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

This is the transcript of Day 25 of the proceeding and Day 16 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/


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        1    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
        1    SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
        2    -------------------------------------x
        2    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
        3
        3               v.                            S1 02 Cr. 395 (JGK)
        4
        4    AHMED ABDEL SATTAR, a/k/a "Abu Omar,"
        5    a/k/a "Dr. Ahmed," LYNNE STEWART,
        5    and MOHAMMED YOUSRY,
        6
        6                          Defendants.
        7    -------------------------------------x
        7
        8                                            July 20, 2004
        8                                            9:25 a.m.
        9
        9
       10
       10    Before:
       11                          HON. JOHN G. KOELTL
       11
       12                                            District Judge
       12
       13
       13                              APPEARANCES
       14
       14    DAVID N. KELLEY
       15         United States Attorney for the
       15         Southern District of New York
       16    ROBIN BAKER
       16    CHRISTOPHER MORVILLO
       17    ANTHONY BARKOW
       17    ANDREW DEMBER
       18         Assistant United States Attorneys
       18
       19    KENNETH A. PAUL
       19    BARRY M. FALLICK
       20         Attorneys for Defendant Sattar
       20
       21    MICHAEL TIGAR
       21    JILL R. SHELLOW-LAVINE
       22         Attorneys for Defendant Stewart
       22
       23    DAVID STERN
       23    DAVID A. RUHNKE
       24         Attorneys for Defendant Yousry
       25
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        1               (In open court; jury not present)
        2             THE COURT:  Good morning, all.  Please be seated.  We
        3    have a few minutes because Mr. Grate wanted to speak with the
        4    jurors.
        5             MR. GRATE:  Actually, I want to speak to you.
        6               (Off the record)
        7               (At the sidebar)
        8             THE COURT:  A couple of things.  Mr. Grate is going to
        9    talk to the jurors about going out to lunch and the
       10    arrangements for going out to lunch and menus and the like.
       11    We'll send the jurors out to lunch on an irregular basis, and
       12    I'll let you know on any day when the jurors are going to go
       13    out to lunch, and we'll have to take about a two-hour break
       14    over the lunch hour on a day that that happens.
       15             And I won't do anything over that lunch hour, so you
       16    can all take a long lunch.  Because I understand the security
       17    detail will have to assist in taking the jurors out to lunch.
       18             Second, the marshals raised with me whether I had any
       19    problem with jurors remaining in the hallway.  I mentioned to
       20    you earlier I've allowed the jurors to stretch their legs in
       21    the back corridor, and from time to time, at least one juror
       22    will sit outside the jury room going over the juror's notes.
       23    Other jurors may spend more time in the other room that we've
       24    provided which provides an additional rest room.  And my
       25    reaction to all of that is I have no problem with any of that.
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        1    The jury room is not so large that if individual jurors want to
        2    get away -- it's, I think, all to the good for the jurors to be
        3    able to do that.  And the back corridor is -- the marshals are
        4    in it, so to me, there's no problem.  But I wanted to raise it
        5    with you.
        6             MR. STERN:  Seems fine.
        7             THE COURT:  All righty.
        8               (In open court)
        9             THE COURT:  In going over my notes from yesterday, I
       10    had a question.  Also, I viewed my prior opinion and looked at
       11    the indictment, and I don't recall testimony yesterday with
       12    respect to any tape of the alleged July 13, 2001 prison visit.
       13             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, that's because the witness
       14    who can testify to that retired from the FBI recently and was
       15    on vacation yesterday and is flying here as we speak and will
       16    be here tomorrow to testify with respect to that meeting.
       17             THE COURT:  All right.  Well then, it's premature for
       18    me to start ruling on the rest of the tapes.
       19             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, if I may -- I don't know if
       20    the Court had other issues it wanted to get to before.  We had
       21    two things we wanted to raise briefly.  The first relates to
       22    the first piece of evidence that we wished to start with this
       23    morning, which is Government Exhibit 508 which the Court ruled
       24    as redacted is admissible.  And what we have done is, at this
       25    point, covered the portion that is to be redacted with a piece
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        1    of paper that is glued or taped on.  What we had intended to do
        2    today is when we publish this, not to hand it to the jury, but
        3    to have someone hold it up and show it to them.
        4             Defense counsel, especially defense counsel for Miss
        5    Stewart, raised an issue with respect to this because it is
        6    taped or glued on, and expressed concern that it could be
        7    peeled off and what was underneath could be seen.  So what we
        8    propose to do is use an exacto knife or something and cut it
        9    out and have that be what eventually goes back to the jury, and
       10    maybe even mount it on a board, so as to make it that it's
       11    still in the same size, it's an original newspaper article.
       12    But they seem to have a problem with that.  I'm not entirely
       13    sure, I think they want us to cut the article to pieces and
       14    rearrange it.  But we would like to present it this way, and
       15    we'd ask the Court to allow us to do that.  That was the first
       16    issue that I wanted to raise.
       17             THE COURT:  If there is -- if there's an issue, it's
       18    redacted so it can be removed, and if the parties would rather
       19    that it be physically cut out and put on a -- mounted on
       20    another piece of paper, that's fine.
       21             MR. BARKOW:  We actually don't have a problem with
       22    that, your Honor.  What I'm actually saying, and I don't
       23    completely understand what they propose that we do, but I think
       24    they want us to cut it and rearrange it in some way and not
       25    even hold it up to the jury this way at this point.
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        1             MS. SHELLOW-LAVINE:  Your Honor, our suggestion to
        2    Mr. Barkow had been because when you hold up the piece that's
        3    there, it's sort of like asking the jury not to notice that the
        4    hippopotamus is not there.  That merely moving the half
        5    columns, still leaving it in its full size so that it's
        6    obviously still full size from a newspaper, but therefore not
        7    with the huge white hole in the middle, a process which, with
        8    an exacto knife, shouldn't take very long and which doesn't
        9    remove the content.
       10             MR. BARKOW:  The point is, though, that there will be
       11    a huge white hole somewhere because there's only so much
       12    content on here once you remove the part that's redacted.  So
       13    no matter how we arrange it, there's going to be a space that
       14    is white.  As with any other redacted pieces of evidence, it
       15    seems an instruction about redaction, that it has no bearing or
       16    effect on a case would be sufficient because the jury would
       17    have no idea what was there.
       18             THE COURT:  I don't see a way of rearranging that.
       19    And rearranging it would interfere with the integrity of the
       20    original other than by just taking it out.
       21             MS. SHELLOW-LAVINE:  It would leave a blank column at
       22    the -- I believe reading right to left, the left-hand side of
       23    the page.  It's just changes the size of the hippopotamus.
       24             THE COURT:  I think I understand.  If the parties
       25    agree, the way of doing it is to take the second column from
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        1    the left or the second and third columns from the left and move
        2    them up so that the space is half at the top and half at the
        3    bottom of that column.
        4             MR. BARKOW:  I don't think that works, your Honor,
        5    because the bottom here, there's three, and then this piece
        6    here is on the bottom which is a separate -- I think this is
        7    actually the fatwa.  It cuts over into the fourth column from
        8    the left.  So even if one were to move these up, then this one
        9    here would still be dangling, so to speak, at the bottom, and
       10    then this would be white space here.  So the only way to make
       11    it compact would be to turn it on its side or something like
       12    that.  So it seems like the only way to keep it together is
       13    just to cut out the middle.
       14             THE COURT:  I think what Miss Shellow-Lavine was
       15    saying would be, you can take the second, third and fourth
       16    columns up to the beginning of the fatwa on the right and move
       17    those up.  It would reduce probably by a third the white space
       18    at the top and the white space to the bottom.  Since the
       19    assumption is that the jurors can't read Arabic in any event,
       20    if some Arabic is cut off in doing that, it will not be a
       21    problem.  We've left in Arabic as redacted from the
       22    translation.  But it just moves that space up and reduces the
       23    amount of uninterrupted white space.
       24             MR. BARKOW:  On the bottom, your Honor -- this is from
       25    Al-Quds Al-Arabi.
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        1             THE COURT:  You can talk about it, but another way of
        2    doing it is simply to take the second and third column in their
        3    completeness at the bottom and move those up.  It would --
        4    those two, just move it halfway up.  It will leave white space
        5    at the bottom of the second and third columns, but less white
        6    space at the top, and it will leave a column of white space in
        7    what would otherwise be the fourth column.
        8             MR. BARKOW:  I guess the other issue is we had
        9    intended to start with this.  Can we hold this up to jury this
       10    way and then do the cutting and pasting later?
       11             THE COURT:  It won't take long.
       12             MR. BARKOW:  Can we take a break?
       13             THE COURT:  Would everyone agree with that as a
       14    reasonable way to present it.
       15             MS. SHELLOW-LAVINE:  Thank you, your Honor.  That
       16    would be good for us.
       17             THE COURT:  Okay.
       18             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, may I be excused for a
       19    minute?
       20             THE COURT:  Sure.
       21             MR. BARKOW:  The other thing we wanted to raise -- and
       22    obviously, as we said yesterday, as Ms. Baker said yesterday,
       23    we can't take a position on -- this relates to the redactions
       24    of the prison visits.  We obviously can't take a position on it
       25    yet because we don't know what's in there.  But we just wanted
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        1    to make the Court aware of the logistical issue as we see it
        2    now.
        3             Our versions of these transcripts of prison visits are
        4    essentially ready.  There won't be really any really
        5    significant, if any, changes from the last changes, what we
        6    were to offer into evidence.  But obviously the remainder, the
        7    part defendants proposed yesterday to offer into evidence, that
        8    is, the parts that were redacted or minimized, are not ready.
        9    And we don't know how much was redacted because we're not aware
       10    of the content, but we believe it's several hours.
       11             It took us years really to get the parts that we want
       12    to offer into evidence ready.  And we think that it would
       13    take -- we don't really know, but we think it would take weeks
       14    to get the rest ready in a similar fashion.  That included
       15    transcription in a final form, enhancement of the audio on that
       16    part, and -- excuse me, I guess the enhancement is done for the
       17    whole part, but the transcription then is the issue of the
       18    remaining parts.  To finalize that could take some time.  We
       19    don't know how long.
