the jury be told right now that the
       20    recordings are in.  So if your Honor thinks it would be easier
       21    to wait until we get to the presentation of each particular
       22    recording, your Honor could then formally admit each recording
       23    at that time.  It only mattered to us to resolve all of the
       24    authenticity admissibility issues today.
       25             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, we certainly agree with so
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3883
             47JLSAT4
        1    much of that as says we don't need to do it today.  We would
        2    like to have, of course, the same general instruction with
        3    respect to tapes which we would agree that, as before, need
        4    only be given once, and perhaps the best time is when they play
        5    the first one.
        6             If your Honor has asked whether there's going to be a
        7    global agreement about transcripts, we received a whole bunch
        8    of those over the weekend, and for us, it's simply a question
        9    of checking and making sure, before we go forward.  I think one
       10    can anticipate something similar to what happened last time.
       11             THE COURT:  Well, why don't I, just because these were
       12    offered right before, do it the same way I did it before and
       13    nothing will be played for the jury at this point.  Exhibits
       14    1300 and 1301 and 1300L and 1301L received in evidence subject
       15    to the specific objections with respect to the content of the
       16    telephone calls, and I'll tell the jury before any of these
       17    recordings are played, they would be played with transcripts,
       18    and I will give you a similar limiting instruction with respect
       19    to the telephone recordings and the transcripts as I've given
       20    you before, but I don't believe that one of those recordings is
       21    going to be played today.  Is that satisfactory?
       22             MR. TIGAR:  To the defense, yes, your Honor.
       23             MS. BAKER:  Yes, your Honor.
       24             THE COURT:  Okay.  Where are we going then after I do
       25    that?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3884
             47JLSAT4
        1             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, we have three witnesses
        2    here from the FBI, Minnesota, who are prepared to testify.
        3             THE COURT:  Okay.
        4             MR. MORVILLO:  Would you like me to call the first one
        5    to the stand, have him take a seat?
        6             THE COURT:  Yes, and let's bring in the jury.
        7               (Jury entering the courtroom)
        8             THE COURT:  All right.  Please be seated all.
        9             Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.
       10             JURORS:  Good afternoon.
       11             THE COURT:  Good to see you all.  Ladies and
       12    gentlemen, Government Exhibits 1300 and 1301, 1300L and 1301L,
       13    are received in evidence subject to any specific objection with
       14    respect to the content of any of the telephone calls.
       15             Ladies and gentlemen, as you've heard, there are
       16    telephone recordings on 1300 and 1301L.  And these will be
       17    subject to similar limiting instructions with respect to the
       18    recordings that I gave you with respect to 1000 and 1015, and
       19    there will likely be transcripts that go along with those
       20    recordings, and I've given you instructions -- limiting
       21    instructions with respect to how to use transcripts of foreign
       22    languages, Arabic recordings, and how to use transcripts as an
       23    aid when English recordings are played.  And I will give you
       24    those specific instructions before the first recording that
       25    appears on Government Exhibit 1300 or 1301 is played for you,
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3885
             47JLSAT4
        1    but I don't expect that any of those recordings will be played
        2    today, so I won't give you that instruction yet.  Before the
        3    first one of those recordings is played, I will give you those
        4    instructions.
        5             All right.  The government can call its next witness.
        6             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, at this time the government
        7    would call Cynthia McGrath.
        8               (Witness sworn)
        9             DEPUTY CLERK:  You may be seated.  Please state your
       10    full name for the record.
       11             THE WITNESS:  Cynthia McGrath.
       12             DEPUTY CLERK:  Thank you.
       13             THE COURT:  Mr. Morvillo, you may examine.
       14             MR. MORVILLO:  Thank you, your Honor.
       15     CYNTHIA MCGRATH,
       16         called as a witness by the Government,
       17         having been duly sworn, testified as follows:
       18    DIRECT EXAMINATION
       19    BY MR. MORVILLO:
       20    Q.  Good afternoon, Miss McGrath.
       21    A.  Good afternoon.
       22    Q.  How are you employed?
       23    A.  I'm a special agent with the Federal Bureau of
       24    Investigation.
       25    Q.  And how long have you been a special agent with the FBI?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3886
             47JLSAT4                 McGrath - direct
        1    A.  14 years.
        2    Q.  Where are you currently assigned?
        3    A.  I'm currently assigned to Minneapolis, field division.
        4    Q.  Minneapolis, Minnesota?
        5    A.  Yes.
        6    Q.  And how long have you been assigned to the Minneapolis
        7    field division of the FBI?
        8    A.  For 14 years.
        9             THE COURT:  Please, keep your voice up.
       10    BY MR. MORVILLO:
       11    Q.  Agent McGrath, are you assigned to a particular unit or
       12    division with the FBI?
       13    A.  I'm currently assigned to the foreign counter-intelligence
       14    squad.
       15    Q.  And how long have you been assigned to that squad?
       16    A.  Approximately two years.
       17    Q.  Directing your attention to February 19th of 2000, what
       18    unit or division were you assigned to at that time?
       19    A.  The squad at that time was the foreign counter-intelligence
       20    and counter-terrorism squad.
       21    Q.  On that day, what was your assignment?
       22    A.  I was assigned to go down to the federal medical center in
       23    Rochester, Minnesota, and record a visit at the prison.
       24    Q.  And incidentally, what day of the week, if you recall, was
       25    February the 19th of 2000?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3887
             47JLSAT4                 McGrath - direct
        1    A.  That was a Saturday.
        2    Q.  Were you working by yourself that day?
        3    A.  No, I was not.  I was working with Agent Brian Bartholmey
        4    from the Rochester office.
        5    Q.  Is that B-a-r-t-h-o-l-m-e-y?
        6    A.  Yes.
        7    Q.  Why did you go to Rochester, Minnesota that day?
        8    A.  A court order had been issued for us to record the visit
        9    between Sheikh Abdel Rahman, the interpreter and an attorney.
       10    Q.  What did you do when you got to the FMC in Rochester that
       11    day?
       12    A.  When we arrived, we went into the entrance area and signed
       13    the logbook.
       14             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
       15             THE COURT:  Yes.
       16    BY MR. MORVILLO:
       17    Q.  Agent McGrath, I've just handed you what's been marked for
       18    identification as Government Exhibits 1760 and 1760C.  I'd ask
       19    you to take a look at those and let me know whether you
       20    recognize them.
       21    A.  Yes, I recognize them.
       22    Q.  What is Government Exhibit 1760?
       23    A.  1760 is the official visitors' record book, and it says
       24    Closed, 3-1-01.
       25    Q.  Is that the logbook that you saw on February 19th, 2000?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3888
             47JLSAT4                 McGrath - direct
        1    A.  Yes, it is.
        2    Q.  Could you turn to the first tabbed page in that book?  Do
        3    you recognize that page?
        4    A.  Yes, I do.
        5    Q.  What is that page, if you could describe it?
        6    A.  It's the page on which I signed when I arrived at the FMC.
        7    Q.  If you would now look at Government Exhibit 1760C.  Do you
        8    recognize that?
        9    A.  Yes.
       10    Q.  What is that?
       11    A.  It's a photocopy of the pages I just looked at in the
       12    logbook.
       13    Q.  Is that a true and accurate photocopy of that page?
       14    A.  Yes, it is.
       15             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor at this time the government
       16    would offer into evidence Government Exhibit 1760C.
       17             THE COURT:  No objection.  Government Exhibit 1760C
       18    received in evidence.
       19             (Government's Exhibit 1760C received in evidence)
       20    Q.  Agent McGrath, directing your attention to 1760C, do you
       21    see where you signed in?
       22    A.  Yes, I do.
       23    Q.  And can you read your name?
       24    A.  Cynthia M. Whiteside.
       25    Q.  And is that your maiden name?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3889
             47JLSAT4                 McGrath - direct
        1    A.  Yes, it is.
        2    Q.  And what other information is contained in the signature
        3    line where you signed in?
        4    A.  My signature, and then that I was with the FBI Minneapolis.
        5    The date, February 19th, 2000.  And time in, 7:40 a.m.  And the
        6    time out, at 3:13 p.m.
        7    Q.  And did you sign in with anyone else?
        8    A.  I did.  I signed in with Brian Bartholmey.
        9    Q.  And is his signature also on this page, on this document?
       10    A.  Yes.
       11    Q.  You can put that aside.  Where did you go after you signed
       12    in?
       13    A.  After we signed in, we went into the security building,
       14    into the basement, into an office, across from the warden's
       15    conference room.
       16    Q.  When you say the security building, is that a separate
       17    building from where you entered?
       18    A.  Yes, it is.
       19    Q.  And do you know whose office that was that you went to?
       20    A.  Her name was Kara Christenson.
       21    Q.  When did you go into that office?
       22    A.  That is where the recording equipment had been set up.
       23    Q.  Did you set up that equipment?
       24    A.  No, I know not.
       25    Q.  Could you please describe for the jury what Miss
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3890
             47JLSAT4                 McGrath - direct
        1    Christenson's office looked like on February 19th, 2000?
        2    A.  Sure.  It's not a very big office.  We entered the room.
        3    To the left was the stand on which the recording equipment was.
        4    And not very far into the room was a desk with a chair behind
        5    it and a computer.  And there was a window behind the desk.
        6    The room is below grade, except up to the point where the
        7    window is.
        8    Q.  Were there any other windows in the office?
        9    A.  There was a window onto the hallway but that was covered
       10    with a blind.
       11    Q.  And in relation to Miss Christenson's office, where was the
       12    conference room?
       13    A.  It was catty-corner from Kara's office.
       14    Q.  You said that there was recording equipment set up in
       15    there?
       16    A.  Yes.
       17    Q.  Can you describe that to the jury?
       18    A.  Sure.  There was a stand, and then there were two decks,
       19    and then on top of that was a black-and-white monitor.
       20    Q.  What type of decks were they, do you know?
       21    A.  Recording decks that you put the tapes in.  I don't know
       22    the make.
       23    Q.  Did you bring cassette tapes with you to the prison that
       24    day?
       25    A.  No, they were left by the agents who set up the equipment.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3891
             47JLSAT4                 McGrath - direct
        1    Q.  Do you have any training in technology?
        2    A.  No, I don't.
        3    Q.  Did there come a time when the meeting in the conference
        4    room that you were there to record actually began?
        5    A.  Yes.
        6    Q.  What did you do at that time?
        7    A.  At the time that the meeting began, I opened the tapes and
        8    put them in the deck.  The -- I turned the power on and pressed
        9    record on both decks.
       10    Q.  Do you know why there were two decks?
       11    A.  There's -- it's standard procedure.  You have two decks for
       12    two reasons:  One is in case there's a malfunction, the second
       13    deck could cover; and also, if you -- the meeting goes long and
       14    you need to change tapes, while you change the first tape,
       15    the -- while you're taking out Tape A, Tape B is still
       16    recording, so you'd replace Tape A and then you would take
       17    Tape B out and put the other -- the next copy in.
       18    Q.  So then while you're changing Tape A, Tape B is recording?
       19    A.  Exactly.  So there's no gap.
       20    Q.  What happened when you pressed "record" on the two tape
       21    decks?
       22    A.  The recording began.  The recording of the meeting began.
       23    Q.  And how do you know?
       24    A.  You listen -- there is a headset there.  You listen in to
       25    make sure you could hear sound.  And then the meters on the
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3892
             47JLSAT4                 McGrath - direct
        1    decks were moving, the needles were moving.
        2    Q.  Did you listen to the entire meeting?
        3    A.  No.
        4    Q.  What was the purpose for you listening?
        5    A.  Just to make sure that the recording was being made.
        6    Q.  Did there come a time during this meeting when you needed
        7    to switch the tapes in the tape deck?
        8    A.  Yes.
        9    Q.  Can you please explain to the jury the process of switching
       10    the tapes?
       11    A.  When we realized we needed to change the tape, I opened up
       12    a new tape, two packages, labeled them Tape 2, A and B.
       13    Stopped the tape in Tape A, in Deck A.  Took that tape out.
       14    Put the second tape in.  And then I did the same for Deck B,
       15    taking the first tape out and putting the second tape into
       16    Deck B and recording again.
       17    Q.  What did you do with each tape after you removed them from
       18    the tape decks?
       19    A.  I put them in the case and kept them so I could take them
       20    back with me when I left.
       21             THE COURT:  Please keep your voice up.
       22    Q.  Were they labeled?
       23    A.  They were labeled Tape 1, I believe -- they were labeled by
       24    tape number and then the deck number, and the date.
       25    Q.  Did you label them yourself?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3893
             47JLSAT4                 McGrath - direct
        1    A.  Yes, I did.
        2             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
        3             THE COURT:  Yes.
        4    BY MR. MORVILLO:
        5    Q.  Agent McGrath, I've just handed you what's been marked for
        6    identification purposes as Government Exhibits 1700, 1701,
        7    1702, 1703 and 1704 and 1705.  I'd ask you to take a look at
        8    those and let me know whether you recognize them.
        9    A.  Yes, I recognize them.
       10    Q.  How do you recognize them?
       11    A.  It's my handwriting on the labels.
       12    Q.  What are they?
       13    A.  They are tapes from -- dated February 19th, 2000, and there
       14    are three sets of tapes, each from Deck A and Deck B.
       15             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, at this time the government
       16    would offer into evidence government exhibits 1700, 1701, 1702,
       17    1703, 1704 and 1705, those portions that correspond to the
       18    transcripts of these recordings that will be introduced into
       19    evidence later.
       20             THE COURT:  All right.  No objections?
       21             MR. TIGAR:  Yes, your Honor.
       22             THE COURT:  Oh, sorry.
       23             MR. TIGAR:  This is the issue that we discussed this
       24    morning.
       25             THE COURT:  Okay.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3894
             47JLSAT4                 McGrath - direct
        1             MR. TIGAR:  And I'd like to be heard on it.  I think
        2    it should be done out of the presence of the jury.
        3             THE COURT:  All right.
        4             MR. TIGAR:  According to the rules.
        5             THE COURT:  I'll reserve on 1700 through 1705.
        6               (Continued on next page)
        7
        8
        9
       10
       11
       12
       13
       14
       15
       16
       17
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3895
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    Q.  Ms. McGrath, what did you do after the meeting concluded?
        2    A.  After the meeting concluded I removed the final tapes from
        3    the machine, the decks, both deck A and deck B, packaged them
        4    in a box and then took them with me, placed them in the trunk
        5    of my car and secured it with a lock, and then returned home.
        6    Q.  Once you returned back to the office, when was the next day
        7    that you were at work?
        8    A.  It was Monday.
        9    Q.  February 21st?
       10    A.  Yes.
       11    Q.  Did there come a time when you sent these tapes to the home
       12    office?
       13    A.  Yes.
       14    Q.  Do you know when that was?
       15    A.  I can't recall specifically the date.  I believe it was
       16    that Monday.
       17    Q.  Is your recollection exhausted on that?
       18    A.  I am sorry?
       19    Q.  Do you have a specific recollection?
       20    A.  I recall dictating what we call the electronic
       21    communication to transmit the tapes but I can't recall a
       22    specific date that it was typed on.
       23    Q.  If you saw that document, would that refresh your
       24    recollection?
       25    A.  Yes, it would.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3896
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
        2             THE COURT:  Yes.
        3    Q.  Agent McGrath, I have handed you what has been marked for
        4    identification as Government Exhibit 3555C.  I would ask you to
        5    read that to yourself, take a look at it, and after you finish
        6    let me know.
        7             Have you looked at it?
        8    A.  Yes, I have.
        9    Q.  Does looking at that document refresh your recollection?
       10    A.  Yes, it does.
       11    Q.  As to when you sent the recordings?
       12    A.  Yes, I sent the recordings on February 23, 2000.
       13    Q.  Incidentally, Agent McGrath, how many tapes did you make on
       14    February 19, 2000?
       15    A.  There are 6.
       16    Q.  And what does that consist of?
       17    A.  It consists of one tape or, excuse me, two tapes from --
       18    how do I explain this?  There are 2 decks and so there were
       19    three times we had to switch tapes.  I don't know if that is
       20    clear enough.
       21    Q.  So is it fair to say that there are essentially three
       22    segments of the meeting?
       23    A.  Yes, from start to the end.
       24    Q.  Do you recall how long the meeting lasted that was
       25    recorded?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3897
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    A.  I don't recall.  I left at I believe it said 3:13, so I
        2    think the meeting probably ended around 3.
        3    Q.  And do you recall what time the meeting began?
        4    A.  I believe around 10 or 10:30.
        5    Q.  Now, you just testified a moment ago that on February 23rd
        6    you sent these tapes somewhere.  Where did you send them?
        7    A.  To the New York field office.
        8    Q.  Do you know to whose attention you sent them?
        9    A.  To Kim Whittle.
       10    Q.  Who is Kim Whittle?
       11    A.  She is the case agent.
       12    Q.  Did you retain any copies of these tapes in your office in
       13    Minneapolis?
       14    A.  No.
       15    Q.  Did you ever see these tapes again until today?
       16    A.  No.
       17    Q.  Now, directing your attention to May 19, 2000, were you
       18    working that day?
       19    A.  Yes, I was.
       20    Q.  What was your assignment on that day?
       21    A.  Again, I was assigned pursuant to a court order to go to
       22    the medical center in Rochester and record the meeting between
       23    Sheikh Abdel Rahman and --
       24             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, objection to secondary --
       25             THE COURT:  All right, sustained.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3898
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    Q.  Why did you go to FMC Rochester on May 19, 2000?