       20             And we can't take a position on yet as what our view
       21    is as to whether those other parts are admissible, but we just
       22    wanted to make the Court aware, and if it turns out that we
       23    don't agree or we don't believe that those parts are
       24    admissible, then we might be in a position where we
       25    unfortunately might need -- not have anything to do for
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        1    sometime.  And we think that it might be -- and again, we don't
        2    have a -- we're not taking a position on this yet, but the --
        3    it might be quicker and -- to at that point engage in a
        4    completeness analysis of whatever parts the defendants might
        5    try to cross designate than it would be to have the government
        6    go back and finalize the entirety of those redacted parts,
        7    which we do think would take some decent amount of time, though
        8    we don't know how much.  So we just want to do put that out on
        9    the table so the court's aware of what we see as a logistical
       10    hurdle we might be approaching.
       11             THE COURT:  There's nothing for me to rule on right
       12    now.  I just -- there are a couple of practical suggestions
       13    that I make to you:
       14             Your position, Mr. Barkow, is somewhat inconsistent
       15    with Ms. Baker's position yesterday.  Not from a legal
       16    position, but from a strictly practical position that it may be
       17    in -- that the government would not want to put in parts of the
       18    transcripts, and if the defendants sought to introduce the
       19    other parts as part of their own case, the government would
       20    seek to put in the whole.
       21             MR. BARKOW:  What I am saying is, I guess, correct, is
       22    slightly different than what Ms. Baker said yesterday, and the
       23    explanation is last night we went back and talked about this in
       24    some more detail and --
       25             THE COURT:  But you should ask yourself if the best
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        1    solution for all parties is to have all of the transcripts
        2    admitted at the same time, how that could best be accomplished,
        3    if it can be accomplished?  That's the first point.  And it
        4    really is, from a practical standpoint, not from a legal
        5    standpoint -- I realize there are all of the issues with
        6    respect first of all to the stipulation; and secondly with
        7    respect to a completeness analysis, and you could introduce
        8    those as part of your own case and take all of the risks that
        9    Ms. Baker want to do avoid yesterday.
       10             The other observation that I would make to you is you
       11    should, as soon as this issue is, as I expect will be, resolved
       12    quickly, with respect to Mr. Ruhnke's letter, it may be that
       13    the defendants say they've been working on these transcripts
       14    for a long time, and they've had access to this.  The
       15    government may or may not agree with those transcripts.  I know
       16    the government's been working on their transcripts for a long
       17    time.  But the government may eventually think that the defense
       18    transcripts or the defense portions are just dandy.
       19             MR. BARKOW:  I guess the problem is if they were to
       20    give us their proposed transcripts we would need to ask the
       21    same people to verify the accuracy of those that we would need
       22    to have transcribed.  And while that might be a faster process,
       23    we, obviously, don't think we would be able to figure that all
       24    out, although I know Ms. Stewart's proposal relates mostly to
       25    English.
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        1             THE COURT:  And you also have it within your power,
        2    unlike really the portions that you offer as part of your case,
        3    if the defendants seek essentially to have cross-designations
        4    and they say, Okay, just listen to the rest of the tape, and
        5    here's our proffer with respect to the transcripts, you know,
        6    from a practical standpoint, you certainly should ask yourself
        7    the question:  Is there anything in those translations that we
        8    care about?
        9             MR. BARKOW:  Right.  Your Honor, we're not taking a
       10    position now because we don't know what's in there.  We just
       11    wanted to let the Court -- because yesterday Ms. Baker said
       12    what she said and because last night we talked about it, we
       13    wanted to make the Court aware that that wasn't entirely where
       14    we're at right now.
       15             THE COURT:  I know.  But then also, when I say that
       16    the position you're taking today is different from the position
       17    Ms. Baker took yesterday, don't look at me quizzically as
       18    though you don't understand what I'm saying.
       19             MR. BARKOW:  No, no.  I agree, your Honor.  What I'm
       20    saying today is different than what Ms. Baker said yesterday.
       21    So my facial expression was -- I don't know what I was
       22    expressing with that.
       23             We're not taking a position right now.  And we can't
       24    until we know what's in there.  But what motivated us today in
       25    raising this to your Honor was, one, just to put on your
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        1    Honor's radar screen the logistical issue that we saw perhaps
        2    coming down the road.  And secondly to raise it because --
        3             THE COURT:  As the logistical issue, let me just point
        4    out -- I mean, the number of -- the amount of additional
        5    evidence which is admitted in terms of the telephone calls
        6    alone are --
        7             MR. BARKOW:  Well, at this point your Honor, actually,
        8    we've estimated and I don't know that the reading of those
        9    calls will take all that long.
       10             THE COURT:  Including 1300 and 1301?
       11             MR. BARKOW:  The transcripts for the 1300 disk are not
       12    entirely complete yet.  And so we don't have an exact or
       13    reliable estimate of how long it will take to presents those.
       14    Of the remaining ones on the 1000 DVD, there are a number that
       15    would take us up to -- and this is the second issue I wanted to
       16    raise, that it will take us up to, for not chronologically, the
       17    February 21000 prison visit.  And it was our strong desire to
       18    present this case to the extent possible in some sort of
       19    chronology.  And the logistical issue with respect to the
       20    prison visits, this says what we discussed last night, we fear
       21    might substantially disrupt our order of presentation.  So
       22    although there are some calls -- if we were to go through for
       23    example on the 1000 DVD to the end, we would have calls I think
       24    from 2001, and that is simply not the way that we would like to
       25    present the evidence.  And we think that -- and we recognize
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        1    the issues with respect to the use of jury time and the like,
        2    but we also think that we're being -- we've been put into a
        3    situation here where a day or two before we wanted to present
        4    this February 2000 prison visit, this issue has been put onto
        5    the table by the defendants, and we don't think that our
        6    presentation of the case should entirely bear the brunt of what
        7    we view as a rather late clearly stated position by them.
        8             MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, I was able yesterday to write
        9    this off as a miscommunication.  But for the last two weeks
       10    we've been talking with government representatives including
       11    Mr. Barkow about playing prison visits and phone calls from
       12    start to finish.  It is difficult for me to understand how that
       13    was misunderstood.  But I'll accept that it was misunderstood.
       14    So we'll leave it as a misunderstanding, it should not be left
       15    as, this is what the defense has done to the poor government.
       16    I'm willing to leave it as a miscommunication.  I'm not willing
       17    to leave it as a case of the defense somehow springing a trap
       18    on the unwary government.
       19             MR. BARKOW:  I'm not suggesting that.
       20             THE COURT:  Stop.
       21             MR. RUHNKE:  That it would be a week or two before
       22    they started to play the visits.  And that is one of the
       23    reasons the discussions were kind of ongoing in an unurgent
       24    way.
       25             I'm not asking your Honor to decide anything, I'm just
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        1    putting forth a different perspective.
        2             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, I'm sorry.  I'm not
        3    suggesting that it was a trap.  I'm only saying that -- and
        4    I'll accept that it was a miscommunication, because I think
        5    that subsequent conversations between us and Mr. Ruhnke have
        6    made clear that, at least in our conversations with him, we
        7    were not on the same page as to what was going on.  And it was
        8    a misunderstanding, I think, on both sides.
        9             But, because of that misunderstanding, we're in this
       10    position now.  And that is all I meant to say, is that we don't
       11    think that our order of presentation should bear -- entirely
       12    bear the brunt of that misunderstanding.  And I don't mean to
       13    say that Mr. Ruhnke misled us, and I don't mean to say that
       14    there was any bad faith at all in what Mr. Ruhnke was doing in
       15    his discussions with me.  But I really do think, reflecting
       16    back on the conversations I had with him, we completely
       17    misunderstood each other, and that's unfortunate, but that's
       18    where we are now.
       19             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, I don't want to get into the
       20    middle of this one, but I have a practical problem:  I spoke to
       21    Mr. Dember this morning about a witness named Noel Herold who
       22    did the enhancement on the prison tapes.  And I had agreed with
       23    Mr. Dember that I was not going to make an issue out of, you
       24    know, You enhanced these first; you didn't enhance those; and
       25    these were differently treated than those -- because I thought
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        1    that the whole issue, who was going to present what and how,
        2    was going to be resolved basically all at once.  There's no
        3    reason for me to try to make some untoward suggestion about the
        4    government's desire to limit what the jury hears if indeed
        5    that's not what's going to happen, and I'd like to stick to
        6    that.
        7             So if there's going to be some sea change in what I
        8    have thought was, you know, an orderly process towards a
        9    resolution, then we should know it.  I take it, from what I've
       10    heard, it's not.
       11             I would comment that, chronologically, we started with
       12    Mr. Fitzgerald and Mr. Francisco, and then we had a playing of
       13    a tape of a reading of the SAM of Sheikh Rahman in May of 2001.
       14    So the chronological sweep has at times for other reasons been
       15    interrupted without noticeable harm to the integrity of
       16    anything.
       17             THE COURT:  That's a fair point.  It makes so much
       18    sense to try and get these done all at the same time.  For the
       19    reasons that Ms. Baker said yesterday, and for the reasons that
       20    defendants have said.
       21             It's also -- I don't want to go over the
       22    correspondence and conversations between the parties, but on
       23    the level of miscommunication, I place some weight on what
       24    Mr. Ruhnke says about when he expected the prison tapes to be
       25    played.  Which was not like, you know, today or quickly.  That
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        1    there was going to be a little time.
        2             At the same time, I ask myself when were the
        3    defendants going to come forward with their transcripts and the
        4    like for the remainder of the prison recordings that were not
        5    being offered by the government.  And I also ask myself -- I
        6    know that these final transcripts are almost the same as the
        7    last set of transcripts that the defendants have had for
        8    sometime.
        9             At the same time, I place some credence on what
       10    Mr. Ruhnke said about when the final transcripts that were
       11    actually going to be offered were given because it reflects
       12    something about when in the orderly presentation of the case it
       13    was expected that the prison recordings would be read or
       14    introduced.
       15             So it really behooves the parties to try and move this
       16    along, and, Mr. Ruhnke, it would be really useful for you to
       17    not only write the letter to Mr. Schmidt but talk to
       18    Mr. Schmidt.
       19             MR. RUHNKE:  I sent the letter, I faxed the letter
       20    relatively late last night.  I intend to call him this morning
       21    or as soon as I can practicably do that.
       22             THE COURT:  Because I really have to -- if a response
       23    is not promptly forthcoming, I'd have to look at the order and
       24    ask myself whether I should simply follow the order and
       25    stipulation to move this along.  Because there are procedures
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        1    that the parties have agreed to and that I had ordered, and a
        2    copy of that order I'm confident was sent to, I believe,
        3    counsel for Sheikh Abdel Rahman at the time.