        2    A.  To record a meeting between Sheikh Abdel Rahman, the
        3    interpreter, and the attorney.
        4    Q.  Did you sign anything?
        5    A.  Yes, I did.
        6             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
        7             THE COURT:  Yes.
        8    Q.  Agent McGrath, I have just placed before you what is marked
        9    for identification as Government Exhibit 1760D.  Do you still
       10    have 1760 up there?
       11    A.  Yes, I do.
       12    Q.  Can you open that to the second half page?
       13    A.  Yes.
       14    Q.  Do you recognize that page?
       15    A.  Yes, I do.
       16    Q.  What is it?
       17    A.  It's a page on which I signed when I went to the FMC on May
       18    19, 2000.
       19    Q.  And directing your attention to 1760D, what is that?
       20    A.  It's a photocopy of that page.
       21    Q.  Is it a true and accurate photocopy of that page?
       22    A.  Yes, it is.
       23             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, the government offers
       24    Government Exhibit 1760D at this time.
       25             MR. TIGAR:  May I just inquire briefly, your Honor?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3899
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1             THE COURT:  All right.
        2             MR. TIGAR:  May I inquire of counsel?  I may be able
        3    to shorten this.
        4             THE COURT:  Sure.
        5             MR. TIGAR:  Thank you, your Honor.
        6             THE COURT:  All right, no objection.  Government
        7    Exhibit 1760D received in evidence.
        8             (Government's Exhibit  1760D received in evidence)
        9    Q.  Agent McGrath, where on --
       10             THE COURT:  Hold on.
       11             Go ahead.
       12    Q.  Where on 1760D does your name appear?
       13    A.  It appears -- my printed name and my signature appear
       14    signing in at 9:35.
       15             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, may I publish this to the
       16    jury?
       17             THE COURT:  Yes.
       18    Q.  Agent McGrath, if you look at the monitor in front of you,
       19    and if you touch the screen, it should indicate where your name
       20    is.  I said "should".  There, okay.
       21             Again, the entry there is Cynthia Whiteside?
       22    A.  Yes, that is correct.  That is my maiden name.
       23    Q.  That is the signature next to your printed name?
       24    A.  Yes.
       25    Q.  And reading across from your signature where the blue dot
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3900
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    now is, is that the date you signed that?
        2    A.  Yes, it is.
        3    Q.  What day is that?
        4    A.  May 19, 2000.
        5    Q.  What time did you sign in?
        6    A.  9:35 a.m.
        7    Q.  What time did you sign out?
        8    A.  3:20 p.m.
        9    Q.  During that time frame, between 9:35 a.m. and 3:20 p.m.,
       10    did you actually record a meeting?
       11    A.  Yes, I did.
       12    Q.  And approximately when did that meeting begin and when did
       13    that meeting end?
       14    A.  It began approximately 10 a.m. and ended around 3 o'clock.
       15    Q.  Were you working with anyone else that day?
       16    A.  Yes, I was working with my supervisor, Chris Briese.
       17    Q.  Does his signature also appear on Government Exhibit 1760D?
       18    A.  Yes, it does.
       19    Q.  After you signed in on May 19, 2000, what did you do?
       20    A.  We went back to the security building and into the
       21    basement, back into Kara Christenson's office.
       22    Q.  That is the same office that you used on February 19, 2000?
       23    A.  Yes.
       24    Q.  Was there anything different about that office this time?
       25    A.  No.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3901
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    Q.  The same equipment was set up there?
        2    A.  Yes, the same equipment was set up.
        3    Q.  Incidentally, Agent McGrath, do you know what type of
        4    recording you made on February 19, 2000, whether it was audio
        5    or video or both?
        6    A.  I am not sure to tell you the truth.  All I know is I put
        7    the tapes in.  They said video cassette on the tape.  I don't
        8    know if it was video or just audio.
        9    Q.  And with respect to May 19, 2000, do you know what type of
       10    recording you were making that day?
       11    A.  Again, I think it was just audio.  I am not positive
       12    though.
       13    Q.  With respect to the recordings that you made on May 19,
       14    2000, did you employ the same procedures that you employed on
       15    February 19, 2000?
       16    A.  Yes, I did.
       17    Q.  When did you begin the recording on May 19, 2000?
       18    A.  We began the recording when the meeting started.
       19    Q.  And how do you know when the meeting started?
       20    A.  Again, there was a monitor in the room we were in in the
       21    office and when they sat down we turned the power on and hit
       22    "record" on both decks.
       23    Q.  And, again, on the May 19 visit did you check to make sure
       24    that the recording equipment was operating?
       25    A.  Yes.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3902
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    Q.  And how did you do that?
        2    A.  Again, we listened to see if there was anything coming over
        3    through the headphone and then also looked at the meter on the
        4    decks.
        5    Q.  Other than that did you monitor this meeting?
        6    A.  No.
        7             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
        8             THE COURT:  Yes.
        9    Q.  Agent McGrath, I have just handed you what has been marked
       10    for identification as Government Exhibits 1706, 1707, 1708 and
       11    1709.  Do you recognize those materials?
       12    A.  Yes, I do.
       13    Q.  How do you recognize them?
       14    A.  My handwriting is on it.
       15    Q.  And what kind of information did you put on there?
       16    A.  I have the tape number, whether it was the first or second
       17    tape, the letter corresponding to the deck, the date, which is
       18    5/19/2000, FMC for Federal Medical Center, and then my
       19    initials.
       20    Q.  What are these materials?
       21    A.  These are the tapes that we recorded on that day.
       22    Q.  On May 19, 2000?
       23    A.  Yes, on May 19, 2000.
       24             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, the government would offer
       25    Government exhibits 1706, 1707, 1708 and 1709.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3903
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1             MR. TIGAR:  We respectfully request the court to
        2    reserve.
        3             THE COURT:  Okay.
        4             I will reserve on Government Exhibits 1706 through
        5    1709.
        6    Q.  Agent McGrath, how many tapes did you make that day?
        7    A.  We made four total.
        8    Q.  And is that from one deck or from two decks?
        9    A.  That would be two decks, so two tapes from each deck.
       10    Q.  You testified previously that you believe the meeting ended
       11    at around 3 o'clock?
       12    A.  Yes, I believe so.
       13    Q.  What did you do after the meeting ended?
       14    A.  I extracted the second tapes from the deck and put them in
       15    another box and then secured them in the trunk of my car with a
       16    chain.
       17    Q.  What did you do with the tapes after you returned to your
       18    office in Minneapolis?
       19    A.  I believe I gave those to Vickie Bell.  She is our clerk
       20    who handles recordings and she made copies of them.
       21    Q.  And did there come a time when she gave them back to you?
       22    A.  Yes.
       23    Q.  Did she give you also copies?
       24    A.  Yes, she gave me the tapes I gave her, as well as the
       25    copies.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3904
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    Q.  And what did you do with those original tapes and the
        2    copies?
        3    A.  The original tapes were sent to headquarters in Washington,
        4    D.C.
        5    Q.  When you say headquarters --
        6    A.  FBI headquarters.  And then the copies were all sent to the
        7    New York field office.
        8    Q.  Did you retain any copies or any of the originals in
        9    Minneapolis?
       10    A.  No.
       11    Q.  Is this the first time that you are seeing these tapes
       12    again here since you sent them to Washington?
       13    A.  Yes, it is.
       14    Q.  Do you recall when you sent them?
       15    A.  No, I don't.
       16    Q.  Do you recall about when you sent them?
       17    A.  It was -- the 19th is a Saturday, so around the 21st of
       18    May, I would believe.
       19    Q.  Just a couple of days later?
       20    A.  Yes.
       21    Q.  Other than these two dates that you have testified about,
       22    the February 19th prison visit and the May 19th prison visit,
       23    both of 2000, did you ever record any other meetings between
       24    Sheikh Abdel Rahman, his interpreter, and a lawyer?
       25    A.  I did not.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3905
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    Q.  You did not personally?
        2    A.  No, not personally.
        3    Q.  With respect to both of those visits that you participated
        4    in the recording of, did you remain in Ms. Christenson's office
        5    during the entirety of the recording?
        6    A.  Yes.
        7    Q.  Did you ever at any time stop the tape before you changed
        8    the tapes?
        9    A.  No.
       10    Q.  Directing your attention to July 2001, were you working at
       11    that time?
       12    A.  No, I was not.
       13    Q.  Why not?
       14    A.  I was on my honeymoon.
       15    Q.  And when you returned from your honeymoon, did you take any
       16    action with respect to the investigation in this case?
       17    A.  Yes, when I returned from my honeymoon that following
       18    Monday I had been advised there had been a visit again at the
       19    prison and so I dictated an electronic communication, or EC,
       20    for the tapes that were recorded for that weekend and sent them
       21    to New York.
       22    Q.  But you did not personally make the recordings?
       23    A.  No, I did not.
       24    Q.  You just transmitted the tapes to New York?
       25    A.  Yes.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3906
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    Q.  To whose attention did you send those tapes?
        2    A.  Again, it was to Kim Whittle.
        3    Q.  Did you retain any copies of those tapes in Minneapolis?
        4    A.  No.
        5    Q.  And how soon after the visit that happened in July did you
        6    send the tapes on to New York?
        7    A.  It was within a couple of days.
        8             MR. MORVILLO:  May I have a moment, your Honor?
        9             THE COURT:  Yes.
       10    Q.  Agent McGrath, was there a video monitor during the
       11    February 19, 2000 visit?
       12    A.  I believe there was, yes.
       13    Q.  And how did you know when, during that visit, to begin the
       14    recording?
       15    A.  Again when they sat down at the table is when we started
       16    the recording.
       17    Q.  Is there anything that would refresh your recollection as
       18    to what type of recording you did on February 19, 2000 and/or
       19    May, 19, 2000?
       20    A.  I can look at the electronic communications that I sent.
       21    That would probably help me.
       22             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
       23             THE COURT:  Yes.
       24    Q.  Agent McGrath, I have just handed you what has been marked
       25    for identification as Government Exhibits 3555E and 3555C and I
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3907
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    would ask you to take a look at those and read them to yourself
        2    and let me know when you are finished reading them.
        3             Do either of those documents refresh your recollection
        4    as to what type of recordings were made on the February 19
        5    visit and the May 2000 visit?
        6    A.  The February 2000 was an audio tape.  They were audio
        7    tapes.
        8    Q.  And what about the May 2000 visit?
        9    A.  Unfortunately it just says tapes.  It doesn't say audio or
       10    video.
       11             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
       12             THE COURT:  Yes.
       13    A.  I am sorry, I just saw it in the line.
       14    Q.  Does that refresh your recollection as to what type of
       15    recordings were made?
       16    A.  Yes, it does.
       17    Q.  Now that your recollection has been refreshed, what type of
       18    recordings were they?
       19    A.  In May 2000 we did audio and videotape of the meetings.
       20             MR. MORVILLO:  May I have a moment, your Honor?
       21             THE COURT:  Yes.
       22             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, I have no further
       23    questions.
       24             THE COURT:  All right.
       25             Actually, ladies and gentlemen, I notice some of you
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3908
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - direct
        1    stretching.  We can take a stretch break at this point.
        2             (Pause)
        3             THE COURT:  All right, please be seated all.
        4             Is there anything else?
        5             All right.  Mr. Ruhnke, you may examine.
        6    CROSS EXAMINATION
        7    BY MR. RUHNKE:
        8    Q.  Agent McGrath, good afternoon.
        9             You are talking about three different occasions when
       10    you were involved in the tape and/or video recording of
       11    conversations?
       12    A.  I was only involved personally on two occasions.
       13    Q.  And one of those occasions was on February 19, 2000,
       14    correct?
       15    A.  That is correct.
       16    Q.  Did you have any visual observations of the meeting in
       17    progress?
       18    A.  There was a monitor there, yes.
       19    Q.  And could you see that there were three people in the
       20    conference room that you were monitoring?
       21    A.  Yes.
       22    Q.  One of them was Sheikh Abdel Rahman, correct?
       23    A.  Right.
       24    Q.  And one man who was an interpreter and another man who was
       25    the attorney, is that correct?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3909
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - cross
        1    A.  That is correct.
        2    Q.  Did you come to know that the name of the attorney was
        3    Abdeen Jabara?
        4    A.  Yes, I did.
        5    Q.  And the name of the interpreter was Mohammed Yousry?
        6    A.  Yes.
        7    Q.  Now, were you also aware that Mr. Jabara and Mr. Yousry had
        8    visited Sheikh Abdel Rahman the day before at FMC Rochester?
        9    February 18, 2000.
       10    A.  I wasn't there.  I thought the 19th was the first visit.
       11    Q.  Do you know if anybody else from the FBI was there on
       12    February 18, 2000 or any attempt was made --
       13    A.  I would have to look at the log book, sir.
       14    Q.  The log book, you mean the log book --
       15    A.  Yes.
       16    Q.  Just before I hand you that in a second, do you have any
       17    knowledge if there were attempts made to tape record or video
       18    record or otherwise monitor a meeting that occurred on February
       19    18, 2000?
       20    A.  I was not part of that, no.
       21    Q.  So you have no knowledge of that?
       22    A.  No, I don't have any knowledge of that.
       23    Q.  Do you still want to see the log book?
       24    A.  Please.
       25             MR. RUHNKE:  May I approach, your Honor?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3910
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - cross
        1             THE COURT:  Yes.
        2    Q.  I am handing you the exhibit, Government Exhibit 1760.
        3             MR. MORVILLO:  For the record, your Honor, that
        4    exhibit is not in evidence.  It's the photocopy, 1760C and D.
        5             THE COURT:  All right.
        6    Q.  Have you looked at that now?
        7    A.  Yes, I have.
        8    Q.  Does that help you at all as to whether there was an
        9    attempt the day before?
       10    A.  Those are the --
       11             MR. MORVILLO:  Objection.
       12             THE COURT:  All right.  Sustained.
       13    Q.  Does that help you refresh your recollection?
       14    A.  Yes.
       15    Q.  And what does your refreshed recollection tell us?
       16    A.  I don't believe there was a recording made that day.
       17    Q.  Okay.  I have no more questions for you.
       18             THE COURT:  All right.
       19    CROSS EXAMINATION
       20    BY MR. TIGAR:
       21    Q.  Ms. McGrath, I would like to start by asking you about that
       22    first surveillance that you were involved in in February of
       23    2000, all right?
       24    A.  Okay.
       25    Q.  Now, Sheikh Abdel Rahman was there, right?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3911
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - cross
        1    A.  That is correct.
        2    Q.  He was the prisoner.
        3    A.  Yes.
        4    Q.  And then Mr. Yousry was there, correct?
        5    A.  That is correct.
        6    Q.  And do you recognize him in court?
        7    A.  I believe he is the man wearing the gray vest.
        8    Q.  The sweater vest?
        9    A.  Yes.
       10    Q.  And the other person there was Mr. Abdeen Jabara, correct?
       11    A.  Yes.
       12    Q.  And you understood he was an attorney?
       13    A.  Yes.
       14    Q.  Ms. Stewart was not present, was she?
       15    A.
       16    A.  No, sir.
       17    Q.  You didn't see her at all?
       18    A.  No, sir.
       19    Q.  And you testified that you did not set up the recording
       20    equipment, correct?
       21    A.  That is correct.
       22    Q.  You had nothing to do with how the microphones were going
       23    to be or where the camera was or any of that?
       24    A.  No, sir.
       25    Q.  That is not your field of endeavor, is it?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3912
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - cross
        1    A.  No, sir.
        2    Q.  But you did have a monitor, right, where you could see what
        3    was going on in there?
        4    A.  Yes.
        5    Q.  In addition to sometimes listening to make sure that the
        6    audio was coming through, did you try to observe the behavior
        7    of the people you were watching?
        8    A.  Occasionally we would look up to see what was going on.
        9    Q.  Now, did you become aware on the February 20th meeting that
       10    it was supposed to start at 8:30 but didn't start until 10?
       11             MR. MORVILLO:  Objection.  I believe that is the wrong
       12    date.
       13             THE COURT:  I am sorry, I can't hear you.
       14             MR. MORVILLO:  I believe that is the wrong date, your
       15    Honor.
       16             THE COURT:  February 19 I think is the date.
       17             MR. TIGAR:  Oh, okay.  He is right, your Honor.
       18             I withdraw the question.
       19    Q.  Did you cover a meeting that took place on the 20th of
       20    February?
       21    A.  No, sir.
       22    Q.  Was anybody from your office involved in covering a meeting
       23    on the 20th of February?
       24    A.  No, sir.
       25             MR. TIGAR:  May I approach, your Honor?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3913
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - cross
        1             THE COURT::  Yes.
        2    Q.  I am going to show you what has been marked as 3555C, and
        3    this is not in evidence but I would like to ask you do you see
        4    that date there?
        5    A.  It's a typo.
        6    Q.  Okay.  Thank you.
        7             You did make a report of this activity but as a typo,
        8    it should be the 19th instead of the 20th?
        9    A.  Yes, sir.
       10    Q.  Now, based on that meeting on the 19th, did you become
       11    aware that the meeting was supposed to start at 8:30 but didn't
       12    start until 10?