        4             MR. RUHNKE:  I think so, your Honor, yes.
        5             THE COURT:  And as to timing, it seems to me that the
        6    the parties are moving the case along with some expedition in
        7    terms of blanket examinations and stipulations and where we are
        8    in terms of trial days and the evidence.  I could be wrong on
        9    that, and it may change day-to-day.  But that's no reason that
       10    we shouldn't continue to move along in an expeditious fashion.
       11             Anything else?  Is the -- the article is being done?
       12    I haven't double-checked the -- checked the redactions, but
       13    they appeared to be in accordance with my opinion.  Redacted
       14    another three paragraphs.
       15             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, we will check again.
       16    Ms. Baker prepared that exhibit.  I have not actually examined
       17    it.  So I cannot say myself that it has those other paragraphs
       18    taken out, but --
       19             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, I'm not sure if they've
       20    been taken out in the Arabic, but I know they've been taken out
       21    in the translation.
       22             THE COURT:  No -- in the translation?
       23             MR. MORVILLO:  Yes.
       24             THE COURT:  Yes.  Anything else?
       25             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, Miss Grant informs us it's
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT1
        1    going to take about a half hour to prepare this final copy of
        2    the exhibit.  That was about 15 minutes ago.
        3             MS. GRANT:  I'll go back at 10:25.
        4             MR. MORVILLO:  10:25.
        5             THE COURT:  Okay.  Anything else for me?  We'll take
        6    10 minutes and Mr. Ruhnke can make his call.
        7             MR. RUHNKE:  Thank you.
        8               (Continued on next page)
        9
       10
       11
       12
       13
       14
       15
       16
       17
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2
        1             (In open court; jury not present)
        2             THE COURT:  Good morning.
        3             Please be seated all.
        4             MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, I can bring you up to date
        5    quickly.  I spoke with Mr. Schmidt during the break.  He is
        6    aware and understands the situation and the need for a quick
        7    answer.  He is going to speak with Mr. Clark and confer with
        8    him and then we will talk some more.  He is going to get back
        9    to us.
       10             THE COURT:  All right.
       11             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, Mr. Morvillo went back to the
       12    litigation support section of our office to bring back the
       13    exhibit as soon as it's done.  He hasn't made it back yet.
       14             Mr. Dember just stepped out to go to the rest room.
       15             THE COURT:  Mr. Barkow, with respect to 508, there was
       16    an issue that I left with you with respect to the translation,
       17    whether that was the translation.
       18             MR. BARKOW:  There is a stipulation, your Honor.  Yes,
       19    there is a stipulation that is agreed to on that.
       20             THE COURT:  Okay.
       21             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, can I hand up what the
       22    redaction looks like?
       23             THE COURT:  Surely.  Show it to defense counsel
       24    please.
       25             MR. MORVILLO:  Ms. Shellow-Lavine said it was lovely.
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             47KSSAT2
        1             THE COURT:  Okay.
        2             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, as a result of the delay
        3    here, it's my understanding that we have a witness who is ready
        4    to go right now who was hoping to catch a train this afternoon
        5    to go back to Washington.  So Ms. Baker is walking over with
        6    him and they should be here in a minute.
        7             THE COURT:  All right.
        8             While we have a minute, let me raise another issue.
        9             I have asked the government to provide an exhibit list
       10    and there was an updated exhibit list with the dates when
       11    documents are in evidence and I appreciate that, and then there
       12    was an amendment to the last few pages.
       13             I would ask, in view of the number of exhibits in the
       14    case, for defense counsel also to check the list on an ongoing
       15    basis so that you are all on board with respect to the same
       16    list.
       17             MS. SHELLOW-LAVINE:  Your Honor, I have been checking.
       18    As we receive it on a rolling basis I try and check theirs
       19    against mine.
       20             THE COURT:  Great.  Thank you.
       21             And I don't know how often the government is going to
       22    give me an updated list.
       23             MR. MORVILLO:  How often would you like one, your
       24    Honor?  We can do it on a daily basis if you like.  We can do
       25    it on a weekly basis.
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             47KSSAT2
        1             I am told we don't update our list every day but we
        2    can certainly do it on a weekly basis.
        3             THE COURT:  A weekly basis is fine.
        4             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, may we bring the witness
        5    in?
        6             THE COURT:  Yes.
        7             All right, are we ready to bring in the jury?
        8             MS. BAKER:  Yes, your Honor.
        9             (In open court; jury present)
       10             THE COURT:  Please be seated all.
       11             Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.  Good to see you
       12    all.
       13             Again, ladies and gentlemen, as I told you before, if
       14    there seems to be some delay in bringing you out in the
       15    morning, there are things that I take care of before you come
       16    out and I hope that it expedites the time that you are sitting
       17    in the jury box.  I understand the chairs are not all that
       18    comfortable, so if I can take care of those issues and use your
       19    time better while you are in the jury box, I try to do that.
       20    So I appreciate your indulgence.
       21             The government may call its next witness.
       22             MS. BAKER:  The government calls Noel Herold.
       23     NOEL HEROLD,
       24         called as a witness by the Government,
       25         having been duly sworn, testified as follows:
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    DIRECT EXAMINATION
        1    47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        2    BY MS. BAKER:
        3    Q.  Mr. Herold, the acoustics in this room are not very good,
        4    so please pull the microphone towards you a little bit and try
        5    to make sure to speak into it and keep your voice up.
        6             Who do you work for?
        7    A.  I am a contractor for the Federal Bureau of Investigation
        8    at Quantico, Virginia.
        9    Q.  What facility of the Federal Bureau of Investigation do you
       10    work at?
       11    A.  It's called the Engineering Research Facility.
       12    Q.  How long have you been working as a contractor for the FBI?
       13    A.  Since June of 1996.
       14    Q.  In very general terms, what kind of work do you do for the
       15    FBI as a contractor?
       16    A.  Well, before I was a contractor I was an employee with the
       17    FBI for almost 27 years.  And I supervised -- I worked in the
       18    field and came to the lab and worked in firearms identification
       19    and then I eventually moved to the electronics engineering, and
       20    I have been in engineering for almost 20 years, actually almost
       21    25 years, and I supervise cases and work cases and supervise
       22    people underneath me.  When I became a contractor I no longer
       23    had the supervisory responsibilities but I continued to work
       24    cases.
       25    Q.  Let me ask, and let's back up and come forward
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    chronologically.
        2             What is your college degree in?
        3    A.  I have a Bachelor of Arts degree in atomic and nuclear
        4    physics.
        5    Q.  What did you do before you joined the FBI?
        6    A.  I worked for Grumman Aerospace for approximately 5 years on
        7    the project Apollo primary guidance and navigation subsystem.
        8    Q.  And in what field or capacity were you working for Grumman?
        9    A.  Well, I was considered a physicist in the test and support
       10    of the guidance equipment on the Apollo lunar module.
       11    Q.  In what year did you first start working for the FBI?
       12    A.  I worked for them in January of 1970.
       13    Q.  Were you a special agent for the FBI initially?
       14    A.  Yes.
       15    Q.  Where were you assigned initially as a special agent for
       16    the FBI?
       17    A.  I was assigned to the Cincinnati office where I worked
       18    fugitive cases and then I was assigned to the New York office
       19    where I worked organized crime.
       20    Q.  Where were you assigned next with the FBI?
       21    A.  Then I was assigned to the Laboratory Division, Firearms
       22    Identification Unit.
       23    Q.  How long did you do that?
       24    A.  I was there for approximately 3-1/2 years.
       25    Q.  Basically were you doing the examination of firearms, guns,
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    in that position?
        2    A.  That is right.
        3    Q.  And when did you begin working in the radio engineering
        4    section, or now the engineering section, of the FBI?
        5    A.  It was approximately May of 1975 I started working there.
        6    Q.  And what sorts of work have you done over the time that you
        7    worked in that capacity both while you were employed by the FBI
        8    and now in your capacity as a contractor?
        9    A.  Well, I worked on of course firearms and I worked on
       10    testing silencers because if the device is a silencer for a
       11    firearm that is a federal crime.  So we have to determine
       12    whether it is or not.  I have worked on acoustics.  I worked on
       13    video enhancement, audio enhancement, copyrighted video and
       14    audio.  I have done some instructing and I worked on
       15    authenticity of audio and video as well.
       16    Q.  What, if any, specialized training have you received that
       17    relates to the work that you do with audio and video?
       18    A.  Well, as to firearms primarily the training is with an
       19    experienced examiner.  You work on cases with them and you
       20    understand how things are done and what kind of problems you
       21    are faced with.  And in addition to that there are many books
       22    and there are many symposiums that are provided by various
       23    companies, like Panasonic and Sony, that give us instruction.
       24    Q.  Have you previously testified in any courts as an expert in
       25    the handling or processing of audio and/or video?
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                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    A.  Yes, I have.
        2    Q.  About how many times?
        3    A.  Roughly 90 to 100 times.
        4    Q.  In what sorts of courts generally where?
        5    A.  Well, I testified in state court, local court, federal
        6    court, and international courts.
        7    Q.  Have you lectured or given any training to anyone else in
        8    fields relating to the examination and processing of audio or
        9    video?
       10    A.  Yes, I have lectured to our new agents, classes that come
       11    into the academy, and to the TTAs, technically trained agents,
       12    who come back from the field and they receive training from us
       13    on technical matters.
       14             I have also provided some training and lectures to
       15    NATIA, the organization that is the National Association of
       16    Technical Investigators.
       17    Q.  That was an acronym N-A-T-I-A?
       18    A.  Yes, it is.
       19    Q.  Have you had any articles or other writings published on
       20    subjects that relate to the examination or processing of audio
       21    or video?
       22    A.  Yes, I have had a couple of articles published, one on
       23    audio copy writing and one on video, and another one on setting
       24    up video and audio laboratories for police.
       25    Q.  So in total for about how many years have you conducted
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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                                                                           4025
             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    examinations and been involved in processing audio and video
        2    recordings?
        3    A.  Oh, almost 30 years.
        4    Q.  Can you estimate at all how many audio and video recordings
        5    you have examined and processed during that period of time?
        6    A.  Well, it probably averaged about 3-1/2 tapes per case and I
        7    work close to 200 cases a year.  So if you do the math on that,
        8    it's thousands of tapes.
        9             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, the government offers Mr.
       10    Herold as an expert in the examination and processing of audio
       11    and video recordings.
       12             MR. TIGAR:  May I inquire briefly, your Honor?
       13             THE COURT:  Yes.
       14    VOIR DIRE EXAMINATION
       15    BY MR. TIGAR:
       16    Q.  Mr. Herold, are you going to be telling us today about
       17    analogue originals or digital originals?
       18    A.  These original tapes are analogue tapes.
       19    Q.  And that has been the field in which you have been doing
       20    most of your work over the years, correct?
       21    A.  Well, that is the field that everybody has been doing most
       22    of the work because digital is rather new and, like everybody
       23    else, I have been introduced to the new digital world.
       24    Q.  So you are not here to talk to us at all about any digital
       25    originals, correct?
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    A.  Not digital originals, no.
        2             MR. TIGAR:  We have no objection, your Honor.  He is
        3    an expert as far as we are concerned.
        4             THE COURT:  All right.  With that consent, that is
        5    fine.
        6    DIRECT EXAMINATION (Continued)
        7    BY MS. BAKER:
        8    Q.  Mr. Herold, let me ask you now about the work that you
        9    performed in connection with this case.
       10             Did you process certain audio and video recordings in
       11    connection with this case?
       12    A.  Yes, I did.
       13             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I approach the witness?
       14             THE COURT:  Yes.
       15    Q.  Mr. Herold, I have placed there on the witness stand next
       16    to you 26 tapes that are marked for identification as
       17    Government Exhibits 1700 through 1725.
       18             Did you have an opportunity yesterday evening to
       19    examine each of those tapes more closely?
       20    A.  Yes, I did.
       21    Q.  Based on your examination of those tapes yesterday evening,
       22    did you recognize them?
       23    A.  Yes, I did.
       24    Q.  What are they?
       25    A.  These are tapes that were received by me in our engineering
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    laboratory in the course of business in a sealed envelope.
        2    Q.  How is it that you were able to recognize each of them as a
        3    tape that you received?
        4    A.  My initials and laboratory number and date are on each
        5    tape.
        6             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, I would request permission to
        7    display as an example Government Exhibit 1700 on the ELMO, the
        8    label.
        9             MR. TIGAR:  No objection, your Honor.
       10             THE COURT:  All right.  We can do that.
       11    Q.  I think I am going to have to hold it here for the moment.
       12             Mr. Herold, would you explain which markings on this
       13    label were made by you that allow you to recognize the tape?
       14    A.  Well, the Q11, my initials, the laboratory number, and
       15    under that there is a date.
       16    Q.  Immediately to the right of the Q11 there is a little
       17    marking.  You indicated those are your initials?
       18    A.  Yes, and they are my initials NH compressed.
       19             MS. BAKER:  I am sorry, your Honor, I apologize for
       20    interrupting the witness.  I didn't realize it wasn't displayed
       21    to the jury.
       22             May we do that?
       23             THE COURT:  Yes.
       24             MS. BAKER:  Thank you.
       25    Q.  I am sorry, would you repeat what you said about which
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    markings are yours?
        2    A.  Well, the Q11 is our laboratory sequential number and it
        3    was assigned under the laboratory number.  My initials follow
        4    the Q11, and then there is a laboratory number along with my
        5    lab initials following that.  And underneath is the date at
        6    which I opened the tape.
        7    Q.  And you were about to explain the little marking next to
        8    the Q11 and how that represents it.
        9    A.  When we worked at firearms we had to mark tiny fragments of
       10    metal and tiny pieces of cartridge cases and so we compressed
       11    our initials so we can make them out, and that is just the way
       12    I did it.  I compressed the N and the H together.  It's kind of
       13    laying on its side but that is an H.
       14    Q.  Let me ask you about the left-hand most markings that you
       15    put there, the Q11.
       16             Was each of these original tapes that you received and
       17    worked with assigned a different Q number?
       18    A.  When a case comes into the Laboratory Division, whether
       19    it's a state, local or federal case, it's assigned a bureau
       20    file number and that file number follows the case throughout.
       21    So if there are additional submissions that file number is
       22    always referred to.
       23             So this case was assigned a file number and when they
       24    looked at the submissions that had previously been submitted on
       25    this case, the last submissions preceded Q11 so the next
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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                                                                           4029
             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    submission would have been Q11.  So Q11 was assigned to that
        2    and you might have Q11, Q12, Q13 and there might be additional
        3    submissions on some other point on some other venue, and then
        4    that is supplied by the Evidence Control Group in the lab and
        5    they are the ones that assign all the Q numbers.  We simply go
        6    by whatever their assignment is.
        7    Q.  Within anyone FBI case number, should each Q number be
        8    different so that each piece of original evidence has a
        9    different identifying Q number?
       10    A.  It can.  Sometimes they can get crossed up and sometimes
       11    you will have the same Q numbers assigned over again but that Q
       12    number goes to that particular lab number, which is a 9 digit
       13    followed by the 2 letters, and so that makes it unique.  Even
       14    if you had a repetition of the Q numbers it would still apply
       15    to that particular lab number.  So that makes it unique.
       16    Q.  And if the FBI assigns more than one case number to things
       17    that eventually end up as part of the same prosecution, can you
       18    end up with items in as evidence in the same prosecution that
       19    have the same Q numbers because they had different FBI file
       20    numbers or laboratory numbers?
       21    A.  That is conceivable, yes.
       22    Q.  To your knowledge, in this series of 26 tapes that I am
       23    asking you about now, does each tape have a different Q number?
       24    A.  Yes, they do.
       25    Q.  Are all of those Q numbers sequential or are there some
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                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    gaps?
        2    A.  There are some gaps but they are sequential as to how at
        3    the time that they were received, so a tape with a higher Q
        4    number was received later than a tape with a lower Q number.
        5    Q.  And as far as gaps in Q numbers and how that can occur,
        6    other than possibly misnumbering, could it occur because a
        7    particular item came in and was handled by someone else in a
        8    laboratory other than you?
        9    A.  Sure.  It could have been assigned to somebody in serology,
       10    firearms, hairs and fibers, even the fingerprint division.  So
       11    it could have had its own Q number and by the time you see the
       12    next Q that you are going to work on you may have gone through
       13    several Q numbers.
       14    Q.  As part of the work that you did with these 26 tapes, did
       15    you watch and listen to each of the tapes when you received it?
       16    A.  Yes.  Each tape was played back in the proper play-back
       17    system and the video and the audio signals were monitored and
       18    determined what types of signals they were.
       19    Q.  Generally speaking, are these recordings recordings of
       20    people talking?
       21    A.  Yes, generally speaking these are recordings of a
       22    conversation with a number of people and the camera view is
       23    from basically overhead of the participants.
       24    Q.  So these were in-person conversations as opposed to
       25    telephone or some other method?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    A.  Yes, these are in-person conversations.
        2    Q.  Now, I am going to ask you in detail what you did but let
        3    me ask you first the overall purpose.
        4             With respect to the audibility of these recordings and
        5    the words spoken in the recordings, what was the purpose of the
        6    processing of the recordings that you did?
        7    A.  In this particular case these recordings were made in the
        8    same environment, that is, the same room, microphones in
        9    relation to the people in the room, and the objects in the room
       10    were the same, it didn't vary, not significantly at least.  And
       11    the audio quality of these conversations is very good.
       12    Compared to what we normally get it was very good.
       13             And I would rate the intelligibility of these
       14    conversations as good and the signal and noise ratio maybe fair
       15    to good only because at times some of the participants were
       16    talking very low and you have to strain to listen.  But the
       17    intelligibility was still good.
       18    Q.  And what was your purpose in processing the recordings?
       19    What was the goal of that processing?
       20    A.  The goal in enhancing either video or audio, in the case of
       21    audio, the idea is to render the conversations more
       22    intelligible and you have two elements in a conversation.  You
       23    have the signal, the conversation you want to hear, and you
       24    have everything else that interferes, and that is noise.  And
       25    so we always strive to improve the signal-to-noise ratio when
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    we work on enhancing audio.
        2    Q.  Are all 26 of these tapes of the same type, the original
        3    tapes?
        4    A.  Yes, they are.
        5    Q.  What type is that?
        6    A.  These are all high 8 millimeter video cassette tapes.
        7    Q.  Is high 8 millimeter a good quality original to make a
        8    recording?
        9    A.  Yes, high 8 is one of the higher quality of the analogue
       10    recordings, very good quality.
       11    Q.  Now, you said that you watched and listened to the original
       12    tapes.  What was your purpose in doing that?
       13    A.  Well, my purpose in listening to the tapes is to determine
       14    what types of noise are present and what type of electronic
       15    enhancement or filtering we can do to perhaps make the
       16    conversations even more intelligible.
       17    Q.  As a result of your watching and listening to each of the
       18    tapes, were you able to determine whether each of the tapes was
       19    in fact an original tape?
       20    A.  Yes.  I examined each of the tapes and through the video
       21    and audio signals determined they were original recordings.
       22    Q.  If any of the original tapes had been edited or altered in
       23    any way, would you have been able to detect that through your
       24    examination of the tapes?
       25    A.  Yes, any editing on an original tape would be immediately
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    obvious.
        2    Q.  Could you explain a little bit how you would be able to
        3    detect that?
        4    A.  In order to alter -- and bear in mind these tapes are made
        5    continuously at the time they are made.  They started, the
        6    conversation ensues, and they are stopped.  In between there
        7    are no stops and starts.  So if you were to alter the tape you
        8    would have to disrupt that flow of information, that video and
        9    the audio.  It has to be disrupted in order to take something
       10    out or insert something, whatever you were going to do.  And
       11    there was absolutely nothing like that on these tapes at all.
       12    They were pristine, continuous tapes.  Any disruptions is
       13    immediately obvious.
       14    Q.  And is that true for each of these original tapes marked as
       15    Government Exhibits 1700 through 1725?
       16    A.  Yes, it is.
       17    Q.  Now, you started to tell us a few minutes ago about your
       18    opinion about the quality of the original recordings.  Let me
       19    ask you a little bit more about that.
       20             The opinion that you were expressing, is that as to
       21    the audibility or how clearly one can hear the spoken words in
       22    the recordings?
       23    A.  Yes.
       24    Q.  What scale or what categories do you use when you are
       25    rating the quality of original recordings?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    A.  Well, I just have three scales -- poor, fair and good.