       13    A.  Yes.
       14    Q.  Now, that is not information that you got from your
       15    recording, is it?
       16    A.  No.  We learned that from the prison officials because they
       17    had to -- they had Sheikh Abdel Rahman ready to come down to
       18    the meeting and because the two parties were running late, they
       19    did not bring him down.
       20    Q.  So that is where you got that information, correct?
       21    A.  Yes.
       22    Q.  Now, in addition to that, you observed what Mr. Yousry was
       23    doing during the morning hours, correct?
       24    A.  Yes.
       25    Q.  And you saw that he was reading to the client, to Sheikh
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3914
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - cross
        1    Abdel Rahman, from Arab newspapers, correct?
        2    A.  That is what it appeared to be, yes, sir.
        3    Q.  And you made a note of that fact, correct?
        4    A.  Yes.
        5    Q.  And during how much of the time that the reading was going
        6    on were you listening to it to be able to form that conclusion?
        7    A.  We weren't listening to it, sir.  We were watching it on
        8    the monitor.
        9    Q.  Well, if you are watching it on the monitor what led you to
       10    the conclusion they were Arab newspapers?
       11    A.  Because we could see the print.
       12    Q.  And it didn't look like English letters, right?
       13    A.  Right.
       14    Q.  You don't speak Arabic, do you?
       15    A.  No, sir.
       16    Q.  And in the afternoon, you said that there was a discussion
       17    in which Mr. Yousry asked Mr. Jabara to do something.  I don't
       18    want to get into what it is, but there was that discussion,
       19    right?
       20             Was that discussion that was captured on the tape or
       21    was that outside the taping time?
       22    A.  I believe that was during the taping time.
       23    Q.  And was there a discussion of dropping something off?
       24    A.  Yes, there was.
       25    Q.  Was that during the taping time or after?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3915
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - cross
        1    A.  I can't remember that, when that occurred to tell you the
        2    truth, sir.  I can't remember if it was before or after.
        3    Q.  Was it a part of your job there to listen to what was going
        4    on and make observations in addition to doing the taping?
        5    A.  We felt that the New York office needed to know what was
        6    going on; that newspapers were being read in violation of the
        7    special agreement or rules.  That is why we put those
        8    observations down.
        9    Q.  Your conclusion was there was a violation of the rules,
       10    right?
       11    A.  The rules said you cannot read a newspaper.
       12    Q.  Excuse me, Agent, your interpretation of the rules --
       13             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, can the witness please
       14    finish her answer?
       15             THE COURT:  Yes, the witness can finish.
       16             MR. TIGAR:  But --
       17             THE COURT:  Hold on.  The witness can finish.
       18             I think the answer was finished, and next question.
       19    Q.  Had you finished?
       20    A.  Yes, sir.
       21    Q.  The New York office had given you their interpretation of
       22    events, correct?
       23    A.  We were told what was allowed.
       24    Q.  Did you ask Mr. Jabara what he thought was allowed?
       25    A.  No, sir, I did not speak to him.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3916
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - cross
        1    Q.  And in your experience as an FBI agent you understand
        2    sometimes people on different sides of the question can
        3    disagree about what is allowed and what is not?
        4             MR. MORVILLO:  Objection.
        5             THE COURT:  Overruled.
        6    A.  Yes.
        7    Q.  Now, coming back, ma'am, to what you were doing, can you
        8    remember whether or not you heard Mr. Jabara and Mr. Yousry
        9    talking during a time when the talking wasn't being recorded?
       10    A.  I can't recall, sir.
       11    Q.  In addition to the ET or the memorandum 3555C, did you make
       12    any FBI-302 or other memorandum of your investigative activity
       13    on that day?
       14    A.  No, sir, I did not.
       15    Q.  Now let's go to the 19th of May.  Did you see Ms. Stewart
       16    on that day?
       17    A.  Yes, I did.
       18    Q.  And do you recognize her in court?
       19    A.  Yes, I do.
       20    Q.  And you see the lady here in the green dress?
       21    A.  Yes.
       22    Q.  And she was there that day with Mr. Yousry and meeting with
       23    her client, correct?
       24    A.  That is correct.
       25    Q.  Now, those tapes you sent to both the New York field office
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3917
             47JSSAT5                 McGrath - cross
        1    and the FBI headquarters, correct?
        2    A.  Correct.
        3    Q.  The first set of tapes you sent only to the FBI field
        4    office, right?
        5    A.  That is correct.
        6    Q.  And that was pursuant to instructions that you had?
        7    A.  Yes.
        8             MR. TIGAR:  Thank you very much.
        9             No further questions, your Honor.
       10             THE COURT:  All right.
       11             MR. MORVILLO:  Nothing further, your Honor.
       12             THE COURT:  All right.  The witness is excused.  You
       13    may step down.
       14             (Witness excused)
       15             THE COURT:  All right.  It's about 3:25, so we will
       16    take our mid-afternoon break for ten minutes.
       17             Ladies and gentlemen, please follow my continuing
       18    instructions not to talk about the case.  Keep an open mind.
       19             All rise please.
       20             Follow Mr. Fletcher to the jury room.
       21             (Jury left the courtroom)
       22             THE COURT:  All right, we will take ten minutes.
       23             (Recess)
       24             (In open court; jury not present)
       25             THE COURT:  All right, please be seated all.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3918
             47JSSAT5
        1             THE COURT:  I just wanted to check with the parties
        2    that it was the parties' desire that I take up any issues that
        3    I reserved on at the end of the day; that there is no reason to
        4    do it now at the break as we are going through these witnesses.
        5             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, there is no reason to do it
        6    now.  I would like Agent McGrath not to leave the city until
        7    after we have made some applications to your Honor today.
        8    There was some material in the Jencks related to this FISA and
        9    without having more information I didn't want to be tramping
       10    all over her.
       11             THE COURT:  Okay.
       12             MR. TIGAR:  But if they would just hold her just in
       13    case, we would appreciate it.
       14             MR. MORVILLO:  My understanding is that Agent McGrath
       15    is not intending to leave until Wednesday, your Honor.
       16             THE COURT:  All right.
       17             Let's bring the jury back.
       18             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, a matter while we are waiting
       19    for the jury.
       20             I redacted Government Exhibit 508.  I showed it to the
       21    defense and they approved of the redactions and these are
       22    copies of the redacted transcripts, if I can hand that up to
       23    your Honor.  I provided that to the defense as well.
       24             THE COURT:  All right.
       25             Some of the jurors were complaining that the glare
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3919
             47JSSAT5
        1    from the ELMO shines in their faces.  Maybe you could just
        2    slightly pull it back a bit.
        3             Okay.  Thank you.
        4             (In open court; jury present)
        5             THE COURT:  Please be seated all.
        6             The government should call its next witness.
        7             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, the government calls
        8    Richard Ostrom.  (richard L Ostrom (O -S it are O am)
        9             THE COURT:  All right, Mr. Morvillo, you may examine.
       10    Direct.
       11     RICHARD L. OSTROM,
       12         called as a witness by the Government,
       13         having been duly sworn, testified as follows:
       14    DIRECT EXAMINATION
       14    47JSSAT5                 Ostrom - direct
       15    BY MR. MORVILLO:
       16    Q.  Mr. Ostrom, good afternoon.
       17    A.  Good afternoon.
       18    Q.  How are you employed?
       19    A.  I am employed as a supervisory special agent with the
       20    Federal Bureau of Investigation.
       21    Q.  And how long have you been with the Federal Bureau of
       22    Investigation?
       23    A.  Since June of 1978.
       24    Q.  And where are you currently assigned?
       25    A.  Minneapolis Division in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3920
             47JSSAT5
        1    Q.  And how long have you been assigned to the Minneapolis,
        2    Minnesota division?
        3    A.  Since 1991, April '91.
        4    Q.  And you testified that you are a supervisory special agent?
        5    A.  Yes.
        6    Q.  What does that mean?
        7    A.  I supervise a squad of agents.  Currently I supervise a
        8    white collar crime squad and a small office called a resident
        9    agency in Mankato, Minnesota.  It's two agents that are
       10    assigned in physically Mankato, Minnesota.
       11    Q.  Is a resident agency sometimes referred to as an RA?
       12    A.  Yes.
       13    Q.  How long have you been a supervisory special agent?
       14    A.  Since July 1996.
       15    Q.  And you have been with the FBI since June of '78?
       16    A.  Yes.
       17    Q.  What other offices have you been assigned to?
       18    A.  I have assigned to previously Chicago, New York and
       19    Springfield, Illinois before Minneapolis.
       20    Q.  Directing your attention to May 20, 2000, what was your
       21    assignment at that time?  Withdrawn.
       22             Directing your attention to May 20, 2000, were you a
       23    supervisory special agent at that time?
       24    A.  Yes.
       25    Q.  Were you also in charge of the Mankato office at that time?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3921
             47JSSAT5
        1    A.  I was in charge of the Rochester office, RA at that time
        2    also and not Mankato.  We had made a switch here later.
        3    Q.  What does it mean to be in charge of a resident agency?
        4    A.  I handle the administrative matters for those particular
        5    agents in that small satellite office, the small RA, and
        6    monitor their workload.
        7    Q.  And at the time in May 2000, do you recall who was assigned
        8    to the Rochester RA?
        9    A.  It was Special Agent Dave Price and Special Agent Brian
       10    Bartholmey.
       11    Q.  David Price as in P-R-I-C-E?
       12    A.  Correct.
       13    Q.  Directing your attention specifically to May 20, 2000, what
       14    was your assignment that day?
       15    A.  I was assigned along with Special Agent Bartholmey to
       16    travel to the Federal Medical Center in Rochester, Minnesota.
       17    Q.  What was the purpose of your travel to FMC Rochester?
       18    A.  A court order had been obtained to record a --
       19             MR. TIGAR:  Objection, your Honor.
       20             THE COURT:  Sustained.
       21    Q.  Why did you go to FMC Rochester that day?
       22    A.  Myself and Special Agent Bartholmey were going to record a
       23    visit that was occurring at the Federal Medical Center in
       24    Rochester.
       25    Q.  And was that visit authorized?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3922
             47JSSAT5
        1    A.  Yes, it was.
        2    Q.  Withdrawn.
        3             Was that recording authorized?
        4    A.  Yes, it was.  It was authorized.
        5             MR. TIGAR:  Objection, and move to strike.
        6             THE COURT:  Sustained, strike it.
        7    Q.  What did you do on that day when you got to FMC Rochester?
        8    A.  Myself and Agent Bartholmey signed in at the front
        9    entrance.  We were escorted to a room inside the facility, I
       10    think either the legal or the SIU room, and that is the room
       11    where we were to record the conversation that was occurring in
       12    a room across the hallway, a conference room across the
       13    hallway.
       14    Q.  When you arrived at FMC Rochester, did you sign in?
       15    A.  Yes, I did.
       16             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
       17             THE COURT:  Yes.
       18    Q.  Agent Ostrom, I have just handed you what is marked as
       19    Government Exhibit 1760D.  It's in evidence.
       20             Do you recognize that document?
       21    A.  Yes.
       22    Q.  What is it?
       23    A.  This is a color photograph of the official visitors' log
       24    that I signed on May 20 upon entering the facility.
       25    Q.  Do you see your signature on that page?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3923
             47JSSAT5
        1    A.  Yes, I do.
        2    Q.  What time did you sign in?
        3    A.  I signed in at 7:43 a.m.
        4    Q.  And what time did you sign out on that day?
        5    A.  3:30 p.m.
        6    Q.  And between 7:43 a.m. and 3:30 p.m., did you actually
        7    record a meeting?
        8    A.  Yes, between those hours a recording was made at the
        9    prison, yes.
       10    Q.  You testified that after you signed in you went down to
       11    another building and went to another division?
       12    A.  It was I think a legal office or SIS office within the
       13    Federal Medical Center.
       14    Q.  And do you know whose office you went to?
       15    A.  I don't, no.  No.
       16    Q.  When you went to that office, did you see the conference
       17    room that was going to be the location for the meeting?
       18    A.  Yes, there was a conference room that was across the hall
       19    and slightly down from the room that we were taping from.
       20    Q.  And when you went into this office, was there any recording
       21    equipment set up in there?
       22    A.  Yes, the recording equipment had been set up previously.
       23    Q.  And what was in there?
       24    A.  There was two cassette type recorders side by side, I
       25    believe, with a TV monitor set up.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3924
             47JSSAT5
        1    Q.  Did you bring tape cassettes with you that day?
        2    A.  Yes, they were high 8 or super 8 tapes were brought in with
        3    us.
        4    Q.  Had you used a high 8 recorder before?
        5    A.  I don't know the answer to that.  I have used many
        6    recorders, many types.  I suspect, yes, is the answer.
        7    Q.  Did there come a time when the meeting that you were there
        8    to record began?
        9    A.  Yes.
       10    Q.  Were you alone in the room?
       11    A.  No, I was present with Special Agent Bartholmey.
       12    Q.  And what happened when the meeting began?
       13    A.  Once the meeting began Special Agent Bartholmey started the
       14    tape machines.  There were two machines separate.  He started
       15    the first one and then started the second machine recording.
       16    Q.  How did you know when to begin recording?
       17    A.  I believe the SIS officer had escorted everybody in there
       18    and we knew that once the individuals were present we were
       19    going to start the recording.  We started the recording.
       20    Q.  Do you know if the equipment was working?
       21    A.  I assume it was working.  The little dials, the voice
       22    levels were going back and forth, and the tape was running.
       23    Q.  Did you monitor the meeting while it was occurring?
       24    A.  No.
       25    Q.  Do you know whether Agent Bartholmey monitored the meeting
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3925
             47JSSAT5
        1    while it was occurring?
        2    A.  I do not believe he did at all either.  No.  I can say no.
        3    Q.  Were you present in that office during the entirety of the
        4    meeting?
        5    A.  Yes.
        6    Q.  Did there come a time during the meeting when you needed to
        7    switch the tapes?
        8    A.  Yes, the cassette tapes were running near the end so the
        9    tapes were switched out first in the first recorder and then
       10    once the first recorder was running again with the replacement
       11    tape, the tape was switched out of the second recorder.
       12    Q.  Do you know what kind of recording was being done?
       13    A.  Audio and video?
       14    Q.  Yes.
       15    A.  Yes, it was my understanding audio and video was being
       16    done.
       17             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
       18             THE COURT:  Yes.
       19    Q.  Agent Ostrom, I have just placed before you what has been
       20    marked as Government Exhibit 1710, 1711, 1712, 1713, 1714, and
       21    1715.
       22             Do you recognize those materials?
       23    A.  Yes, I do.
       24    Q.  What are they?
       25    A.  These are the tapes that we used to record the meeting at
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3926
             47JSSAT5
        1    the FMC on May 20.
        2    Q.  How do you recognize them?
        3    A.  On the tapes are the initials that I placed on there, my
        4    own initials, and as well as I recognize Brian Bartholmey's
        5    initials also.
        6    Q.  Incidentally, is there information on there that was not on
        7    there at the time the recordings were made?
        8    A.  Yes.
        9    Q.  Do you know how that got there?
       10    A.  There is a Q number.  No.
       11    Q.  How many total cassette tapes did you make that day?
       12    A.  Six total.
       13    Q.  And does that mean there were 6 segments of the meeting or
       14    how come there are 6 tapes?
       15    A.  Here is tape number one.  When it neared the end of
       16    completion we swapped it out for tape number 2.  When that tape
       17    was nearing the end we swapped it out for tape number 3.  The
       18    second recorder likewise occurred, when that was nearing the
       19    end and the first tape had been switched out, we switched out
       20    number 1, number 2, and the final tape was number 3.
       21    Q.  So --
       22    A.  So this is the entire meeting that occurred on these 6
       23    tapes.
       24    Q.  So is it fair so say that the three segments substantially
       25    overlap with one another, the 6 tapes, tapes 1, 2 and 3 would
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3927
             47JSSAT5
        1    overlap with tapes 4, 5 and 6?
        2    A.  Yes.  In essence is the entire meeting recorded on these 6
        3    tapes?
        4    Q.  Yes.
        5    A.  Yes, that is correct.
        6             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, at this time the government
        7    would offer Government Exhibit 1710, 1711, 1712, 1713, 1714 and
        8    1715.
        9             MR. TIGAR:  We respectfully request that the court
       10    reserve.
       11             THE COURT:  All right, I will reserve.
       12             I will reserve on Government Exhibits 1710 through
       13    1715.
       14    Q.  Incidentally, Agent Ostrom, do all those recordings have
       15    your initials on them?
       16    A.  Yes, they do.
       17    Q.  While the recording was going on, did you ever leave that
       18    room?
       19    A.  No, I did not.
       20    Q.  Did you ever do anything other than when changing the tapes
       21    to stop the recorder?
       22    A.  No.
       23    Q.  What did you do with these tapes when the meeting was over?
       24    A.  I took those back to Minneapolis with me and turned them
       25    over to Agent McGrath.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3928
             47JSSAT5
        1    Q.  Is that Special Agent Cynthia McGrath?
        2    A.  Yes.
        3             MR. MORVILLO:  May I have a moment, your Honor?
        4             THE COURT:  Yes.
        5             MR. MORVILLO:  No further questions questions, your
        6    Honor.
        7             THE COURT:  All right.
        8             Mr. Tigar, you may examine.
        9             MR. TIGAR:  Thank you, your Honor.
       10    CROSS EXAMINATION
       11    BY MR. TIGAR:
       12    Q.  Agent Ostrom, the Agent McGrath that you gave the tapes to,
       13    her name was Whiteside at that time?