        2    Q.  Now, you said a little bit earlier that in terms of I think
        3    you said intelligibility that you rated these 26 original
        4    recordings as good in terms of intelligibility?
        5    A.  Yes.
        6    Q.  So that is the highest of your three categories?
        7    A.  Yes.
        8    Q.  And then you made reference to I believe you said the
        9    signal-to-noise ratio.
       10    A.  That is right.
       11    Q.  Would you explain a little more what that means?
       12    A.  In any environment where you are making a recording of an
       13    audio tape, an audio recording, one of the factors that
       14    interferes with the quality or the intelligibility of the
       15    recording are the acoustics of the room.  For example, this
       16    room here has a lot of marble wall and those marble walls are
       17    reflective of sound.
       18             So if I have a microphone and I have somebody I want
       19    to record and their voice is coming directly to the mic., that
       20    is what I want to hear.  But the voices are omnidirectional, so
       21    your voice goes also to the ceiling, the walls, and the floor
       22    and it bounces off and it comes back to the mic. eventually
       23    from these reflected surfaces.  But because the path is longer
       24    the time is longer and so these signals that come to the mic.
       25    are called out-of-phase signals.
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        1             And in a small room where there isn't a lot of
        2    reflective surfaces it tends to make the voice a little muddy
        3    and of course even muddier if the convoluted noises or the
        4    noises reflected off surfaces are even greater.
        5             An example of a terrible situation is you have
        6    probably been in a stairwell that has nothing but concrete and
        7    steal around it and you are trying to talk to somebody and you
        8    can hardly hear each other talk because all the sounds are
        9    coming off the walls and ceilings and steps and it's hard to
       10    hear, and that is called convoluted noise and interferes with
       11    the intelligibility of what you are trying to hear.  And that
       12    is true of almost all environments unless you are sitting in an
       13    anti-echo chamber, and that is a surface with no reflective
       14    surfaces at all, and then you have pristine conversations with
       15    the mic. and that is ideal.  But that is not the real world.
       16    Q.  Now, I believe you said earlier that in terms of the
       17    signal-to-noise ratio you rated these 26 original recordings as
       18    fair to good?
       19    A.  Yes, the signal-to-noise ratio was fair to good and mainly
       20    another factor is that if somebody talks at a very low volume
       21    you may have trouble, you have to lean in to listen to them so
       22    you want to turn the volume up basically to hear what they are
       23    saying because they are talking low.  And that would really be
       24    the genesis of my opinions that some of the signals were fair
       25    because the fact the signal was low and it was getting down
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    into the noise, the floor noise we call it of the audio, but
        2    still above it enough that it was fair.
        3    Q.  Based on your experience over the years and the large
        4    number of other recordings that you have dealt with, how do
        5    these original recordings compare?
        6    A.  These are great.  We get some ghastly recordings in and
        7    these compared to those are fabulous.
        8    Q.  What form of audio or in what form is the audio recorded on
        9    these original high 8 tapes which are marked as Government
       10    Exhibits 1700 through 1725?
       11    A.  About 15 years ago, 15 to 20 years ago, Sony came up with a
       12    system to improve the audio quality of their Betacam tapes they
       13    call them.  They call them Betamax.  And what they did is they
       14    took a track that is still on the VHS tapes.  It's a track that
       15    runs along the edge of the tape and it's a linear track of
       16    audio and it's like reading a cassette.  A cassette recording
       17    is a linear track.  It's just a linear recording that runs
       18    right along the tape and it plays through.
       19             The quality of this recording, the audio, can be
       20    fairly poor especially if the tape is recorded in a slow speed,
       21    like a 6-hour speed.  So Sony came up with the idea, well,
       22    let's use the heads on the drum, these flying heads that come
       23    around and pick up the video, let's incorporate audio heads on
       24    the drum and let's multiplex or combine the audio signal on the
       25    video part of the tape and have these heads just read the audio
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    signal.  So it's called hi-fi, and they fully put two tracks of
        2    information multiplexed on the video portion of the tape called
        3    hi-fi stereo.
        4             VHS did the same thing.  They came up with their own
        5    scheme to multiplex the audio signal.  So hi-fi stereo, VHS or
        6    high 8, or in some cases even 8 millimeter, has high fidelity
        7    stereo audio and it's very high quality.  And that is what
        8    these tapes have, hi-fi stereo.
        9    Q.  Now, based on the explanation that you just gave of how the
       10    audio is recorded on this type of tape relative to the video,
       11    is it possible for someone to edit or alter audio on this type
       12    of tape without disrupting the video as well?
       13    A.  No, you can't de-multiplex the signal.  Once it's recorded
       14    in a multiplex fashion if you try and alter one you alter the
       15    other.  So you can't do any editing on a hi-fi signal.
       16    Q.  Based on your examination of the 26 original tapes, what
       17    did you learn about whether any of the tapes have the same
       18    content as each other?
       19    A.  By content you are referring to --
       20    Q.  The same events or conversations recorded on them.
       21    A.  Yes, the participants and the environment are virtually
       22    identical on all the tapes.
       23    Q.  Do you have an opinion based on what you saw from examining
       24    the tapes whether any of the tapes were recorded at essentially
       25    the same time as each other?
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    A.  Well, apparently when they made these recordings they were
        2    concerned because the high 8 tapes can record in one of two
        3    modes.  One is SP or 2-hour mode, and the other mode is LP or
        4    4-hour mode.  4-hour mode, because it records longer, you
        5    suffer some quality in the audio and video.  You don't get
        6    something for nothing in the physical world.
        7             So to optimize the audio and the video they decided we
        8    can record everything in the 2-hour SP mode.  The problem this
        9    brought in is, well, now if we do that and the conversations
       10    run more than 2 hours we have a problem because we are going to
       11    be reloading tapes and the conversation is going to continue
       12    and we are going to be missing those parts of the conversation.
       13    So they employed a single camera but they employed two
       14    recorders.  So they started one recorder to start playing and
       15    recording the entire event and just before that ran out,
       16    before -- they started another recorder several minutes later.
       17    In other words, maybe ten minutes later they started another
       18    recorder recording the same events so when the first one ran
       19    out the second one was still recording and if they had to they
       20    could change tapes and not miss any of the recording because
       21    one of the two recorders is going to pick up everything.  And
       22    this is what I say was done in this case and in a few cases
       23    there are places where there was some overlapping to get the
       24    whole conversation.
       25    Q.  So out of the set of 26 original tapes total, is it fair to
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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        1    say that there are 13 tapes that are completely different from
        2    each other and then the other set of 13 tapes overlap with the
        3    first set tape to tape either completely or very substantially?
        4    A.  Yes, probably, yes.
        5    Q.  Now, as far as the work that you did with the recordings,
        6    did you carry out certain processing of each recording in order
        7    to enhance the intelligibility of the conversations as you
        8    described earlier?
        9    A.  Yes, once we listened to the audio part of the recording,
       10    we determined what types of noise and what types of problems
       11    there are in order to advance the intelligibility.  We attack
       12    it in this case in three ways.  First of all, I mentioned that
       13    part of the recording has some low volume, that is, people just
       14    talk low.  And in order to listen to what is being said when
       15    the volume was low you would naturally turn the gain up on the
       16    amplifier in order to hear it louder.  The problem with that is
       17    if you turn the gain way up and suddenly someone talks loud you
       18    can distort and blow yourself out and clip the audio and that
       19    is not good.  You can't do that.
       20             So we have a device that owes dose it electronically
       21    and we can set the threshold of where we want this device to
       22    attenuate or reduce the gain of the audio.  It's called a gain
       23    brain.  Basically it's a very simple computer that looks at a
       24    threshold of an audio level and it says, okay, anything above
       25    this level I am going to start reducing that level of audio so
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    it doesn't clip or it doesn't distort.
        2             When you do that you can raise the volume of the lower
        3    signals.  In other words, signals that are hard to hear, they
        4    are raised higher and the signals you don't want to hear that
        5    are too loud are actually reduced in volume so that you have,
        6    in effect, brought up the gain of the low and not disturbed the
        7    gain of the high.  And that is called gain reduction.
        8    Q.  And was that the first step of the processing that you did
        9    on the recordings?
       10    A.  That was the first step, yes.
       11    Q.  Now, before we continue forward through the steps, did you
       12    process -- withdrawn.
       13             For each of the recordings that you did process, did
       14    you carry out the same processing?
       15    A.  Yes, I did.
       16    Q.  Did you end up over time processing all 26 recordings or
       17    did you not process some of them because they were completely
       18    duplicative of others?
       19    A.  Well, the recordings I processed were all processed at the
       20    instruction of the New York office.  I wasn't going to worry
       21    about what was a duplicate and what wasn't.  They sent a
       22    standard to me and they said do this and this, and that is what
       23    we did.
       24    Q.  Before we continue talking about the processing that you
       25    did, let me ask you what effect, if any, does the processing
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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        1    that you did or did the processing that you did have on the
        2    original tapes which are marked as Government Exhibits 1700
        3    through 1725?
        4    A.  Well, all the enhancement and the processing was done with
        5    the signal from the original tapes.  Nothing was done on the
        6    original tapes other than playing them back.  All the recording
        7    was done on a copy as a result of the enhanced signals from the
        8    original tape.
        9    Q.  So in order to carry out the processing, do you essentially
       10    play the original tape through various devices and then end up
       11    with a copy recording at the end?
       12    A.  That is right.
       13    Q.  Now, I believe you just finished describing the first step
       14    of the processing which was the gain reduction.  Have you
       15    finished describing that?
       16    A.  That is right, yes.
       17    Q.  And as a result of that, is it that things that were
       18    difficult to hear on the original because they were soft are
       19    made louder without distorting or making too loud the parts
       20    that were already loud on the original?
       21    A.  That is right.
       22    Q.  And what is the second step of the processing that you
       23    applied to the recording?