       14    A.  Cindy Whiteside.  That was her maiden name.
       15    Q.  She has been here.  Thank you.
       16             This room that you were in, it had a glass window that
       17    gave out onto the hallway, is that correct?
       18    A.  Yes.
       19    Q.  Did you have the blinds pulled?
       20    A.  Yes, the blinds were pulled.
       21    Q.  Why?
       22    A.  I don't know.  They were there when I came in.  I suspect
       23    so they didn't see us in the next room making a recording.
       24    Q.  Right.  You didn't want them to see you doing your
       25    business, right?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3929
             47JSSAT5                 Ostrom - cross
        1    A.  That would be correct I would believe.
        2    Q.  Right.  And that is because that was your business, not
        3    theirs, right, as far as you were concerned?  You had the right
        4    to have the blinds closed, right?
        5    A.  I have the right ---
        6    Q.  There was nothing wrong with having the blinds closed?
        7    A.  No, it was a necessity as far as I was concerned.
        8    Q.  Because when private things are happening it's all right
        9    for people to take steps to preserve their privacy, correct?
       10             MR. MORVILLO:  Objection.
       11             THE COURT:  Overruled.
       12    A.  When private things are occurring?  This was not a private
       13    thing.  This was a court-authorized recording.
       14    Q.  As far as you were concerned --
       15             MR. MORVILLO:  Objection.
       16    Q.  I am sorry, I interrupted you.  I move to strike the answer
       17    an as not responsive, your Honor.
       18             THE COURT:  Oh, no, it was answered.  Go ahead.
       19    Q.  Go ahead.
       20             THE COURT:  Go ahead.  The answer was completed.
       21    Q.  The answer stands, thank you.
       22             You didn't want people to see what you were doing,
       23    right?
       24    A.  Correct.
       25    Q.  Now, were you watching on that TV monitor to see what
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3930
             47JSSAT5                 Ostrom - cross
        1    people were doing in there?
        2    A.  The TV monitor was there.  We noted that there was
        3    movement.  Did I pay attention, no.  In detail, absolutely not.
        4    Q.  Were you aware that Sheikh Abdel Rahman was blind?
        5    A.  Yes.  Totally blind, I don't know.  But there is claims of
        6    him being blind, yes.
        7    Q.  But you don't know that to your personal knowledge.  It's
        8    just information you picked up in your investigation?
        9    A.  Right.  I have never met him so I don't know personally.
       10    Q.  And on that tape you saw Mr. Yousry and Ms. Stewart and
       11    Sheikh Abdel Rahman, correct?
       12    A.  There was an attorney, a translator, and the sheikh was on
       13    there.
       14    Q.  Well, would you look around to see if you recognize anybody
       15    in the courtroom today?
       16             Do you?
       17    A.  As far as who was on that tape?
       18    Q.  Yes.
       19    A.  No, no, sir.
       20             MR. TIGAR:  No further questions.
       21             THE COURT:  All right.
       22             MR. MORVILLO:  Nothing further, your Honor.
       23             THE COURT:  All right.
       24             The witness is excused.
       25             You may step down.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3931
             47JSSAT5                 Ostrom - cross
        1             (Witness excused)
        2             THE COURT:  The government can call its next witness.
        3             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, the government calls David
        4    Price.
        5             THE COURT:  All right.  Mr. Morvillo, you may examine.
        6             MR. MORVILLO:  Thank you, your Honor.
        7     DAVID PRICE,
        8         called as a witness by the Government,
        9         having been duly sworn, testified as follows:
       10    DIRECT EXAMINATION
       10    47JSSAT5                 Price - direct
       11    BY MR. MORVILLO:
       12    Q.  Mr. Price, good afternoon.
       13    A.  Good afternoon, sir.
       14    Q.  How are you employed, sir?
       15    A.  I am a special agent with the Federal Bureau of
       16    Investigation.
       17    Q.  And how long have you been employed by the FBI?
       18    A.  About 33 years.
       19    Q.  Where are you currently assigned?
       20    A.  I don't hear well.
       21    Q.  Where are you currently assigned?
       22    A.  I am assigned in Rochester, Minnesota.
       23    Q.  Are you assigned to a particular unit or division?
       24    A.  There is a two-man office in Rochester called a resident
       25    agency out of the Minneapolis Division of the FBI.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3932
             47JSSAT5                 Price - direct
        1             THE COURT:  Agent Price, please keep your voice up.
        2    Talk into the microphone.  The acoustics in the courtroom are
        3    not good.
        4             THE WITNESS:  Yes, sir, thank you.
        5    Q.  How long have you been assigned to the Rochester RA?
        6    A.  Since about 1977.
        7    Q.  And where else have you been assigned in the FBI?
        8    A.  I have been assigned to Indianapolis, Indiana, Chicago,
        9    Illinois and Rapid City, South Dakota.
       10    Q.  Directing your attention to July 14, 2001, were you working
       11    that day?
       12    A.  I was.
       13    Q.  And what was your assignment that day?
       14    A.  My assignment was to go to the Federal Medical Center,
       15    which is Bureau of Prisons property in Rochester, Minnesota,
       16    and record a meeting.
       17    Q.  Was it your understanding that that recording was
       18    authorized?
       19    A.  It was court ordered authorized, to my understanding, sir.
       20             MR. TIGAR:  Objection, your Honor.
       21             THE COURT:  All right.  I will sustain it.
       22    Q.  What did you do when you got to FMC Rochester that day,
       23    July 14, 2001?
       24    A.  I signed in on the official visitors' log and then would
       25    have gone down to the special investigative services area where
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47JSSAT5                 Price - direct
        1    I would have met officers from the prison.
        2             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
        3             THE COURT:  Yes.
        4    Q.  Agent Price, I have just handed you what has been marked
        5    for identification as Government Exhibit 1760, what is in
        6    evidence as Government Exhibit -- withdrawn, Government Exhibit
        7    1760, Government Exhibit 1761 and Government Exhibit 1761C, all
        8    for identification.
        9             Can you take a look at those and let me know whether
       10    you recognize them?
       11    A.  Yes, sir, I do recognize each of these.
       12    Q.  With respect to Government Exhibits 1760 and 61, what are
       13    those?
       14    A.  These are the official logs that an official visitor has to
       15    sign in when you go to the prison.  Immigration,
       16    Naturalization, Customs, Marshals Service, coroner, FBI agents,
       17    if you are not a visitor to one of the inmates or you are not a
       18    worker there, you have to sign in on these.
       19             (Continued on next page)
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3934
             47JLSAT6                 Price - direct
        1    BY MR. MORVILLO:
        2    Q.  Have you seen those logs before?
        3    A.  Yes, I've signed these -- I've signed in many times at the
        4    prison in Rochester, so I've signed in on these two logs.  And
        5    they were given to me last Friday to bring here by the staff at
        6    the federal medical center.
        7    Q.  And with respect to Government Exhibit 1761C, do you
        8    recognize that?
        9    A.  That is a copy of the sign-in sheets for July 2nd of 2001
       10    through July 16th of 2001.
       11    Q.  If you would look at Government Exhibit 1761, the actual
       12    book, and turn to the tabbed page.
       13    A.  (The witness complies)
       14    Q.  Can you compare the 1761C to that page?
       15    A.  Yes, Sir.  It's the same.
       16    Q.  It's a true and accurate copy?
       17    A.  It is.
       18             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, the government offers 1761C
       19    into evidence.
       20             THE COURT:  All right.  No objection.  Government
       21    Exhibit 1761C received in evidence.
       22             (Government's Exhibit 1761C received in evidence)
       23             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, may I publish it to the
       24    jury?
       25             THE COURT:  Yes.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3935
             47JLSAT6                 Price - direct
        1    BY MR. MORVILLO:
        2    Q.  Directing your attention to the screen in front of you,
        3    1761C, do you see your signature there?
        4    A.  Yes.  I would be about the --
        5    Q.  If you actually touch the screen, it should indicate --
        6    A.  Here, here.  Twice I see my signature on that.
        7    Q.  And on what dates do your signatures appear?
        8    A.  I have my signature on the 13th and the 14th of July.
        9    Q.  And what time did you enter on the 14th?
       10    A.  On the 14th I would have come in at 8:26 in the morning.
       11    Q.  And what time did you sign out on that day?
       12    A.  It would be 14 -- I can't read it right now.
       13             2:19 p.m.
       14    Q.  That's indicated as 1419 on the --
       15    A.  Right.
       16    Q.  After you signed in that day, Agent Price, where did you
       17    go?
       18    A.  I would go down to the office area that holds the warden's
       19    office, and underneath that to an area near the conference room
       20    or the training room of the prison, and I went down to the
       21    legal office of the prison.
       22    Q.  Did you go into an office down there?
       23    A.  I did.
       24    Q.  Do you know whose office that was?
       25    A.  Kara Christenson.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3936
             47JLSAT6                 Price - direct
        1    Q.  And in relation to the conference room, where was that
        2    office located?
        3    A.  It would have been directly across the hall from the
        4    conference room.
        5    Q.  Incidentally, Agent Price, have you been to Rochester on
        6    prior occasions to the FMC at Rochester?
        7    A.  Yes, Sir.
        8    Q.  How often?
        9    A.  It varies.  I might be out once a month, and then again I
       10    might be out several times in two days.
       11    Q.  And when you went into Miss Christenson's office, was there
       12    any recording equipment set up?
       13    A.  There was.
       14    Q.  What was there?
       15    A.  Along the wall next to the corridor were a setup so you
       16    could put cassettes in and record audio and visual from across
       17    the hall in the conference room.  Number 2 set up.
       18    Q.  Did you set up those recorders?
       19    A.  No, I did not.
       20    Q.  Did you bring tapes with you that day?
       21    A.  I think they already had them there.  I don't believe I
       22    brought them in.
       23    Q.  What were you going to record?
       24    A.  I was going to record the conversations between Sheikh Omar
       25    Rahman and his attorney and interpreter that day.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3937
             47JLSAT6                 Price - direct
        1    Q.  Did there come a time on July 14th, 2001, when that meeting
        2    began?
        3    A.  Yes, Sir, there did.
        4    Q.  What did you do on that day at that time?
        5    A.  I placed the "record" button on both tapes.  I had two tape
        6    recordings recording, so I had two to start.  And I would have
        7    checked to see that the sound worked, and then I turned the
        8    sound off.
        9    Q.  How did you check to see if the sound worked?
       10    A.  Well, the needles -- as I recall, fluctuated, but just for
       11    a second I just turned the volume up.  I may have even turned
       12    it on as they walked into the room with the guard.  I don't
       13    recall right now.
       14    Q.  Do you know whether the recording equipment was operating
       15    properly?
       16    A.  I believe it was.
       17    Q.  What is that belief based on?
       18    A.  Well, the needles show that it was.  It was moving.  And --
       19    but I never actually rewound it and reviewed it, no.
       20    Q.  Did there come a time when you had to switch the tapes?
       21    A.  Yes, Sir.
       22    Q.  And can you describe to the jury the process you used to
       23    switch the tapes?
       24    A.  When you're coming to the end of a tape or there's a gap in
       25    whatever's happening, you want to change the tapes before it
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3938
             47JLSAT6                 Price - direct
        1    runs out, so you just prepare your next tape, and you're about
        2    ready with your times and you get them set side by side and you
        3    push one button and that ejects the tape, and you put that one
        4    in; and you eject the next one and put the other one in.  So
        5    you're talking a matter of 10, 30 seconds, something like that,
        6    between the final exchange.  It might be a little longer, but
        7    that's about it.
        8    Q.  So Tape A and Tape B are substantially similar?
        9    A.  Yes.  In fact, they're nearly duplicates or are duplicates.
       10             MR. MORVILLO:  May I approach, your Honor?
       11             THE COURT:  Yes.
       12    Q.  Agent Price, I've just placed before you what's been marked
       13    for identification as government Exhibits 1720, 1721, 1722,
       14    1723, 1724, and 1725.  I'd ask you to take a look at those and
       15    tell me whether you recognize them.
       16    A.  These are the recordings I made on July 14th, 2001.
       17    Q.  And how do you know that?
       18    A.  Because I initialed them and dated them and marked them in
       19    various ways as I did them.
       20    Q.  And how many cassettes are there?
       21    A.  There's a total of six.
       22    Q.  And do those reflect tape Deck A and tape Deck B?
       23    A.  Yes, one from each.
       24    Q.  For a total of?
       25    A.  Three from each, yes.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3939
             47JLSAT6                 Price - direct
        1             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, at this time the government
        2    would offer Government Exhibits 1720 through 1725 into
        3    evidence.
        4             MR. TIGAR:  Respectfully request the Court reserve.
        5             THE COURT:  All right.  I'll reserve ruling.
        6    BY MR. MORVILLO:
        7    Q.  Agent Price, while you were recording, did you ever leave
        8    the room?
        9    A.  I did not.
       10    Q.  Did you ever do anything to stop the tape during its
       11    recording other than when you were changing the tapes?
       12    A.  No, Sir, I did not.
       13    Q.  What did you do with the tapes after the meeting ended?
       14    A.  I took them back to the Rochester FBI office, and then I
       15    would have transmitted them up to our electronic surveillance
       16    technician, the person responsible for such tapes in the Twin
       17    Cities.
       18    Q.  The Twin Cities being Minneapolis?
       19    A.  Minneapolis.
       20    Q.  Have you seen these tapes since the time you transmitted
       21    them?
       22    A.  Today, Sir, when you gave them to me.
       23             MR. MORVILLO:  May I have a moment, your Honor?
       24             THE COURT:  Yes.
       25               (Off the record)
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3940
             47JLSAT6                 Price - direct
        1             MR. MORVILLO:  I have no further questions, your
        2    Honor.
        3             THE COURT:  All right.
        4    BY MR. TIGAR:
        5    Q.  Agent Price --
        6             THE COURT:  Just a moment.
        7             MR. TIGAR:  Excuse me, your Honor.
        8             THE COURT:  Go ahead.
        9    CROSS EXAMINATION
       10    BY MR. TIGAR:
       11    Q.  Agent Price, on direct examination, you told us about a
       12    visit to the prison on the 13th of July.  Did that have
       13    anything to do with this case?  That's on 1761C, Sir.
       14    A.  It probably did, in that I probably learned how to use the
       15    tape recorder, but I don't have a memory of it.  I learned
       16    sometime how to use the tape recorder -- or, the recorder.
       17    Q.  And your instructions that day were to record this meeting,
       18    correct?
       19    A.  That's correct.
       20             THE COURT:  I'm sorry, I think you want to place that
       21    in time.
       22    Q.  Did I get the wrong date?  Your instructions on July 14th
       23    were to record the meeting, weren't they, Sir?
       24    A.  Yes, sir.
       25    Q.  And you were not instructed by anyone to listen to the
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3941
             47JLSAT6                 Price - cross
        1    meeting all the way through, were you?
        2    A.  No, I was not instructed to listen.
        3    Q.  And you were not instructed to perform any investigation
        4    such as looking at people or interviewing people, correct?
        5    A.  I don't recall any such instructions.
        6    Q.  You did not make an FBI 302, did you, Sir?
        7    A.  No, Sir.
        8    Q.  And an FBI 302 would be something you would make if you
        9    actually interviewed someone on a case, correct?
       10    A.  Usually.
       11    Q.  Or you might make a 302 if you conducted a visual
       12    surveillance of someone you wanted to report, correct?
       13    A.  There are surveillance logs and there are 302s.  So --
       14    possibly, but not always.
       15    Q.  But for this activity, you were not instructed to make
       16    either a surveillance log or a 302, correct?
       17    A.  I was not asked to do a 302.  I'm not sure I didn't make a
       18    handwritten log that went with this, but I can't remember
       19    anymore.
       20    Q.  If you did make such a handwritten log, where is it?
       21    A.  I don't know.
       22    Q.  It wouldn't tell us anything other than that you sat in a
       23    room and punched a button, right?
       24    A.  Right.
       25    Q.  And after you got these tape recordings, you didn't watch
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3942
             47JLSAT6                 Price - cross
        1    them or listen to them, did you?
        2    A.  I did not.
        3    Q.  Your instructions were to get them to the Twin Cities, and
        4    from there, they would go to wherever they're supposed to go,
        5    correct?
        6    A.  Yes, Sir.
        7    Q.  That was all you were -- and that was the sum total of your
        8    involvement, right?
        9    A.  That's correct.
       10             MR. TIGAR:  No further questions.
       11             MR. MORVILLO:  Nothing further, your Honor.
       12             THE COURT:  All right.  The witness is excused.  You
       13    may step down.
       14               (The witness leaves the witness box)
       15             THE COURT:  All right.  Government?
       16             MR. BARKOW:  May we have just a second, your Honor?
       17             THE COURT:  It's about 10 minutes before we break.
       18             MR. MORVILLO:  We have no further witnesses today.
       19             THE COURT:  All right.  And if there is nothing
       20    convenient for 10 minutes, I'll just let the jury go at this
       21    point.
       22             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, I think that it might be
       23    necessary to break.