       24    A.  Well, the second step is a way of digitally attacking the
       25    noise and the noise can be anything that is periodic in nature.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    A tone is a sign wave and that is periodic.  It just keeps
        2    repeating.  Convoluted noise, reflected noise, as long as the
        3    people are talking and don't significantly change their
        4    position during the recording, their convoluted noise is
        5    predictable.  And so the digital filter that we use is really a
        6    little miniature computer and it stores tiny fractions,
        7    milliseconds of time, depending on how you have the filter set,
        8    of snapshots of this audio envelope that it sees.  And it
        9    recognizes patterns that are periodic, that keep repeating, and
       10    it identifies these patterns and it says, well, I am
       11    identifying this as periodic noise and I don't want it, so when
       12    I output this signal on the output of my filter, I am going to
       13    put it exactly 180 degrees out of phase with this unwanted
       14    signal, which essentially nulls it out.  In other words, if I
       15    had a wave like this and I didn't want it, I would put a wave
       16    like that and the result would be zero.  So I null it out.
       17    That is what basically this filter does.
       18    Q.  And is the goal of the digital filtration to remove what
       19    you referred to earlier as the convoluted noise but to leave
       20    intact the speech that essentially went directly into the
       21    microphone?
       22    A.  Yes, convoluted noise is one of several types of
       23    identifiable periodic noise all of which are not consistent
       24    with human speech.  One of the advantages of human speech is
       25    it's completely random noise.  There is no periodicity to
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    random noise.  So you can take out everything that is periodic
        2    I have taken out noise that is unwanted.  And what you have
        3    left is uncorrelated nonperiodic noise and that noise is
        4    speech.  Unfortunately there are some noises also that it can
        5    include that are also nonperiodic, but that is not the case
        6    here that we are worried about.
        7    Q.  What effect, if any, does the digital filtering have on the
        8    words spoken in the recorded conversations?
        9    A.  It has no effect, or significant effect.
       10    Q.  Now, that was the second step of the processing.  What was
       11    the third step?
       12    A.  Well, the third step is we run it through what is called a
       13    parametric equalizer, and that is simply a fancy word for a
       14    bass and treble tone device and we call it parametric because
       15    the low frequencies, the low mid-range, the mid-range, the
       16    middle highs and the highs, all the range of frequencies can be
       17    adjusted, the parameters can be adjusted quite significantly
       18    and what we try and do is shape the envelope of that output
       19    wave more or less to correspond to the envelope of the human
       20    ear.
       21             So it's kind of identifiable as a speech we recognize
       22    and in some cases we might accentuate the middle low highs
       23    because that is where a lot of the intelligibility of speech is
       24    found, the roughly 1200 to 2500 Hertz.  That is where a lot of
       25    the intelligibility of human speech is.  So it simply shapes
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    the signal and conditions it, if you will, so on the output it
        2    sounds pleasing and it sounds intelligible.
        3    Q.  And is the reason for doing that that certain types of
        4    sounds -- and I don't know whether the right word would be
        5    pitch -- or certain sounds are more difficult for the human ear
        6    to hear?
        7    A.  Well, no, it's actually -- the microphone has its own -- it
        8    doesn't hear things the way the human ear hears it and so you
        9    are just trying to shape the signal so that it corresponds to
       10    pretty much what the human ear hears.  The human ear doesn't
       11    hear the real lows real well and it doesn't hear the highs real
       12    well either.  It kind of hears in between and it's roughly a
       13    bell-shaped curve, so the output of this equalizer is trying to
       14    emulate what the human ear would hear and make it sound natural
       15    and intelligible.
       16    Q.  How commonly used are these three steps of processing of
       17    audio to improve intelligibility?
       18    A.  Well, in my case, and I assume the case of many of my
       19    colleagues, it's standard.  It's the way to attack noise and
       20    improve intelligibility.
       21    Q.  And, in your opinion, and based on your experience, do
       22    these three steps of processing that you applied to these
       23    recordings make the conversations more audible without changing
       24    the front end as far as the words that were actually spoken in
       25    the conversation?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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        1    A.  Yes, I think it improved the intelligibility.  Bear in mind
        2    that the original recording was intelligible.  It was good
        3    quality.  So changes were not significant.  There were enough I
        4    think that you can pick up some words that may have been harder
        5    to understand before, so therefore it improves the
        6    intelligibility.
        7    Q.  Now, you testified earlier when I asked you about the
        8    format of the audio on the original tapes that it is in stereo
        9    format?
       10    A.  That is right.
       11    Q.  What does that mean about how many tracks there are of
       12    audio in the original recording?
       13    A.  Well, in this case stereo means you have two mics. and if
       14    we have the left and a right channel, if you will, and so those
       15    two channels are processed separately.
       16    Q.  So when you carried out the three steps of processing that
       17    you just finished describing, did you have to process the left
       18    and right audio each separately?
       19    A.  Yes, they are processed separately.
       20    Q.  Now, in what form did you save the audio that resulted from
       21    the processing that you just described?
       22    A.  The output of play of the video that was played back and
       23    simultaneously the output of the audio played back from the
       24    original tapes was recorded in a digital format.  It's called a
       25    D3 digital recorder.  And that was used to archive all of the
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    enhanced and processed audio and video from the original tapes.
        2    Q.  Why did you use the D3 format to save the recordings after
        3    you had processed the audio?
        4    A.  The D3 format is an extremely high quality professional
        5    recording format, in addition to which it supplies us with
        6    timing display.  I can actually put a time clock on the video
        7    and just put it right out there and insert it and it's accurate
        8    down to a sixteenth of a second.  So when our translator,
        9    Nabila Banout, did the translation, she used one of the D3
       10    copies and she noted the time display where she wanted to take
       11    edits out of the audio and this enabled us to do very accurate
       12    editing on the redaction process.
       13    Q.  Is it feasible for D3 recordings to be used here in court?
       14    A.  No.
       15    Q.  Why not?
       16    A.  The equipment is bulky.  It's extremely expensive and the
       17    tapes are very expensive and bulky.
       18    Q.  About how much does a D3 tape costs?
       19    A.  The D3 tape itself runs anywhere between 180 and $250 per
       20    tape.
       21    Q.  And what about the equipment?
       22    A.  The equipment runs 60 to $70,000.
       23    Q.  Is the D3 recording a digital format?
       24    A.  Yes.
       25    Q.  What, if any, advantages are there to using a digital form
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    of recording in this type of situation?
        2    A.  When you record digitally, and again we are talking about
        3    analogue tapes being archived digitally, digital recordings
        4    don't add any noise at all.  They only faithfully record
        5    whatever it sees.  So there is no additional layer of noise
        6    when you play back a digital recording.  Noise is not there.
        7    So I can actually -- if you can imagine you take a VHS tape and
        8    you made a copy of the VHS tape and you made a copy of a copy,
        9    and you made a copy of that copy, and a copy of that copy, by
       10    the time you got the 4 or 5 copies the VHS looks awful.  You
       11    have probably seen them.  It's smeared and there is no
       12    definition.  It's awful.  Not with digital.  Digital you can
       13    make 50, 200 copies and the 200th copy looks like the first one
       14    because in a digital process you don't add noise.  There is no
       15    noise.  There is no significant detectable layer of noise
       16    added.
       17    Q.  Just so we are clear, digital and analogue are two
       18    different forms of recordings?
       19    A.  Yes.
       20    Q.  I believe you testified earlier in response to Mr. Tigar's
       21    question these original tapes marked as Government Exhibits
       22    1700 through 1725 are analogue recordings?
       23    A.  Yes, they are.
       24    Q.  And in your last answer you were contrasting digital to VHS
       25    video cassettes?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT2                 Herold - direct
        1    A.  That is right.
        2    Q.  Are VHS video cassettes also analogue recordings?
        3    A.  They are analogue as well.
        4    Q.  So once you had the recordings which included the processed
        5    audio saved in D3 format, did you make copies of them to
        6    another medium?
        7    A.  Yes.  Once we had archived the enhanced signals from the
        8    original tapes, the playback of the D3 archived copy, and made
        9    the copies from there.
       10    Q.  And did you copy them to some type of disk?
       11    A.  Initially we copied them to VHS tapes and then as the time
       12    line of the case progressed we got into the ability to record
       13    on DVD, digital disks, and so we made the copies then on DVD
       14    disks.
       15             (Continued on next page)
       16
       17
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       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1    BY MS. BAKER:
        2    Q.  More specifically, what types of or what type of DVD did
        3    you copy the recordings to?
        4    A.  Well, there are basically four types of DVD:  There's
        5    DVD minus R (DVD-R), DVD plus R (DVD+R), DVD minus RW (DVD-RW),
        6    and a DVD plus RW (DVD+RW).  We use a DVD-R for recordings.
        7    The difference between a -R and a -RW is the RW is
        8    rerecordable.  It has a different surface.  You can actually
        9    record up to 2000 times over again on an RW.  The problem is
       10    the quality isn't quite as dependable, and some players have
       11    difficulty playing this particular format back.  So we use the
       12    -R, and the -R's record once only.  You can only record it
       13    once.  Once you start recording, you can't go back and change
       14    it.  One-time recording.
       15    Q.  So can a recording and a DVD R be altered after it's made?
       16    A.  Not without obvious penalties for it.  You disrupt the
       17    signal.
       18    Q.  And in what format did you copy the recordings onto
       19    DVD R's?
       20             THE COURT:  I'm sorry, did you say onto DVD R or
       21    DVD-R?
       22             THE WITNESS:  It's DVD-R.
       23    Q.  Thank you.  In what format did you copy the DVD-R disks?
       24    A.  Again, these are -R, and they're either in one of two
       25    speeds.  -R can be recorded, as recorders stand now, in a
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1    one-hour mode -- actually, about an hour and two minutes.
        2    That's called V-1.  The second mode is two hours, and it's
        3    called V-2.  It's about two hours and three minutes recording
        4    time.
        5    Q.  I'm sorry, the letter you're saying there is "V" like
        6    video?
        7    A.  Yeah, "V" as in Victor -- video, yes.
        8    Q.  And which -- or did you use both the V-1 and the V-2
        9    formats here?
       10    A.  Some of these recordings were less than an hour long.  And
       11    in those cases I used the V-1 format, and the recordings that
       12    were two hours or more than one hour, I used the V-2.
       13    Q.  In your opinion, and based on your experience in this
       14    field, how does the quality of a V-1 or V-2 recording on a
       15    DVD-R disk compare with the quality of the same recording on a
       16    VHS tape?
       17    A.  There's hardly any comparison.  The quality of the VHS is
       18    significantly degraded, even the highest quality, compared to
       19    what the DVD provides you.  DVD quality is studio quality,
       20    video quality.
       21             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I approach the witness?
       22             THE COURT:  Yes.
       23             MS. BAKER:  Before I do that, let me state these for
       24    the record.
       25    BY MS. BAKER:
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1    Q.  Mr. Herold, I'm going to hand you a set of disks that are
        2    marked as follows:  Government Exhibit 1700C, 1701C, 1702C,
        3    1704C, 1705C, 1706C, 1707C, 1710C, 1711C, 1712C, 1713C, 1714C,
        4    1716C, 1717C, 1720C, 1721C and 1722C.
        5             Do you recognize those disks?
        6    A.  Yes, I do.
        7    Q.  What are they?
        8    A.  These are unredacted DVD copies taken from the unredacted
        9    D3 archive copies of the respective "Q"s.
       10    Q.  I'm sorry, let me ask you to repeat that answer.  You said
       11    these are unredacted copies made from --
       12    A.  The D3 unredacted enhanced signals from the archive copies.
       13    Q.  So in other words, with respect to the testimony that you
       14    finished giving about the processing, these disks were made
       15    from the D3 recordings that were after the processing that
       16    you've described earlier?
       17    A.  Right.  These were made, direct copies, from the archive D3
       18    tapes, which was a product of enhancing the audiovisual signals
       19    from the original.
       20    Q.  And is each of those disks a DVD-R disk as you were
       21    describing a few minutes ago?
       22    A.  Yes, it is.
       23    Q.  How were you able to recognize each of those disks as a
       24    recording that you made?
       25    A.  My handwriting, it has my number, it has initials, and it
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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        1    has nomenclature identifying what it is.
        2    Q.  Does each of those disks bear a "Q" number?
        3    A.  Yes.
        4    Q.  Does the "Q" number on each of those disks correspond to
        5    the "Q" number on the corresponding original tape?
        6    A.  Yes, it does.
        7    Q.  So for example, if a disk bears Q-11, it's a processed,
        8    audio-copied recording of the tape that's also marked as Q-11?
        9    A.  That's right.
       10    Q.  Let me ask you specifically about six of the original tapes
       11    that you received, the tapes that were marked as Government
       12    Exhibits 1700 through 1705.  What, if any, video or picture do
       13    those tapes contain?
       14    A.  Without looking at them, I assume these are the tapes that
       15    had no video picture, associated with the covering.
       16    Q.  Is there -- you say without looking, you would assume.  Is
       17    there paperwork that you've prepared that would allow you to
       18    confirm what, if any, audio is on those particular tapes?
       19    A.  Yes.  Q-1 through Q-10 and Q-11 through Q-30, I believe,
       20    all have video signals.  Q-11, 12, 13 and 31, 32, 33, all are
       21    lacking in a video signal.
       22    Q.  Okay.  So you just identified six recordings by the "Q"
       23    numbers that are on them?
       24    A.  Yes, I'm not familiar with the Court numbers.
       25    Q.  Let me ask you to look please -- your Honor, may I
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        1    approach?
        2             THE COURT:  Yes.
        3    Q.  I'm going to return to you 1700, which I had borrowed.
        4             Let me ask you to look at 1700 through 1705 and see
        5    whether those are marked with the "Q" numbers, Q-11 and 31, 32
        6    and 33.
        7    A.  Yes.
        8    Q.  So 1700 through 1705, as far as the government exhibit
        9    numbers, are the tapes that you were saying a minute ago had
       10    something different about the video?
       11    A.  Yes.
       12    Q.  What was in the video component of those six tapes?
       13    A.  To my understanding, was -- was not granted because it
       14    sought specifically to provide video imaging of the meetings
       15    and thereby the lens cap was kept placed over the camcorder so
       16    that no video could record.  The resultant video was a black
       17    or -- a black screen.
       18    Q.  When you were copying those particular six recordings,
       19    what, if any, change did you make to the video portion?
       20    A.  Well, in place of the black screen, I put in color bars,
       21    standard color bars used in the industry.  Normally they're
       22    used to set up the hue and saturation of color when you're
       23    playing the tape.  You see the tape that has those color bars
       24    in front of it.  If you set up the colors to get the proper
       25    color bar balance, then you know the colors in the tape,
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        1    ensuing tape, should be the proper balance as well.
        2             In this case, I simply put the color bars in as a
        3    means of having a display rather than a black screen, in
        4    addition to which, and primarily, it provided a video timing
        5    source for a D3 recorder.  The professional recorders, the D3
        6    types of recorders, are very sensitive to the quality of the
        7    timing signals with respect to the video that's input at the
        8    time.  And if you don't have proper timing signals, you can
        9    have problems making the recording itself, so this ensured that
       10    all the timing signals were good.
       11    Q.  As far as the other 20 original tapes that you received and
       12    examined, did those other 20 tapes have video that actually
       13    depicted something?
       14    A.  Yes, it did.
       15    Q.  And I believe you alluded to this earlier, but just
       16    generally, what was the type of picture that was on them?
       17    A.  Again, basically an overhead view of people around a table
       18    talking.
       19    Q.  Did you add anything to each copy of the recording that you
       20    made at the beginning of the recording?
       21    A.  Yes.  I added a preamble, and in addition, I stick -- on
       22    the color bars, right over the top of them, I stick a black box
       23    that has the nine-digit lab number, plus the "Q" number, and
       24    that's added to the front of the tape for two reasons:  One, if
       25    the tape is colored, you have a source of color to adjust your
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        1    viewing and saturation.  And in addition to that, sometimes
        2    because the beginning of the tape is exposed physically to the
        3    outside world because it's not wound around the rest of the
        4    spool, it can become damaged in some way, so you give it a
        5    measure of safety, preamble ahead of it, so if some damage
        6    occurs, it occurs to the preamble, the color bar, and not to
        7    the tape itself, or the signal.
        8    Q.  What's the duration or the length of tape that you
        9    essentially added by doing that?
       10    A.  Normally, the rule of thumb is 30 seconds of color bars.
       11    This was followed to some degree with these tapes because, bear
       12    in mind, these tapes were black and white.  So you don't have
       13    to worry about adjusting the colors.  So the times may have
       14    been less than 30 seconds.  May have been 20 seconds.  It
       15    varied somewhat.  Either 30 seconds or less.
       16    Q.  And including that at the beginning of each tape, were you
       17    replacing any other content or was that simply added on before
       18    the other content of the recording began?
       19    A.  No, it was added on.  In addition to that, make sure you
       20    see the beginning of the tape, you don't miss anything.
       21    Because you're going from a recording you've already made and
       22    now you're playing back everything that was on the tape.  So
       23    it's simply added to the front of the tape as additional time
       24    on top of the original tape.
       25    Q.  Now, the set of DVD R disks you have in front of you, you
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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        1    referred to those earlier by using the word unredacted.  Does
        2    that mean that the content of each of those recordings is the
        3    entirety, completely the full length of what was on each of the
        4    corresponding original tapes?
        5    A.  Yes.
        6    Q.  At a certain point or points, did you also make, edit or
        7    what might be referred to as redacted copies of certain of the
        8    recordings?
        9    A.  Yes, I did.
       10    Q.  Mr. Herold, I'm going to hand you another set of disks
       11    which are marked for identification as Government Exhibits
       12    1700D, 1701D, 1702D, 1706D, 1707D, 1710D, 1711D, 1712D, 1716D,
       13    1717D, 1721D, and 1722D.
       14             Do you recognize those disks?
       15    A.  Yes, I do.
       16    Q.  What are those?
       17    A.  These are disks that were made by playing back the archive
       18    D3, respective D3 tape with the redactions having been placed
       19    on the page.
       20    Q.  You just indicated in your answer that these were made from
       21    the D3 recordings?
       22    A.  Yes, I did.
       23    Q.  So do these also have the processed audio portion that was
       24    subjected to the processing that you described earlier?
       25    A.  Yes.  These redacted tapes have the same processed enhanced
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           4057
             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1    stereo audio signal, except in those areas where the powers
        2    that be decided that they wanted these areas redacted out.  And
        3    normally in those areas where there would be no conversations
        4    because they were taken out, there would be silence.  But
        5    silence can be distracting if you're listening to a
        6    conversation and suddenly it's silent, so when we redact
        7    conversations, we always insert a tone, a low amplitude tone so
        8    that you could tell that in fact this wasn't dead air.  It's
        9    like TV:  If they bleep something out, they bleep it out.  You
       10    don't hear just nothing, they have a tone over it.  We had a
       11    2000 hertz tone placed.  Instead of the audio that was taken
       12    out, you now have a 2000 hertz tone in its place.
       13    Q.  As a result of using that you just described and replacing
       14    it with a tone, is the duration of the redacted copy of the
       15    recording the same as the duration of the original recording
       16    and the unredacted copy recording?
       17    A.  The times were identical, the same.
       18    Q.  And where there were portions where you replaced the
       19    original audio with a tone, was the video left intact during
       20    those portions of the recording?
       21    A.  If there was video, yes, it was left intact.
       22    Q.  And for those other recordings where there was just a black
       23    video originally, it just continuously occurs as color bars
       24    even in the redacted version?
       25    A.  With color bars, that's right.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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        1    Q.  Now, were you personally deciding which parts to redact out
        2    and which parts to leave in?
        3    A.  No.
        4    Q.  Were you following instructions that you understood were
        5    for legal reasons?
        6    A.  Yes.  Our translator, Nabila Banout, was the one that
        7    received instructions as to what parts in the transcript were
        8    to be redacted.  And then she transferred those redacted places
        9    to times, times corresponding to the times on the D3 processed
       10    copies, so that once she had redacted this from such-and-such a
       11    time to this at this time, I would take that time, go back on
       12    the D3 and edit out those times that she indicated with the
       13    tone.
       14    Q.  And was she making the determinations or was she
       15    implementing determinations made by someone else?
       16    A.  She was implementing what was made by -- decisions by other
       17    people.
       18    Q.  You refer to Miss Banout as a translator.  Was her
       19    assistance needed in this process because of the fact that the
       20    recordings included portions in another language?
       21    A.  Yes.  She -- some of these were other than English, and she
       22    was the one that had to determine how this applied to the
       23    transfers because she was the only one that could tell what was
       24    being said.
       25    Q.  So she basically indicated the points in time in recording
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1    at which you should start replacing audio with tone and then
        2    stop replacing audio with tone, and then you implemented that?
        3    A.  Yes.
        4    Q.  Let me ask you to refer specifically to a few of that
        5    second stack of disks that I just handed to you.  Actually,
        6    before I do that, I don't recall if I asked you, that second
        7    stack of disks, the ones that are marked with the government
        8    exhibit numbers and the letter "D", are each of those disks
        9    also a DVD-R disk?