       24             THE COURT:  Fine.
       25             Ladies and gentlemen, it's 4:21, so we'll break today.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3943
             47JLSAT6
        1    And we'll resume at 9:30 tomorrow.
        2             In terms of our schedule this week, we will break
        3    again on Thursday at 12:15.  So I just wanted to let you know
        4    that so if you wanted to make any plans for Thursday afternoon,
        5    you could.
        6             Please remember my continuing instructions:  Don't
        7    want look at or listen to anything to do with the case.  If you
        8    should see or hear something, just turn away.  Please don't
        9    talk about the case or anything to do with it.  Please always
       10    remember to keep an open mind until you've heard all of the
       11    evidence, I've instructed you on the law, and you've gone to
       12    the jury room to begin your deliberations.
       13             Have a good evening.  I look forward to seeing you
       14    tomorrow.
       15             All rise, please.  Follow Mr. Fletcher to the jury
       16    room.
       17               (Continued on next page)
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3944
             47JLSAT6
        1               (In open court; jury not present)
        2             THE COURT:  All right.  Please be seated all.
        3             All right.  Now, there are some issues that the
        4    parties wanted to take up with respect to government
        5    Exhibit 1700 through 1715 and 1720 through 1725.
        6             MR. TIGAR:  Yes, your Honor.  This is a part of this
        7    prison surveillance issue, and the reason that I asked your
        8    Honor to reserve -- there were many reasons, but among them was
        9    that its government has in store for us the witness who
       10    actually set the machinery up, or at least they've got somebody
       11    that has a sketch of the machines as actually set up, as I
       12    understand it.  They don't?
       13             MR. MORVILLO:  No, your Honor.
       14             MR. TIGAR:  Oh.  Well, if that's it, your Honor, then
       15    all we know is that three people pushed a button and made sure
       16    that a needle was working for a part of the time.  We don't
       17    know where the microphones were, whether they were capable of
       18    receiving the information.  We don't know the fidelity of the
       19    equipment.  We don't know any of the basic information about
       20    how this was setup, and the agents disclaimed any knowledge of
       21    how it works.  So that's -- that would be the first issue that
       22    we would want to explore.
       23             Second, your Honor, the 3500 material, Agent Whiteside
       24    McGrath indicates that in February of 2000, there were a
       25    surveillance at a different location than the FMC.  And it is
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3945
             47JLSAT6
        1    our understanding, which may be wrong, that that surveillance
        2    occurred that was not authorized by the FISA court.  The
        3    reference to it would be in 3555C, as in Charlie.  I have a
        4    copy of it here I could hand up to the Court, or perhaps the
        5    government has an extra copy.
        6             MR. MORVILLO:  I don't have an extra copy, Mr. Tigar.
        7             MR. TIGAR:  All right.
        8             THE COURT:  Has the government provided 3500 material
        9    or not?
       10             MR. MORVILLO:  I believe we are, your Honor.
       11             MR. BARKOW:  Our understanding is your Honor's binders
       12    were updated this morning to include this 3500 material.
       13             THE COURT:  Okay.  Thank you.
       14             MR. TIGAR:  Shall I hand it up, your Honor?
       15             THE COURT:  All right.
       16             MR. TIGAR:  I'm handing the document to Mr. Fletcher.
       17             There's a reference there to a surveillance that's
       18    established, your Honor.  That's in the synopsis portion.  In
       19    this setting, I don't want to go further than I'm supposed to,
       20    but that states my understanding.
       21             And in our letter of this morning, we stated our
       22    belief that the agents had, and made an argument concerning
       23    relevance as to today.
       24             In addition, your Honor, in my conversation with
       25    Mr. Dember, he related to me the difficulty that the government
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3946
             47JLSAT6
        1    has here because some material that was obtained in this
        2    surveillance was minimized out.  Some was given to a wall team
        3    or privilege team.  Some was subject to privilege litigation,
        4    that your Honor ruled on.  And as to all of that, Ms. Baker's
        5    statements to your Honor this morning are, so far as I know,
        6    correct.  We have that.  We don't have anything that was done
        7    that exceeded the FISA one.  And we've asked for that.  But
        8    regardless of that issue, there's this question of what now
        9    comes in?  I didn't understand what the government was
       10    offering.  Are they offering the entire recording of the
       11    meeting?
       12             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, we were offering those
       13    portions of the meeting that correspond to the transcripts
       14    which will subsequently be offered into evidence.  Those that
       15    have been redacted and minimized in furtherance of the FISA
       16    court order and also the wall proceedings that were set up at
       17    the u sufficient attorney's office.
       18             MR. TIGAR:  That, your Honor, is a technical problem
       19    with the offer, because there's no magic marker on any of nose
       20    magnetic tapes that says, This is where the minimization is and
       21    this is where it isn't.
       22             So the problem will be, your Honor, that any portions
       23    of the conversation that took place in the English language,
       24    the evidence is the tape.  We're going to be playing the tape.
       25    And we're not going to be just using transcripts.  And what
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        1    Mr. Morvillo is saying, I understand, he hasn't heard it all.
        2             And so our position is, your Honor, that if any of it
        3    comes in, it all comes in.  And why?  Because it would be
        4    terribly unfair to single out particular portions in the
        5    context of a long lawyer/client meeting when our whole defense
        6    is that Ms. Stewart is performing regular lawyer/client
        7    services, and that taken in context, her conduct is legal.
        8    Whereas the government's contention is, Oh, no, no, let's point
        9    to these parts -- and your Honor can recall the very first time
       10    that I had some courtroom dispute with Mr. Morvillo, it was
       11    about the leaking of some selected portions that, you know,
       12    were in that recorder -- in the search warrant.  That's been an
       13    issue all along in this case.
       14             So really, we're asking for, seeking here, is a
       15    mechanism to resolve these issues.  We have a hearsay objection
       16    to the entirety of the February taping.  That certainly is
       17    there.  But then when it comes to this, what's redacted, what's
       18    minimized, these lawyers aren't in a position to discuss that
       19    at this point, your Honor.  And we just have to have some way
       20    to deal with it.
       21             Mr. Dember rightly says, Well, I don't want to do
       22    something that's going to get me reversed because I wound up
       23    hearing or using in evidence something the Second Circuit later
       24    holds as privileged.
       25             So really, we're asking for the Court's guidance,
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        1    because there has to be an orderly way to resolve this.
        2             THE COURT:  Of course there is.
        3             MR. TIGAR:  Oh.  Well, then I'm going to sit down,
        4    your Honor, and hear it.
        5             THE COURT:  I mean, this is an issue which is -- I'll
        6    put to one side the issue of the manner of the offer and what
        7    it is that's on the tape because the parties can explain it to
        8    me in some more detail.  And perhaps there should be someone
        9    from the government wall team that's here.
       10             But my understanding is with respect to the prison
       11    recordings, that a stay of the record -- and the parties can
       12    correct me -- before listening to the government, so again, the
       13    parties can correct me, you came to me now on the basis of
       14    having a discussion as to the best way to do this, and to
       15    assure that everything is proper with respect to the
       16    admissibility of the evidence.
       17             My recollection is that there's a prior order or
       18    stipulation that deals with this subject because the trial team
       19    had access to portions of the prison recording which have been
       20    represented over the past as the portions which the government
       21    seeks to offer.
       22             There are other portions, both minimized and redacted
       23    for purposes of attorney/client privilege.
       24             If the defendant sought to offer anything other than
       25    the government was offering from the prison recordings, the
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        1    prior order and/or stipulation provided that the defendants
        2    would give notice to the government and to Sheikh Rahman within
        3    a given period of time so that any objections could be raised
        4    with respect to whether anything else should come in,
        5    including, among other things, recordings of Sheikh Rahman, to
        6    protect any privilege with respect to the remainder of the
        7    prison recording and whether the remainder of the recording
        8    were required to be played at the same time for purposes of
        9    completeness under Rule 106, or should weigh in on the case.
       10             So that was the procedure that was set out.  And it is
       11    now the defendants who are saying, Okay, we give notice.
       12    Whether that notice is somewhat late, I'll put this aside, but
       13    that was worked out.  So that this issue could be dealt with.
       14             Second -- that doesn't answer, of course -- and I
       15    don't know what it is that's on the case, whether it is
       16    redacted and minimized or the full take, and how it is that the
       17    full take is being offered.  That's the second issue.  That's
       18    the more technical issue.
       19             Backing up in order, the issue of fidelity and the
       20    like, the parties can brief that if they wish.  But
       21    Ms. Christianson points out where the items were placed in the
       22    ceiling and that she was cross-examined about such things as
       23    where the table was and where it was in relationship to the
       24    ceiling, where the equipment was.  The agents identified the
       25    tapes as the tapes that they put in the machine, took out of
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        1    the machine, sent to New York and/or Washington.  And the
        2    parties were welcome to give me letters on whether that's
        3    sufficient or whether any other information with respect to
        4    fidelity and why it is necessary, when the tapes are there and
        5    identified as the tapes and can be listened to by the jury.
        6             As to the last issue that you raise, which was the
        7    issue of cross-examination in respect to that other subject,
        8    the parties can give me letters on that.  But my recollection
        9    is that that subject was the subject of at least prior
       10    correspondence between the parties, and there is a fine line
       11    that's here.
       12             I've sustained defendant's objections with respect to
       13    the content of the Court order.  Based upon court orders, based
       14    upon the defense objection that the way to handle the
       15    authorization for the surveillance is simply by a court
       16    instruction like that given in Judge Sand's instructions, which
       17    says that the surveillance in this case was legal, or words to
       18    that effect, there's a wiretap instruction.  And the defendants
       19    objected to going further than that, to going into the contents
       20    of the order and the like because that was secondary evidence
       21    and, as the government point out on another occasion, there are
       22    no restrictions on the order itself, so it's sufficient to
       23    sustain objections with the understanding that I will give the
       24    standard instruction with respect to wiretaps, and in doing
       25    that, prevent any possible unfairness to the defendants from
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        1    otherwise identifying the nature of the order, etc.
        2             And -- so, with respect to the other incident, I would
        3    have questions with respect to relevance.  I would have
        4    questions with respect to the corresponding.  Issues I have
        5    attempted to deal with in a way that was completely fair to
        6    both sides based upon the prior correspondence of -- based upon
        7    what you've told me, and it does not rise to the level of
        8    impeachment any more than some other issues which I dealt with
        9    on relevancy and 403 grounds on cross-examination.
       10             But in addition to those issues, I have issues with
       11    respect to the way in which I've attempted to draw the line to
       12    assure fairness to all sides with respect to the nature of the
       13    authorization for the surveillance that we're dealing with.
       14    And the parties can correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm not at all
       15    sure that that same line is drawn in other cases because there
       16    is at least one transcript that came in which I saw go by which
       17    was a FISA case, which none of the transcripts in this case
       18    are, I assume, would do.
       19             So I think I've covered the issues that you've raised
       20    with me.  And --
       21             MR. TIGAR:  Yes, your Honor.  First, let me take first
       22    issue with notice.  The offer today was of the tapes, but only
       23    those portions to be embodied in later transcripts.  We haven't
       24    seen a transcript.  I can't do what the Court's order asks me
       25    to do until I see what they're going to do.  We will today
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        1    say -- because we just got this 3500 material over the weekend.
        2    Now that we know, then we'll take the steps.
        3             Second, with respect to authenticity, those tapes each
        4    have a cue on them.  I don't know why the government is
        5    offering cue exhibits.  Cue exhibits are question exhibits.
        6    They're exhibits that are subject to later processes.  And I
        7    see government counsel laughing and so on.  Maybe not, maybe
        8    I'm misinterpreting.  We have a witness named Herold,
        9    H-e-r-o-l-d, coming.  He took those exhibits and did something
       10    to them.  We have a lots of material because of something being
       11    done to them.  Presumably, since Mr. Harold is an audio
       12    enhancement expert, he went out and audio-enhanced them.  If
       13    that's what was done to them, at the very least the
       14    authentication decision should require that be found out where
       15    these things have been and what was done to them or what was
       16    done to copies that were made from them before the decision is
       17    made.
       18             I recognize Miss Christenson testified, but I wouldn't
       19    stand up and make my objection, your Honor, without some basis
       20    on what the government has furnished to me that they said is
       21    coming.  Mr. Herold made diagrams of how the signals were put
       22    through machines.  I don't know what those mean yet.  I was
       23    waiting to hear from him so that I could make an authenticity
       24    argument.
       25             Now, with respect to impeachment, I don't want to and
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        1    do not believe I should happen to open a door to let the
        2    contents of FISA orders come in in order to exercise a right of
        3    cross-examination.  If the Court please, Ms. Stewart is on
        4    trial for violating two letters from an Assistant United States
        5    Attorney and for conspiring to violate five letters,
        6    regulations, issues, SAMs, orders, from the Attorney General of
        7    the United States or the designee.
        8             The Court wrote an opinion saying that she couldn't
        9    raise a First Amendment objection because she had an
       10    obligation, if she didn't want to follow the orders, to go get
       11    it clarified.  And that issue has been pursued in cross.  Did
       12    somebody call Mr. Fitzgerald and ask him before May 19?
       13             My request is a simple one:  If indeed the facts are
       14    as I suggested, we are the victims, your Honor, of conduct
       15    which constitutes the fact element of two federal felonies.
       16    And I don't think that my rights, if your Honor holds that I
       17    have them, to inquire as to why these agents take such a
       18    cavalier attitude towards court orders, should be contingent
       19    upon my opening the door to all manner of completely
       20    unreviewable hearsay.  With respect, your Honor, I don't see
       21    it.
       22             If the Court tells me that that's what I'll be doing,
       23    then, you know, we'll have to make a choice here.  But that is
       24    the issue as we see it.
       25             MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, can I say something on the
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        1    issue of the prison recordings and the telephone or the legal
        2    telephone calls that will be coming up?
        3             We have been asking from the start of the case
        4    informally with the government when they were going to start
        5    producing their excerpted transcripts of the prison recordings
        6    of both telephone calls and the prison visits.  And the
        7    government has been -- that they would be producing them in
        8    patches as it goes along.
        9             Now, on Friday -- I haven't physically seen them, will
       10    see them today -- sent to us what is described as redacted
       11    minimized draft transcripts of prison calls of Sheikh Omar
       12    Abdel Rahman.  It was minimized in accordance with the orders
       13    of the FISA court, and that each transcript after being
       14    minimized by the FISA court was reviewed by the officers of the
       15    wall team, and they then redacted what they thought was
       16    privileged information.
       17             This issue of privilege, as far as the prison calls
       18    are concerned or prison recordings are concerned, I understand
       19    and I accept that your Honor dealt with them as well, with only
       20    those particular documents that you were shown at the time.
       21    However, your Honor also ruled --
       22             THE COURT:  No, not only shown but asked to rule on.
       23    I declined the government's gracious invitation simply to take
       24    all of the future notebooks and while I was at it rule on all
       25    of the notebooks.
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        1             MR. RUHNKE:  That's right.  And then in your Honor's
        2    ruling, you ruled basically on a two-level basis.
        3             THE COURT:  And I -- under -- yes, and I -- because it
        4    possibly dealt with sealed materials, and I issued the orders
        5    under seal also, because they dealt with sealed materials.
        6             MR. RUHNKE:  I'm not going to talk about the materials
        7    themselves, your Honor.  Your Honor ruled on one level that any
        8    objection on a privilege basis had been waived.  And then your
        9    Honor said that reaching the merits even, there was no
       10    privilege for the materials that you looked at.
       11             Thereafter, as it developed, I wanted to use some of
       12    the notebooks in opening.  I contacted Mr. Schmidt and copied
       13    Mr. Clark on the correspondence, as well as the government, and
       14    Mr. Schmidt declined; in essence, that he had made his legal
       15    arguments.  He was not going to appeal any aspect of your
       16    Honor's ruling.  And therefore it seems to me that although the
       17    final "t" has not been crossed, we have time to do that.
       18             What I do intend to do is contacted Mr. Schmidt and
       19    say, basically, Do you want to be heard on a
       20    document-by-document, conversation-by-conversation basis, or
       21    are you satisfied?
       22             Of course, that covered anything.  I think his
       23    response will be:  He does not want to be heard on a
       24    document-by-document conversation basis.  But I have not yet
       25    had that conversation.  I'm just being predictive.
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        1             THE COURT:  Because my understanding of the order
        2    and/or stipulation is that that notice would be given and that
        3    there is substantial parts, more to the recordings, than I was
        4    ever asked to rule on.  And I indicated in declining the
        5    government's gracious invitation to examine the rest of the
        6    notebooks that I didn't know whether Sheikh Rahman's position
        7    would be the same if asked not by the government, but by his
        8    former counsel or -- but there was a procedure to -- at least
        9    notices and determine whether any such privilege was being
       10    asserted.  Because it's being -- the government has said that
       11    at the trial, they had access to some of these materials in the
       12    prison recordings, and there has been no determination with
       13    respect to anything other than what I was given which was what
       14    was being sought to be introduced by the government at trial.
       15             Now, maybe you will be able to cut through the timing
       16    of the folder and, you know, that's fine.  I appreciate your,
       17    you know, your -- you bring it to my attention, and doing
       18    whatever you think on behalf of your client and the other
       19    defendants you wish to do with that.
       20             MR. RUHNKE:  The problem we're having is that until we
       21    know what the government wants to offer from those visits and
       22    from those telephone calls, we can't begin to take the next
       23    step.  We can't begin to make completeness arguments.  We can't
       24    begin to say, Oh, wait a minute, is this part of the
       25    conversation that's key, although apparently the wall team has
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        1    ruled them out as privileged, so we get them from the
        2    government.  And we're getting them from the government now.
        3             THE COURT:  Do you have copies of excerpted
        4    transcripts of the prison visits?
        5             MR. RUHNKE:  Of the prison visits?
        6             THE COURT:  Yes.
        7             MR. RUHNKE:  We have translations, draft translations
        8    of the prison visits that the government has provided.  We
        9    don't know of those, I don't think yet, what they intend to
       10    offer.  I may be wrong about that.  Because I don't think the
       11    government has yet to give us even draft transcripts of the
       12    documents they actually wanted to offer to a jury at this
       13    trial.  Just got, either on Friday or Saturday, what are
       14    labeled still as draft transcripts of what they want to offer
       15    on the prison phone calls.  And so, it's a -- I feel
       16    personally, just on behalf of my client, a bit trapped by all
       17    of this.  We haven't gotten what we need to get the process
       18    started.
       19             THE COURT:  I will listen to the government, but I
       20    would -- I would certainly give you whatever time is necessary,
       21    and I think the parties have worked cooperatively, and I'll
       22    certainly assure that you have the time.
       23             MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, I'm not pointing fingers at
       24    the government, saying they're the bad guys here.  It's a lot
       25    of stuff to deal with, and it's complicated and it's
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        1    logistically difficult.  I can remember having the same
        2    conversation just before we started jury selection, about when
        3    are we going to get transfers, and the government said they'll
        4    produce them on a rolling basis.
        5             What I think would be unfair if the government gives
        6    us draft transcripts on Saturday and say, We intend to start
        7    playing these Wednesday, and your Rule 106 objections are due
        8    Sunday.
        9             And that's my plea, basically, to deal with the time
       10    restraints, your Honor.
       11             THE COURT:  All right.
       12             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor.
       13             THE COURT:  Yes.
       14             MS. BAKER:  I'm sorry, I didn't mean to cut you off.
       15             THE COURT:  Really, you didn't.  Go ahead.
       16             MS. BAKER:  Defense counsel's characterization of the
       17    history and the record here is certainly not a fair and
       18    accurate one.  It has been clear from the early stages of this
       19    case that whatever the government would ultimately decide to
       20    offer into evidence as far as the prison visits or the prison
       21    calls, that that would not exceed the portions left in in the
       22    minimized and redacted transcripts, which are transcripts that
       23    had taken out of the minimizations required under the FISA
       24    court's orders, and additional portions that our wall team took
       25    out in an abundance of caution because they might be
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        1    privileged.
        2             Those parts were taken out early in the process and
        3    draft transcripts with all of those parts taken out have long
        4    been in the possession of defense counsel.  Then more refined
        5    drafts of only the same portions were provided again.  And I
        6    don't have my correspondence file here in front of me, but I am
        7    pretty confident that in the period of time leading up to the
        8    trial when we were dealing with Sheikh Abdel Rahman's belated
        9    assertion of his privilege claim, that the government
       10    represented in its correspondence with defense counsel and the
       11    Court that as to the prison visits, it was the government's
       12    intention to offer finalized transcripts which were still being
       13    finalized, and still are, but we don't expect any substantive
       14    changes from the drafts, but finalized transcripts that had in
       15    them the same amount of content that had been in the drafts
       16    that defense counsel has long had.
       17             So the fact that we had never planned to offer the
       18    portions removed pursuant to minimization or removed by our
       19    wall team has been clear all along; and as I say, with respect
       20    to the visits, we went further and said, we do intend to offer
       21    all of those portions that were left in after those processes.
       22             For the calls, I believe we indicated that we intended
       23    to offer not more than what was left in after minimization and
       24    redaction, which again defense counsel has had for quite
       25    sometime.  We've provided drafts of all the calls.  We are now
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        1    providing more refined drafts, and they're also being
        2    finalized.  But again, we made clear that we would not offer
        3    more than what was left after minimization and redaction, but
        4    that as to the prison calls, we might excerpt them further and
        5    offer less.  So of course, if we were to offer more excerpted
        6    calls, of course I grant that defense counsel has not yet had
        7    an opportunity to address any further excerpting.
        8             But the issue that there's some completeness argument
        9    because of the portions that were removed in minimization and
       10    in redaction by the U.S. Attorney's office's wall team has been
       11    clear from the very earliest stages of this case, and defense
       12    counsel has long had, as I said, both the minimized and
       13    redacted transcripts and the corresponding unminimized
       14    unredacted transcripts that were disclosed to defense counsel
       15    by our wall team, but which we on the trial team have never
       16    seen.
       17             And the corresponding recordings as well.  The defense
       18    has long had, for the visits, both the complete recordings and
       19    the recordings that were redacted and minimized to match the
       20    transcripts.  Obviously we on the trial team have only had
       21    access to the minimized and redacted recordings.  That's as to
       22    the visits.
       23             As to the calls, the recordings have not yet been
       24    minimized and redacted, so defense counsel has had all along
       25    the full recordings of its prison calls without any
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        1    minimizations or redactions.
        2             So that is the state of the record.  And your Honor is
        3    correct that there was a stipulation and order that was
        4    designed to address this very issue.  And the government is now
        5    sort of stuck.  I mean, we anticipated that we would offer the
        6    minimized and redacted recordings, and, you know, and their
        7    transcripts, and that there would be a stipulation or an
        8    instruction that other portions had been removed for legal
        9    reasons that the jury need not concern themselves with.  But if
       10    the defense is now saying that they want the recordings offered
       11    in full, that's the first time -- this is the first time that
       12    we're hearing of that, even though it's been clear all along
       13    that we were intending to use only the portions that had been
       14    left in the minimized and redacted versions.
       15             So we are going to need to reassess in light of that
       16    request.  As I said, we on the trial team have not, to this
       17    day, had access to the full recordings or their transcripts.
       18             MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, it's not in the
       19    correspondence.  But for the last two weeks, we've been having
       20    conversations -- Mr. Barkow, Mr. Stern and I have had direct
       21    conversations about what the government intends to play of the
       22    prison visits and the prison phone calls, and we've said it
       23    over and over again:  It's our position they should play
       24    wall-to-wall.  They should play start to finish.  We want to
       25    hear the entire conversation.
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        1             Now, maybe I regret not having added one more letter
        2    to the correspondence that's going around, but Mr. Barkow will
        3    certainly confirm, I think, that those conversations have taken
        4    place.  It's not brand-new news to the government.
        5             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, since it's come up -- and I
        6    hope Mr. Ruhnke would confirm this -- but today was the first
        7    time -- well, actually, let me step back.
        8             Each time that Mr. Ruhnke has asked me about this
        9    issue, my response has been:  I don't know.  And today was the
       10    first time that, between he and I, ever, the subject was
       11    raised, and I raised it about the redacted portions, that is,
       12    the portions that we the trial team had never seen, because up
       13    until that point, it was my understanding at least, that when
       14    Mr. Ruhnke was saying, We want you to play the whole thing
       15    wall-to-wall, I was always proceeding under the assumption that
       16    he was talking about the redacted parts, because, as I assumed
       17    he knew, none of the trial team has ever seen anything other
       18    than that, and so I would never be in a position to discuss
       19    anything beyond that, because I don't know what's there.
       20             So today was the first time that was made explicit by
       21    either one of us.
       22             And so I -- I think that -- my conversations with them
       23    don't really add to this analysis here because they were all
       24    premised on my understanding, at least, that all that was being
       25    discussed was how much of the redacted visits were going to be
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        1    played or offered, what-have-you, because the other stuff has
        2    just never been seen, and we have no knowledge about it.
        3               (Continued on next page)
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       25
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        1             THE COURT:  Well, the since the parties brought this
        2    up to me for discussion, the portions of the prison recordings
        3    that are not those portions which have been redacted and
        4    minimized, what is the portion that the trial team has seen,
        5    the other portions is there a transcript of those?  Such a
        6    transcript would not have been seen by the government trial
        7    team and plainly is not part of what they were offering.
        8             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, there were full verbatim
        9    transcripts prepared initially by FBI personnel who were
       10    permitted to do that under the terms of the FISA court's orders
       11    and then those full verbatim transcripts had the minimizations
       12    performed on them and then additional redactions by our office
       13    wall team.  I believe, however, that as I am sure your Honor
       14    can appreciate when you are going to use a transcript at trial
       15    you have an initial draft, and then you refine it.  And what we
       16    have been working on refining, or having refined for use at
       17    trial, are the minimized or the portions left in after the
       18    minimizing and redacting.
       19             So although there is some full version of a transcript
       20    that our wall team has, I don't believe that it's anywhere near
       21    as finalized and ready to use as the portions which the trial
       22    team was all along planning on using.
       23             THE COURT:  There are obviously a couple of levels.
       24    One is the issue of notice and what Sheikh Abdel Rahman's
       25    position -- which, Mr. Ruhnke, may be able to be dealt with
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        1    relatively quickly -- and the next level then is to assure that
        2    those portions that the government seeks to offer as part of
        3    its case are sufficiently discrete, such that there are no 106
        4    issues that have to be resolved.
        5             Ms. Baker.
        6             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, if the ultimate outcome of
        7    this issue is going to be that Abdel Rahman has no objection or
        8    if he has an objection and it's overruled and the ultimate
        9    outcome on these recordings is that they are going to come in
       10    in their entireties, the government does not want to offer only
       11    selected portions and then have the rest come in in the defense
       12    case.  Or at least the government doesn't know what it wants at
       13    this point since we have no idea what is in those other parts.
       14    But unless we think that there are other parts in there that
       15    simply would not be admissible for some reason, if everything
       16    in there is admissible and if it's relevant to the context of
       17    the other parts, we might be willing to have the whole thing
       18    come in in our case.
       19             We don't want the jury to think that we are trying to
       20    hide parts of the recordings from them.  We were going to offer
       21    only the portions that we were going to offer because that is
       22    all we have ever had access to and that is all we thought we
       23    were legally entitled to offer.  But we are not in a position
       24    to really take a final position right now.  I mean, this is the
       25    first we have been told that the defense seems to want
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        1    everything and if that is true, we now need to know whether or
        2    not Abdel Rahman is objecting or if he even should be given the
        3    opportunity to object again, because we now need to get access
        4    to the materials so that we can decide how to proceed next.
        5             THE COURT:  Well, the stipulation and order provided
        6    for the steps of if the defendant sought to introduce other
        7    portions, then counsel for Sheikh Abdel Rahman would be
        8    informed.  So having issued that order in order to resolve the
        9    issues at that time based on the stipulation of the parties,
       10    that should be followed and if it can be expedited, as Mr.
       11    Ruhnke suggests, Mr. Schmidt did expedite it last time with
       12    respect to certain portions of the Yousry notebook, that will
       13    move along the timetable of the order.  That would then leave
       14    the question of what else is on those tapes and what the state
       15    of transcripts is for the rest of the tapes.
       16             So let me go back.  The parties should talk about that
       17    promptly.
       18             Let me go back to the more technical issue or two more
       19    technical issues which the government didn't respond to.
       20             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, obviously the government's
       21    response on some of those issues depends on ultimately is the
       22    government going to be offering minimized redacted versions or
       23    is the government going to be offering something more than
       24    that.  Before this issue of the other portions of the
       25    transcript came up, the government's intention was as follows:
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        1    Mr. Herald, who works for the FBI, prepared copies of the
        2    recordings that were, among other things, edited to correspond
        3    to the minimized and redacted transcripts.  And the government
        4    will be offering through Mr. Herald those edited copies of the
        5    recordings and for the primary playing of the visits.  Again
        6    assuming we are using minimized redacted versions, the
        7    government was going to be playing those edited copies.
        8    However, the government also wants the original recordings in
        9    evidence because we expect, given, for example, issues that
       10    defendant Stewart has raised with regard to regular telephone
       11    recordings, we expect that at least defendant Stewart may raise
       12    issues relating to the copies of the prison visit recordings
       13    and whether the jury should afford full weight to those copies
       14    and so on.
       15             So the government wants to have the original
       16    recordings in evidence as well so that if some issue is raised
       17    the original recordings are available and although it's not
       18    very easy to play the original recordings if we are only using
       19    the minimized and redacted portions, it is possible because the
       20    recordings could be fast forwarded through the parts that are
       21    removed.  But, again, that is not easy but that is not
       22    primarily how we were intending to present the recordings.
       23             But the point is we don't believe that the fact that
       24    we would only be offering portions should be a bar to the
       25    admissibility of the original recordings and, in any event,
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        1    obviously this issue would be a different issue if now more of
        2    the recordings were coming in or all of the recordings were
        3    coming in.
        4             THE COURT:  But how could I rule on the offer of
        5    government exhibits -- as they were offered -- Government
        6    Exhibits 1700 to 1715 April 1720 to 1725?  The recordings are
        7    the full recordings which Mr. Morvillo offered in evidence.
        8             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, I only offered them to the
        9    extent they correspond with transcripts of the recordings that
       10    are later admitted into evidence.  I thought I made that clear.
       11    And to the extent no transcripts ever come in for some reason,
       12    then no portions of these recordings are going to come into
       13    evidence.  They are the full, unredacted, unminimized
       14    recordings.
       15             The transcripts that we propose to introduce are both
       16    redacted and minimized and so we would only offer those
       17    portions of these recordings that correspond to those portions
       18    of the transcripts that get admitted into evidence.
       19             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, that is a practical question.
       20    If they are in evidence and the jurors have them in the jury
       21    room and ask for a tape player, what are they supposed to do
       22    with them?
       23             MR. MORVILLO:  It's the same way we proceeded with the
       24    audio recordings from the underlying FISA calls, your Honor.
       25             THE COURT:  It simply wasn't, frankly, clear to me
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        1    that the offer was -- and I would have to go back and check the
        2    transcript from my notes -- that the offer was of the tapes
        3    that corresponded to excerpted transcripts.
        4             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, that is what I said the
        5    first time I made an offer and then when Mr. Tigar objected and
        6    your Honor reserved I believe subsequent offers, at least a
        7    second one, was just for the exhibits knowing that there would
        8    be another objection and another reservation.  And the last
        9    time I did it I believe I also qualified the offer.  But just
       10    so it's clear, it is a qualified offer.
       11             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, as to the practical issue, Mr.
       12    Tigar says but they are in evidence, the jury can take them
       13    into the jury room and play them.  They are only in evidence to
       14    the extent that your Honor says that they are in evidence and
       15    so if your Honor rules that only certain portions are in
       16    evidence and if the jury wishes to view those original
       17    recordings as opposed to the other edited copies, then they
       18    would have to be played in the courtroom by fast forwarding
       19    through the portions that are not in evidence.
       20             THE COURT:  That is true.  It just was not clear to me
       21    what the offer was.
       22             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, if there are other particular
       23    issues the court wants me to address I am happy to address any
       24    of them.
       25             On the issue of unauthorized FISA surveillance and
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        1    whether or not there should be any cross examination relating
        2    to that, we had addressed this issue in a letter to defense
        3    counsel and copied to the court, dated January 20, 2004.  I
        4    have a couple of extra copies of that letter here with me.  Mr.
        5    Tigar obviously has already previously received it but I am
        6    giving him another copy and handing it up to the court as well.
        7             The particular issue that Mr. Tigar is alluding to is
        8    addressed in the paragraph that begins at the bottom of the
        9    first page of the letter and in light of the raising of this
       10    issue on the record here now, the government would ask that the
       11    court direct that a copy of this letter be docketed under seal.
       12             Your Honor, there is no basis to cross examine any of
       13    these particular agents who have testified here today about
       14    that issue because those particular agents were not involved in
       15    the other surveillance that is referenced in that paragraph of
       16    this letter.
       17             THE COURT:  Okay.
       18             MR. TIGAR:  I understand what the government is
       19    saying.  The letter itself doesn't tell us who misunderstood
       20    and who did what.  We now -- and I am now told that it wasn't
       21    Agent McGrath.  My belief that it was Agent McGrath has to do
       22    with the paragraph in --
       23             THE COURT:  I accept your representation.
       24             MR. TIGAR:  I wasn't apologizing, your Honor.  I was
       25    going to explain.  I am obeying the order but I did want to
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        1    point out that it says that coverage was established.  That
        2    means that this agent has some knowledge that coverage was
        3    established.  Therefore, someone said to the agent go establish
        4    coverage.  What kind of coverage was the agent instructed to
        5    establish?  That doesn't require us to get in very far, and if
        6    it was do audio and video, then I can get that.  Perhaps the
        7    government would stipulate that the agent if recalled would say
        8    it.  And then I can consider what the next step would be if I
        9    want to pursue this.
       10             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, the government submits that
       11    any other surveillance and the extent to which it was
       12    appropriate or inappropriate is irrelevant to the issue of the
       13    authenticity of the recording of the prison visit, which is the
       14    issue currently before the court.  Moreover, the mere fact that
       15    there is this reference in a piece of Agent McGrath's 3500
       16    material, doesn't mean that she is the person with personal
       17    knowledge of any of the things that Mr. Tigar might wish to
       18    inquire into, which we submit are irrelevant.
       19             MR. TIGAR:  Yes, it's true.  This piece of paper
       20    doesn't say that she does or doesn't have personal knowledge.
       21    Mindful as I was of the court's direction, I didn't ask her
       22    that.
       23             Now, there are two ways to do this that I would be
       24    willing to deal with.  One is government counsel can go and ask
       25    her, you know, exactly what did you know and how did you know
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        1    it, and so on, and provide us some document.  The simplest way
        2    would be to call her back.  She will be here until Wednesday.
        3    Ask her the question.  If I strike out, then that means that a
        4    biased-based cross examination is a fruitless endeavor and if I
        5    want to go after some kind of a bad faith contra spolatorium
        6    argument I have to go somewhere else to do it other than with
        7    this agent.  So that is my respectful request.
        8             MR. MORVILLO:  If I can just respond very briefly.  I
        9    have spoken to Agent McGrath about her personal knowledge and
       10    involvement in this surveillance and she told me that she was
       11    not involved.  I don't know to what extent she has hearsay
       12    knowledge of what occurred but, again, we would submit that is
       13    just not relevant and would be hearsay as well, so it would be
       14    inadmissible.
       15             MR. TIGAR:  I am sorry, that really isn't enough.  She
       16    writes a report to her superiors in which she says FISA
       17    coverage established at, and two locations.  So far as we know
       18    that is the only record of that event in Rochester.  She had to
       19    write that based on something and, of course, it might wind up
       20    one of the questions would be 803(8) because in our hands there
       21    is at least a potential basis for admissibility here.  But that
       22    is our application.
       23             The one thing that has not been addressed is that in
       24    our letter we have sought production if the February 2000
       25    prison visit comes in, then we have asked for Mr. Jabara's
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        1    grand jury testimony.
        2             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, with respect to the grand
        3    jury testimony I can proffer to the court and hand up to the
        4    court a copy of it.  There is nothing in that testimony that
        5    has anything to do with any of the issues that have been
        6    discussed.
        7             THE COURT:  Wait, wait --
        8             MR. BARKOW:  I don't have to hand it up but I proffer
        9    it to the court and I have a copy if the court would like.
       10             THE COURT:  I haven't had an opportunity to read Mr.
       11    Tigar's letter and you both can discuss that representation and
       12    ask whether that affects the production of Jabara grand jury
       13    testimony and if there is dispute I will resolve it.  The
       14    solution to all issues is not simply to give it to the court
       15    without guidance, like the unredacted Yousry notebooks, and
       16    say, here, do it.  The preliminary question is do what?  And
       17    there was an issue between the parties with respect to the
       18    Jabara grand jury testimony.  What precisely that issue is is
       19    not clear to me.  There was a request for the grand jury
       20    testimony.  What you say, Mr. Barkow, may be wholly responsive
       21    to that.  I don't know.  Maybe one more conversation will
       22    resolve it.
       23             But if the parties want me to review Jabara grand jury
       24    testimony, then they have to tell me why it is that I am
       25    reviewing it.  And it's just not -- it may be clear to you but
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        1    it's just not clear to me at the moment.  So take another
        2    conversation.
        3             There was one other issue that the defense raised, Ms.
        4    Baker, which was you told me what Mr. Herald was going to do,
        5    and then the first issue was are the tapes sufficiently
        6    authenticated at this point for admissibility.  The defendants'
        7    objection was the lack of an expert on fidelity and where the
        8    microphones were placed.
        9             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, the government respectfully
       10    submits that all of that goes to weight and not to authenticity
       11    and that Mr. Tigar is able to explore those issues in his case
       12    should he choose to do so.  The court has reviewed at least
       13    portions of the transcripts of the recordings.  The court could
       14    certainly look at the original recordings themselves for their
       15    content for use on the threshold question of admissibility and
       16    the recordings themselves, I am told, not having seen full
       17    versions of them, make clear that the equipment functioned well
       18    enough to record the entire conversation and that by and large
       19    it's all audible.  There may be occasional words or phrases
       20    here or there that are inaudible.  There are occasions in some
       21    of the visits when the parties seem to be intentionally
       22    whispering or lowering their voices.
       23             But as your Honor recognized in ruling on the
       24    admissibility of the other telephone calls the other day, the
       25    fact that portions are inaudible does not render the recordings
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        1    inadmissible, and these are all of the sorts of questions that
        2    go to weight and not to authenticity.
        3             These are the original tapes and the agents who made
        4    these tapes have said, yes, these are the original tapes that I
        5    made.  And the other witness who we will call will testify
        6    about what he did in copying the tapes or processing copies of
        7    the tapes, but that is completely a separate question from the
        8    authenticity of the originals and that authenticity has been
        9    clearly established by the testimony of these witnesses today
       10    as supplemented by the testimony that Kara Christenson gave
       11    about the location of the equipment to the extent of her
       12    knowledge.
       13             THE COURT:  The defendant raised a question of the Q
       14    marking on the tape.
       15             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, I will proffer that
       16    Mr. Herald, who is the witness who made the copies, will
       17    testify that he is the person who added those markings.  When
       18    he received each tape he gave it a reference number and then
       19    took additional steps from there.  So it's his additional
       20    handwriting on the tape labels and on the box labels, although
       21    frankly I don't see what that has to do with the question of
       22    the authenticity of the recording itself.
       23             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, if your Honor please, we have
       24    no evidence at all as to the type of machines.  We know that
       25    you put a high 8 tape into it and push a button.  How do I
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        1    answer that?  What brand of machine?  Was it done with a cable,
        2    a wire from the machine into the microphones?  Was it a
        3    wireless microphone?  What brand of microphone?  Where were the
        4    microphones?  We had that kind of information and, your Honor,
        5    in an ordinary spike mic. case from the '60s or '70s the
        6    question would be, gee, Agent, where did you put the mic.?
        7    What does it look like?  Show us your tape recording.
        8             In fact, your Honor, if you look at 1761C we see that
        9    an Agent Bartholmey came into the prison on the 16th of July
       10    and he went to SIS and presumably Agent Bartholmey is the one
       11    that dismantled the recordings.  I don't know.  But if we look
       12    at 1760D we see that on the 25th of May a Kathy Murphy from the
       13    FBI went in, spent a little more and hour, went to SIS
       14    presumably to remove the recording equipment.
       15             In short, your Honor, what we have here is trips to
       16    New York by three Minnesota agents chosen by the government,
       17    none of whom knows anything about how to report a conversation
       18    except how to press a button.  That is not, your Honor, an
       19    authenticity showing.  It is a deliberate choice of witnesses
       20    designed to keep from us the most basic kind of information
       21    and, yes, it may be, all the parts of McKeever aren't still the
       22    law.  The part particularly Judge Kearse said was the
       23    inducement part.
       24             But I daresay there has never been in this circuit in
       25    front of any district judge of this court a case in which audio
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        1    surveillance comes in without at least somebody being able to
        2    describe for us the microphone and how it's connected to the
        3    machine in the most basic way.  And we just don't have that.
        4             It may be that if somebody gave me that information I
        5    would say, oh, I will drop my inquiry because I know that that
        6    is the sort of thing that people hook up and use all the time.
        7    But what we have here instead, your Honor, is this studied
        8    effort not to share that information.  And that is why I am
        9    objecting, because I don't think they have quite met the
       10    standard.  If overnight they want to reconsider and send me a
       11    letter and say it was a TEAC with a microphone I might come in
       12    tomorrow morning and say, gee, I am not interested in wasting
       13    anybody's time.  I know what the rules are and if this is one
       14    of those Kel sec. one spike cases I will give up.
       15             THE COURT:  Ms. Baker.
       16             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, the government renews its
       17    offer of the evidence and rests on the argument that the
       18    original tapes have been sufficiently authenticated and Mr.
       19    Tigar's lines of inquiry that he wishes to pursue to the extent
       20    that they are relevant go to the weight question for the jury
       21    and not the authenticity and admissibility question for the
       22    court.  The recordings themselves make clear that whatever kind
       23    of microphone it was, however it was hooked up from the
       24    microphone head or whatever it's called itself to the tape
       25    decks, that it worked sufficiently that there is clear
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        1    conversation on there which is overwhelmingly audible and, as I
        2    said before, and as your Honor well knows from the case law,
        3    the contents of the recordings themselves are evidence that the
        4    court may consider in ruling on the admissibility question.
        5             THE COURT:  All right.
        6             MR. TIGAR:  May I have just a moment please, your
        7    Honor?
        8             THE COURT:  Sure.
        9             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, Ms. Shellow-Lavine reminds me
       10    there is us a custody question.  If the tapes that Mr. Morvillo
       11    offered, and about which Ms. Baker is making representations,
       12    are indeed the full tapes, how do they know?
       13             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, we are relying on the
       14    testimony of the agents that these are the tapes they made.
       15             THE COURT:  All right.  The parties can give me any
       16    letters on any of this that they want tonight.  It seems to me
       17    plain that I can't rule on the issue with respect to -- that I
       18    should defer at least briefly on the issues until there is some
       19    resolution of what it is that really is being offered in terms
       20    of the content of the tape and whether that should be before
       21    Mr. Herald testifies because the government says it wants to
       22    consider what it is that is being offered in terms of the tapes
       23    themselves that corresponds to what transcripts.
       24             Mr. Ruhnke has undertaken to get a prompt response on
       25    the defense statement that they want to offer the remainder of
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        1    the conversations, at least of the prison visits.  That may or
        2    may not resolve the issue as to what portion of the transcripts
        3    are actually being offered.
        4             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, it's unclear to me what
        5    procedure now applies.  Are we, the government trial team,
        6    authorized to go back to our offices and begin considering the
        7    full transcript that has the minimized and redacted parts in
        8    it?
        9             THE COURT:  No.  I don't have the order in front of
       10    me, the stipulation and order, and there is a procedure and it
       11    may be that the procedure is -- and I haven't reviewed the
       12    order and stipulation.  None of this was argued out to me
       13    before today, at least these issues.  I don't recall if the
       14    order was such that the government could offer the redacted
       15    transcripts and then within the period of time if there was no
       16    objection, then any objection is waived, any attorney-client
       17    objection is waived and the defendants can seek to offer but
       18    the government can object.  The government says they might not.
       19    So there was a procedure worked out which did include a time
       20    period of notice.  It's the time period that Mr. Ruhnke says
       21    may be resolved more quickly and I also don't recall if the
       22    triggering should have been done before now.
       23             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, my recollection of the
       24    order, and we have a copy of it here, is that the defendants
       25    were supposed to give the government and Mr. Schmidt and the
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        1    court two weeks notice of an intent to disclose any redacted or
        2    minimized materials.  That was to give everyone involved,
        3    particularly Mr. Schmidt or Abdel Rahman's counsel at the time,
        4    the opportunity to interpose any privilege objections.  I
        5    believe the order specifically states that any other objections
        6    such as relevance or hearsay, et cetera, did not need to be
        7    resolved in that two-week period.  But the two-week period was
        8    designed to give all parties the opportunity to consider this
        9    evidence before it was introduced.
       10             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, Mr. Morvillo's recollection is
       11    correct.  We now have a copy up on the laptop computer.  If
       12    your Honor wishes I can pass up the laptop.  It says there
       13    would be 14-day notice of specific portions of "the redacted
       14    content" that the defendants would seek to use and that after
       15    that notice by the defendants, then Abdel Rahman or his counsel
       16    would have 7 days to make any objection based on
       17    attorney-client privilege or attorney work product doctrine,
       18    and it continues from there.
       19             THE COURT:  What triggers the defendants' obligation
       20    to give notice that they wanted to use the remainder -- use
       21    materials that had otherwise been redacted?
       22             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, the order itself makes clear
       23    that the redacted contents is all of those portions that were
       24    already removed in the minimization and redaction processes
       25    that had been completed before this protective order was
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        1    drafted.  So there isn't any specific triggering event.  It
        2    just talks about if the defendants wish to use or disclose
        3    redacted content that they are supposed to give the 14 days
        4    notice.
        5             THE COURT:  All right.  Mr. Ruhnke?
        6             MR. RUHNKE:  Just a quick comment on that.  That was
        7    obviously entered before your Honor made the rulings on the
        8    broader issues of privilege and if there is anything that is
        9    going to be a triggering event it would ultimately be getting
       10    final transcripts from the government.  We don't even have yet
       11    final transcripts of what they want to offer.  It's hard to
       12    know what we want to argue by way of completeness, whether from
       13    materials that are potentially privileged, although I think
       14    Mr. Smith's announcement that he wasn't going to appeal any
       15    aspect of your Honor's ruling and had no problem with the offer
       16    of the notebooks that were put forward, I hope presages that
       17    there will not be a further privilege or work product
       18    interjected but I don't think we are in violation of the order
       19    I guess is what I am trying to say.  And also, just to be fair
       20    to both sides, I think there is a misunderstanding between the
       21    discussions counsel are having for the last two weeks about
       22    wanting -- when we say wall to wall or end to end, we didn't
       23    mean end to end redacted.
       24             So I think there has to be an equitable issue here.  I
       25    think both sides have been, to give credit to both sides, so I
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        1    am talking at cross purpose.  Just practically speaking I
        2    intend tonight to write a letter to Mr. Schmidt and fax a copy
        3    to his office with a copy to the court and a letter to the
        4    government and let him know there is an emergency to hearing
        5    his position on this issue.
        6             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, to echo Mr. Ruhnke's comments,
        7    I interpreted your Honor's order as a cross designation
        8    requirement because that is essentially what I thought it was
        9    and I never thought I am under any duty to cross designate
       10    until I see a designation.
       11             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, in light of the fact that the
       12    order specifically uses the phrase redacted content, it was
       13    clearly intended to refer to the very content that has been out
       14    all along from what the trial team has and not to any further
       15    excerpting that the trial team might have contemplated which,
       16    as I said before, I believe we made clear in the weeks leading
       17    up to the trial that there wasn't going to be any further
       18    excerpting so that is beside the point anyway.  But the order
       19    could not be more explicit that it's about the redacted content
       20    which is the content that has been out all along.
       21             THE COURT:  Well, this subject got introduced to me as
       22    something that the parties wanted to discuss with me and I
       23    don't want to be premature in any way.  And what I suggest to
       24    you now may not even be practical based upon where you are, but
       25    the defendants say they want the rest of the recordings in and
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        1    they will notify Mr. Schmidt and they expect Mr. Schmidt and
        2    his client will not have any objections.  The government
        3    doesn't know -- the government trial team doesn't know what is
        4    in the rest of the transcripts but says we would probably take
        5    the position that we would rather see it all go in as part of
        6    our case rather than do it piecemeal, part now, part later.
        7    You should think about that.  I can't resolve these issues
        8    right now.  I don't know what the practicality is of finished
        9    transcripts of the entire prison visits, not the redacted
       10    minimized versions of the prison visits.
       11             If it's the government's position that, gee, if the
       12    defendants are going to offer the rest of the prison visits in
       13    their own case we would rather see the whole visits come in as
       14    part of our case, then all of that counsels for attempting to
       15    get this done sooner rather than later, quickly, et cetera, and
       16    I am just dealing with the tapes of the prison visits
       17    themselves.  I don't know what the volume of the prison calls
       18    are and what the burden is with respect to unredacted and calls
       19    on the prison calls, what kind of volume is that?
       20             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, the case originally involved a
       21    total of 63 calls.  The government had previously indicated
       22    that it would use not more than 25 particular calls at the
       23    trial and we are continuing to try to whittle down that list.
       24    We don't expect that we will actually use anywhere near that
       25    number.  So we haven't specified yet finally which ones.
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        1             THE COURT:  Both sides are being very expressive in
        2    their hand motions to me and head motions at various points.
        3    The defendants' gestures at that point were we don't have the
        4    telephone calls.  We have the universe of calls but we don't
        5    have what the government attempts to offer so we can't
        6    reasonably make a 106 designation on the prison calls.
        7             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, that is true and not true in
        8    the following way:  The defendants have long had full verbatim
        9    transcripts, drafts of the prison calls and minimized redacted
       10    drafts of the prison calls, so for any prison call they have
       11    long known those parts that are the "redacted content" to use
       12    the term from the stipulation and protective order or the
       13    protective order, whichever it is.  So as to issues that the
       14    defendants might wish to raise as to any redacted content from
       15    any prison call, they know what that redacted content is.
       16             I had said that when we decide finally which prison
       17    calls we are going to use, we were thinking that we might
       18    excerpt those further and I granted earlier in my argument that
       19    we haven't done that yet and therefore the defendants, I agree,
       20    are not in a position to make any further completeness
       21    objection that might arise from further excerpting beyond the
       22    minimizing and redacting.  But they already know the list of 25
       23    calls that are under consideration and which parts of those
       24    calls have been minimized and redacted out and they have known
       25    which parts of all the calls have been minimized and redacted
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        1    out for a long time and which 25 calls are under consideration
        2    since before we had the litigation with Mr. Schmidt, because I
        3    know we had narrowed the universe down to the 25 by that point
        4    because we only gave Mr. Schmidt those 25.
        5             THE COURT:  So with respect to the prison call in
        6    order to avoid any -- if the defendants wish to offer any other
        7    parts of the prison calls, the 25 prison calls, they should
        8    make the request to Mr. Schmidt also.  So both the prison
        9    recordings, prison visits and the 25 phone calls.
       10             MR. RUHNKE:  Yes, your Honor.  That is correct.
       11             THE COURT:  And when the issue is the content of the
       12    prison visits and the transcripts of those and defendants'
       13    current desire to have the full prison visits in and the full
       14    telephone calls and if that is done quickly, that would seem to
       15    be the way that -- the way to approach it.  I am not telling
       16    the government that they can now go and get access to all of
       17    the other transcripts.  That is not what is provided in the
       18    order, but plainly the order contemplates that if there is no
       19    objection and the defendants now seek to offer the remainder of
       20    the prison visits and the 25 prison calls, then at that point
       21    the government trial team would have the ability to look at
       22    that and make a determination whether they are going to make
       23    any objections to admitting that.  Isn't that right?
       24             MR. MORVILLO:  Actually that is not right, your Honor.
       25    That is not correct.  What the order says is that the notice
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        1    has to be given to the government and to Mr. Schmidt and there
        2    is a week for privilege objections to be interposed.  But
        3    notice is given, my understanding from the order, is by
        4    disclosure of those portions that they want to use.  So when
        5    notice is given the government should be receiving portions
        6    that have been redacted or minimized out so they can also
        7    consider the content of those transcripts.
        8             (Continued on next page)
        9
       10
       11
       12
       13
       14
       15
       16
       17
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
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        1             THE COURT:  Before there's Abdel Rachman's counsel.
        2             MR. MORVILLO:  Yes, your Honor.  In other words, if
        3    they're seeking to breach the attorney/client privilege, in
        4    defense of the charges in this case, under the terms of the
        5    protective order, the government, in fairness, is also -- it is
        6    my understanding, without looking at it, those portions of the
        7    redacted minimized transcripts that the defense seeks to use.
        8             THE COURT:  Mr. Ruhnke?
        9             MR. RUHNKE:  Still doesn't strike me as correct.  In
       10    order to -- it seems to me what we need to do, your Honor,
       11    respectfully, is take it a step at a time.  To find out if
       12    there is going to be an imposition of a privilege objection by
       13    Sheikh Omar Rachman's counsel to any of the prison calls, any
       14    of the prison visits he's had prison visits, or any of the
       15    materials that have been the subject of the privilege
       16    litigation generally.  If there is no such objections and if
       17    the government tells us what it wants to offer, we can then put
       18    this context in 106 what we want to offer.  When we said we
       19    want to offer everything, it is because -- offer --
       20             THE COURT:  Wall-to-wall.
       21             MR. RUHNKE:  It is because context is everything.
       22             THE COURT:  Wall-to-wall.
       23             MR. RUHNKE:  It is because context is everything in
       24    this case.
       25             THE COURT:  I understand that.  But then the
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        1    government has to be given access to that.
        2             MR. RUHNKE:  That's right.
        3             THE COURT:  And the only issue in my mind, and -- it
        4    took Mr. Schmidt one day last time to say Mr. Yousry wants to
        5    use the rest, I'm --
        6             MR. RUHNKE:  No problem.
        7             THE COURT:  No problem.
        8             MR. RUHNKE:  Correct.  And your Honor, not to
        9    interrupt -- and to say there would be no appeals taken to your
       10    Honor's orders, anybody had an opportunity or the right to take
       11    an interlocutory or direct appeal of the privilege issue,
       12    Sheikh Omar Rachman's attorney, and that included the waiver
       13    finding on the Court's part.  And as to the waiver finding,
       14    although your Honor ruled discretely on materials presented to
       15    it, the waiver findings on the part of the Court, I think
       16    fairly read, cover the waterfront as far as privilege is
       17    concerned, as far as the assertion is concerned.  And I think
       18    Mr. Rahman's counsel recognize at least that much.
       19             So we're talking about -- if the answer is how far can
       20    this go -- I assume Mr. Schmidt is in New York City and not
       21    somewhere on vacation.  I don't know that.  But I think this
       22    part of it at least can be resolved.
       23             THE COURT:  He shares office space --
       24             MR. RUHNKE:  I'm sorry?
       25             THE COURT:  He shares office space.
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        1             MR. RUHNKE:  With Mr. Tigar.  And I was going to ask
        2    them if he was around.
        3             But in any event, the issue -- I think that issue can
        4    be resolved very quickly.  If for any reason there would be an
        5    interposition of privilege that your Honor would somehow
        6    sustain on the first level, that would be the next issue of how
        7    fair is it now for privilege to be used as a sword against
        8    Mr. Yousry and Ms. Stewart, and your Honor discussed that by
        9    way of reserving, but we would then reach that issue.
       10             I don't think it's going to be necessary to reach any
       11    of those issues.  And I think -- again, you know, maybe I'm
       12    wrong -- I think we can get this part of it resolved quickly.
       13             I would like to know when the government is going to
       14    say reasonably they can tell us when the transcripts are no
       15    longer drafts and when they represent what the government wants
       16    to offer of the prison telephone calls.  And I don't believe
       17    we've gotten even draft transcripts in the sense of the final
       18    group or excerpts or whatever the government wants to present
       19    of the prison visits.  At least, not any recent transcripts.
       20             MS. BAKER:  To address Mr. Ruhnke's latter point
       21    first, as I thought I made clear earlier, the government's
       22    intention was to offer the entirety of the minimized redacted
       23    transcripts of the prison visits that the government has
       24    produced.  And although they have been produced marked draft,
       25    the more recent drafts, we believe, are essentially going to be
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        1    the same as the final transcripts, just as happened with the
        2    regular telephone calls.  There were in some instances early
        3    drafts, and then there were later drafts, and the final ones
        4    were essentially the same as the later draft.  So we're going
        5    to be rolling out the final prison visit transcripts as soon as
        6    we can.  We hope to begin later this week.  But we expect that
        7    they will be essentially identical to the more recently
        8    produced drafts, and it was our intention to offer those
        9    minimized redacted transcripts in their entirety.
       10             Turning back to the protective order, the protective
       11    order is, in fact, explicit that once a defendant indicates a
       12    desire to use or disclose, quote, any redacted content, the
       13    following is supposed to be the procedure, and this is
       14    Paragraph 2 on Page 5 of the protective order:  "The defendant
       15    produces the specific portions of the redacted content for
       16    which disclosure or use is sought to counsel for Abdel Rahman,
       17    counsel for codefendants, the trial AUSAs (or to the government
       18    wall team if disclosure to the trial AUSAs would reveal defense
       19    strategy) and the Court, no less than 14 days prior to the date
       20    upon which such disclosure or use is to occur."
       21             So as drafted and signed by the Court, the protective
       22    order explicitly provides for the government trying team to
       23    have access to the material at the same time as counsel for
       24    Abdel Rahman and its defense is supposed to be providing the
       25    specific additional portions that they are seeking to use.
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        1             THE COURT:  I'm not going to do anything to modify the
        2    order that's already in place.  I'm -- I haven't been asked to
        3    do that.  But if Mr. Ruhnke can successfully obtain from
        4    Mr. Schmidt agreement from Sheikh Rahman, quickly, that would
        5    seem to compress the entire schedule in a way that would be
        6    useful to both sides.
        7             The order is there to protect everyone's rights.  But
        8    isn't that right?  If it were able to be accomplished, the
        9    government trial team would get access to those materials and a
       10    process to use them much more quickly than had originally been
       11    thought at the time that the order -- stipulation and order
       12    were entered.
       13             MS. BAKER:  There are, I think, a few different
       14    aspects to this question kind of intertwined here.  Obviously
       15    if Mr. Ruhnke is successful in reaching Mr. Schmidt quickly and
       16    if Mr. Schmidt indicates that Sheikh Abdel Rahman is not going
       17    to interpose any further privilege objection, then that aspect
       18    of the order, that is, a timeframe for the interposition of
       19    privilege objections to occur, that aspect may be accomplished
       20    more quickly.
       21             Part of what the order also was designed to address
       22    was the government having some lead time to be able to figure
       23    out what the government would seek to do in light of the
       24    defense introducing new pieces of evidence that we on the trial
       25    team have not had access to.
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        1             THE COURT:  That's right.  And it was meant to also
        2    provide if there are objections, some timeframe for the Court
        3    to decide them.
        4             MS. BAKER:  Of course.
        5             THE COURT:  I understand that.  I agree.
        6             MS. BAKER:  And the government would submit that if
        7    what has happened here today is the defendants giving notice
        8    that they wish all of the redacted content from all of the
        9    prison visits to be used, then by the literal terms of the
       10    proactive order, as it is currently in place, that would seem
       11    to the government to indicate that we can go back to our office
       12    now and begin reviewing the early draft transcript of the
       13    complete versions of the prison visits.  If the Court is
       14    directing that we not do that and await Mr. Ruhnke hearing some
       15    information from Mr. Schmidt --
       16             THE COURT:  Yes.  I'm not going to bury the protective
       17    order.  On the other hand, as a matter of prudence, I think
       18    that time will be better served and a resolution of the issue
       19    will be better served by holding off on the government trial
       20    team seeing this until we at least allow Mr. Ruhnke to try and
       21    get a prompt response from Mr. Schmidt.  Which may
       22    substantially accelerate the whole schedule.  And maybe I'm
       23    simply underestimating the practicalities of the situation.
       24    But sufficient unto the day.
       25             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, my reason for pressing the
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        1    Court on this issue and asking the Court to allow the
        2    government to proceed under the terms of the protective order
        3    itself is the issue of the transcript of the calls.  I mean, so
        4    far the defendants have not come forward, for example, and
        5    said, here's our final or almost final version of the
        6    transcript of the redacted content, so here, government, tell
        7    us if you think this is accurate.  So right now, if anybody is
        8    going to be -- if the redacted content is coming in, either in
        9    the government's case or the defense case, or some combination
       10    of the two, the only transcript is that early rough draft.  And
       11    we need to have access to that as soon as possible to assess
       12    the state of that and figure out what that means as far as the
       13    use of those motions of the visits.
       14             MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, to reply to that last point,
       15    we do have transcripts that are basically ready to go of the
       16    prison telephone calls and the prison visits, which as soon as
       17    we resolve this issue, we can turn over to the government.  We
       18    can turn them over tomorrow, if it comes to that.  And we're
       19    preparing the final version of the entire Yousry materials to
       20    turn over to the government shortly.  We're just doing some
       21    cleanup work.  These are almost final drafts.  So yeah, we
       22    haven't forgotten about doing that.
       23             MR. TIGAR:  Our interest, your Honor, is somewhat more
       24    limited.  The parts in which we are interested are those in
       25    which Ms. Stewart or some other English speaker is speaking.
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        1    And as to that, there's not a transcript issue, there's just an
        2    authenticity of the tape issue, but we support the application
        3    Mr. Ruhnke has made.
        4             THE COURT:  I'm still inclined to hold off, Ms. Baker,
        5    on giving you access, giving the government trial team access,
        6    until, at the least, particularly with a representation that
        7    there are transcripts that can be reviewed so that they may not
        8    be -- the government have rough transcripts.  The defendant
        9    have transcripts with respect to the rest of the visits and
       10    calls.  There will be, you know, a process of trying to work it
       11    out between you, but holding off for a day to get a report from
       12    Mr. Ruhnke and Mr. Schmidt is certainly reasonable.
       13             That would lead me not to rule on the transcripts
       14    until -- not to rule on the actual tapes until I get a further
       15    report on where we are.  If the parties can give me anything
       16    they wish on the issue of whether there's sufficient evidence
       17    with respect to authenticity.
       18             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, we have briefed that.  I mean,
       19    I've really gone through all the law I know.
       20             THE COURT:  Okay, that's fine.
       21             MR. TIGAR:  And with respect to these other issues,
       22    the hearsay and the grand jury transcript, I don't intend to
       23    write your Honor a letter about that because we're not there
       24    yet.
       25             THE COURT:  Okay.
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        1             MR. TIGAR:  I mean, I think it's sufficient unto the
        2    day of the evidentiary issues thereof.  And in the meantime I
        3    will talk to Mr. Morvillo and Mr. Barkow and see if we can't
        4    get a little closer together.
        5             THE COURT:  Okay.  If I have to rule at this moment
        6    with respect to the relevance of the cross-examination of the
        7    agent with respect to the other FISA issue, I would be inclined
        8    to find that it is not relevant to the cross-examination of
        9    that witness.
       10             MR. TIGAR:  That would certainly affect Mr. Morvillo's
       11    negotiating position, your Honor, whether we discuss it.  I'll
       12    rethink it in light of your Honor's views.
       13             THE COURT:  Okay.  Anything else?  All right.  See you
       14    tomorrow at --
       15             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, would you like additional
       16    briefing on from the government on the authentication issue
       17    or --
       18             THE COURT:  Only if there are other cases that you
       19    think should be brought to my attention specifically with
       20    respect to this degree of testimony with respect to the
       21    authentication of tapes, any other cases that you think are
       22    directly on point.  And the basic principals of those I've
       23    already laid out.
       24             It actually does not seem to me that there is -- that
       25    the foundation is much different from the foundation in other
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        1    cases where you have a tape machine, a person authenticates the
        2    fact that they were there, they were present throughout the
        3    taping, there were no breaks, they tape-recorded everything.
        4    Here are the tapes that were put into the machine, that came
        5    out of the machine.  I initialed them.  I say, This is the --
        6    this is the tape.  Go listen to the tape.
        7             There is not an audibility question that's been raised
        8    that the tapes are so inaudible that the audible portion of the
        9    tapes make the tapes themselves unreliable.
       10             As to breaks in the chain of custody, that goes to
       11    weight rather than admissibility.  Here are the agents who
       12    actually were there and did the taping and initialed the tapes
       13    and brought them.
       14             Now, you can check if there are any cases that
       15    suggested that's insufficient or on those facts suggest that
       16    that's insufficient, so -- so that's the -- all of the general
       17    briefing with respect to the admissibility of tape recordings
       18    and the standards to be applied, I've gone over those same
       19    standards before.  The only issue is now with respect to these,
       20    are there any other cases that either side wants to proffer to
       21    me that this is -- these are sufficient or insufficient?  I
       22    leave that to you.
       23             MR. MORVILLO:  Just so I'm clear, you don't need
       24    additional briefing, repetitive briefing?
       25             THE COURT:  I think I've stated what the state of the
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        1    record is.
        2             MR. MORVILLO:  You don't need us to repeat what we've
        3    said in other briefs about authentication and admissibility.
        4             THE COURT:  No.  In fact, I went further in the sense
        5    of further research and cases when I ruled on the authenticity
        6    of the prior tape recordings.  And I'm satisfied that my
        7    opinions regarding the prior tape recordings fairly sets out
        8    the state of the law in the Second Circuit.  The only thing I
        9    said was if there are any other specific cases, facts, one way
       10    or the other the parties want to bring to my attention, you're
       11    welcome to do that.
       12             Anything else?
       13             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, I don't recall if you've ruled
       14    on my request that that letter that I ended up filing be under
       15    seal --
       16             THE COURT:  You have an extra copy of it, too?
       17             MS. BAKER:  That is an extra copy I handed up.  Would
       18    you like another one as well?
       19             THE COURT:  Sure, because I've endorsed the letter
       20    indicating that it can be filed, docketed.  So we'll docket
       21    that letter, and you've given me an extra copy.  Okay?
       22             MS. BAKER:  Thank you.
       23             THE COURT:  See you tomorrow morning at 9:00 o'clock.
       24    9:00 o'clock.
       25               (Trial adjourned to July 20, 2004, @ 9:00 a.m.)
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        1                          INDEX OF EXAMINATION
        2    Examination of:                               Page
        3    SCOTT KERNS (recalled)
        4    Direct By Ms. Baker  . . . . . . . . . . . .  3824
        5    Cross By Mr. Tigar   . . . . . . . . . . . .  3832
        6    Redirect By Ms. Baker  . . . . . . . . . . .  3856
        7    Recross By Mr. Tigar . . . . . . . . . . . .  3863
        8    Redirect By Ms. Baker  . . . . . . . . . . .  3865
        9    Recross By Mr. Tigar . . . . . . . . . . . .  3868
       10    CYNTHIA MCGRATH
       11    Direct By Mr. Morvillo . . . . . . . . . . .  3885
       12    Cross By Mr. Ruhnke  . . . . . . . . . . . .  3908
       13    Cross By Mr. Tigar . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3910
       14    RICHARD L. OSTROM
       15    Direct By Mr. Morvillo . . . . . . . . . . .  3919
       16    Cross By Mr. Tigar . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3928
       17    DAVID PRICE
       18    Direct By Mr. Morvillo . . . . . . . . . . .  3931
       19    Cross By Mr. Tigar . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3940
       20                                 o 0 o
       21
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                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           3999
        1                          GOVERNMENT EXHIBITS
        2    Exhibit No.                                  Received
        3     2031  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3811
        4     2002, 2003, 2010S, 2013, 2013T, 2020,
        5     2020T, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2023T, 2025,
        6     2026, 2028, 2029, 2029T, 2037, 2041,
        7     2046A, 2046B, 2046D, 2052, 2057, 2057T,
        8     2066, 2066T, 2067, 2068, 2070, 2070T-A,
        9     2073, 2083, 2083A . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3812
       10    1300, 1301, 1300L, 1301L . . . . . . . . . .  3871
       11     1760C   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   888
       12     1760D   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3899
       13     1761C   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3934
       14                                 o 0 o
       15
       16
       17
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                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300



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