       10    A.  Yes, they are.
       11    Q.  And how are you able to recognize each of those disks as a
       12    recording that you've prepared?
       13    A.  Again, it has my writing, has my lab number, has the
       14    description of the disk and my initials on it.
       15    Q.  Does each of those disks bear at least one "Q" number?
       16    A.  Yes.
       17    Q.  Any "Q" number that appears on any one of those disks, the
       18    disks that have the government exhibit number with the letter
       19    "D", do the "Q" numbers on those disks correspond to the
       20    same "Q" number on the matching original tape?
       21    A.  Yes.
       22    Q.  And do the "Q" numbers on those "D" disks also match
       23    the "Q" numbers on the corresponding unredacted DVD-R's, the
       24    ones that have the government exhibit numbers with the letter
       25    "C"?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1    A.  Yes.
        2    Q.  If you would, please look specifically at the disk marked
        3    as Government Exhibit 1701D and also 1702D.
        4    A.  Okay.
        5    Q.  Does each of those disks bear two "Q" numbers?
        6    A.  Yes.
        7    Q.  Could you explain why that is?
        8    A.  This is a case where a conversation was recorded, when one
        9    recorder ran out, and the recording which was continuing on
       10    with the second recording which started later included parts of
       11    the conversation that would have been missing on the first
       12    tape, so they would have been added together.
       13    Q.  So as far as what appears on the disks marked as 1701D and
       14    1702D, is it the entirety of one "Q" number, and then just the
       15    portion of the second "Q" number that was unique?
       16    A.  That's right.
       17    Q.  If you would also please look at the disks marked as
       18    Government Exhibits 1710D and 1711D.  Again, do each of those
       19    disks bear two "Q" numbers?
       20    A.  Yes, they do.
       21    Q.  Is that for the same reason?
       22    A.  Yes.
       23    Q.  Finally, if you would look at the disk marked as government
       24    Exhibit 1717D.  Does that disk also bear two "Q" numbers?
       25    A.  Yes, it does.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1    Q.  And is that an instance where it was just -- one recording
        2    wasn't very long, so you put another recording on the same disk
        3    with it?
        4    A.  The two were combined at the request of the -- again, of
        5    the field.
        6             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I have a moment to confer?
        7             THE COURT:  Yes.  This is a convenient time for me to
        8    take a mid morning break.  We began a little later, so we'll
        9    take 10 minutes.
       10             Ladies and gentlemen, please remember my continuing
       11    instructions not to talk about the case; keep an open mind.
       12             All rise, please.  Follow Mr. Fletcher to the jury
       13    room.
       14               (Jury exits the courtroom)
       15             THE COURT:  See you shortly.
       16               (Recess)
       17               (In open court; jury not present)
       18             THE COURT:  All right.  Please be seated, all.  Are
       19    you ready?
       20             MS. BAKER:  Yes.
       21             THE COURT:  Let's bring in the jury.
       22               (Jury enters courtroom)
       23               (In open court)
       24             MR. TIGAR:  Miss Shellow-Lavine needs to leave
       25    temporarily, but we're prepared to start, your Honor.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1             THE COURT:  Okay.  Mr. Herold is on the stand.
        2    Mr. Fletcher?
        3             DEPUTY CLERK:  Mr. Herold, I would remind you you are
        4    still under oath.
        5             THE WITNESS:  Yes.
        6             THE COURT:  All right.  Ms. Baker?
        7             MS. BAKER:  Thank you, your Honor.
        8    BY MS. BAKER:
        9    Q.  Mr. Herold, just to make sure that this is clear, let me go
       10    back to something that we touched upon earlier:  The original
       11    high eight tapes which are marked as Government Exhibits 1700
       12    through 1725, are the recordings on those tapes analogue
       13    recordings?
       14    A.  Yes, they are.
       15    Q.  And the intermediate form of the recording that you had as
       16    a result of processing of the audio, the format that you
       17    referred to earlier as D3, is that -- well first of all, is D3
       18    the name of the format of the recording or the medium on which
       19    it's saved or both?
       20    A.  Well, both.  D3 is a type of digital recorder, professional
       21    digital recorder, manufactured by Panasonic.  And for what it's
       22    worth, the information, the audio information on it, is
       23    uncompressed.  It's simply digital information that's recorded
       24    digitally on four tracks of audio, a track of time display --
       25    date/time display, and a track of video.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1    Q.  And so that's a digital recording that uses that particular
        2    kind of tape that's compatible with that equipment?
        3    A.  That's right.
        4    Q.  And then the recordings on the various DVD-R disks that are
        5    in front of you there, are those all digital recordings?
        6    A.  Yes, they are.
        7    Q.  When you did the redacted of some of the recordings to make
        8    what are now the disks marked with the government exhibit
        9    numbers and the letter D, were you making the redactions to the
       10    D3 recordings?
       11    A.  No.  I was taking the D3 -- Nabila, our translator, was
       12    taking the D3 information or the time display and determining
       13    from what time to what time these sections should be redacted.
       14    And then I took that information she supplied me and I did the
       15    actual redaction of the tone.
       16    Q.  Right, but in doing that, when you were replacing some of
       17    the original audio with the tone, were you making that
       18    replacement in that one D3 recording that you had resulting
       19    from the processing of each tape?
       20    A.  Yes, I was.
       21    Q.  So at this point, for any recording where you did
       22    redactions, do you still have an unredacted, completely intact
       23    D3 recording?
       24    A.  No.
       25    Q.  Because you made the redactions into the one existing D3
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1    recording that you had?
        2    A.  That's right.
        3    Q.  If the redactions needed to be altered in a way that
        4    required audio content that had been redacted out to be put
        5    back in, and a new copy of the recording made, what would you
        6    have to do to accomplish that?
        7    A.  We'd have to start over again.  Make a processed video,
        8    enhanced audio copy on a D3, and supply again time display with
        9    that so that the translator could go ahead and now take out new
       10    sections or add whatever the changes were.  Have to start over
       11    again.
       12    Q.  Can you estimate, based on the work that you and
       13    Ms. Banout, the translator, did the first time around with
       14    these recordings, how long it takes to go through the
       15    processing of the audio and then redacting of any one original
       16    tape?
       17    A.  It would vary, depending on how much redaction was done.
       18    Generally would go anywheres from a couple of days to a week
       19    per recording.
       20             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I have another minute?
       21             THE COURT:  Sure.
       22               (Off the record)
       23             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, at this time the government
       24    offers into evidence the DVD-R disks that are marked as
       25    Government Exhibits 1700D, 1701D, 1702D, 1706D, 1707D, 1710D,
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - direct
        1    1711D, 1712D, 1716D, 1717D, 1721D, and 1722D.  And I have no
        2    further questions for Mr. Herold.
        3             MR. TIGAR:  We respectfully request the Court reserve
        4    on the offering.
        5             THE COURT:  All right.  I'll reserve at this time.
        6             MR. TIGAR:  And may I inquire?
        7             THE COURT:  Yes.
        8             MR. TIGAR:  Thank you, your Honor.
        9    CROSS EXAMINATION
       10    BY MR. TIGAR:
       11    Q.  You work at Quantico, Sir?
       12    A.  Yes.
       13    Q.  Most of the time?  And that's been your duty station while
       14    you were in the Bureau and while you were a contractor?
       15    A.  For the last part of my bureau career, that was my station.
       16    And then we've -- we've had several different offices before we
       17    moved into our facility at Quantico.  And now, just in the last
       18    year, last few months, we've moved to a temporary site just
       19    outside the Quantico base while we're waiting for a new
       20    building which is being built next to our old building to move
       21    back in.  But yes.
       22    Q.  But it's the same neighborhood, same stop off by the
       23    highway?
       24    A.  Yes.
       25    Q.  Yes.  Grub's Restaurant.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1             How many original audiotapes -- excuse me.  How many
        2    high eight tapes did you process in connection with this
        3    investigation?
        4    A.  Roughly 13 out of the 26.
        5    Q.  And when you first got them, they were these analogue tapes
        6    similar to what a person would record on a home video recorder,
        7    but not VHS tape.  It was a cassette, right?
        8    A.  A high quality home recording, yes.
        9    Q.  And it was very high quality, correct?
       10    A.  Yes.
       11    Q.  That is, even if you had done nothing to it, just
       12    unenhanced, as it sits there, a person could pretty well figure
       13    out what was on there, right?
       14    A.  That's true.
       15    Q.  Now, some people have, at home, settings on their amplifier
       16    through which they play sounds.  And using the -- twirling the
       17    knobs and pushing the buttons on a sophisticated home high-fi
       18    system, you can approximate some of the things you did with
       19    your enhancement, correct?
       20    A.  Some of it, yes.
       21    Q.  So the first thing you did was to run these through three
       22    processes, correct, that's what you told us?
       23    A.  That's right.
       24    Q.  And the resulting recording was the D3?
       25    A.  Well, the signal -- the resulting signal was placed on a
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    D3, yes.
        2    Q.  So you did not record analogue to analogue, correct?
        3    A.  Correct.
        4    Q.  Because, as you told us, recording analogue to analogue
        5    always results in some distortion?
        6    A.  You add noise, yes.  And time errors.
        7    Q.  You could get tape hiss?
        8    A.  Yes, that's one of the problems, yes.
        9    Q.  If the record head on the second analogue machine is dirty,
       10    that can cause some problems?
       11    A.  Doesn't even have to be dirty.  You simply add -- basically
       12    molecular noise is hiss.  It's thermal noise.
       13    Q.  And the processing, the first thing you did, you call it a
       14    gain brain.  Is that like a limiter?
       15    A.  Yes, it's a volume limiter, yes.  It's kind of like a
       16    little computer that limits the volume so that it doesn't max
       17    out and give you clipping or distortion.
       18    Q.  Now, if you were looking at the unenhanced tape, going by
       19    and used a VU meter before the limiter, you'd see that VU
       20    needle going in a much bigger arc than you would after you'd
       21    run the limiter on, correct?
       22    A.  Probably not significantly, no.  Because a meter's not a
       23    good -- it's really not a good gauge.  The needle itself has
       24    mass and it overshoots, so it's hard to say, but basically,
       25    yeah, that's probably true.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    Q.  Then the next thing you did, you talked about the
        2    noise-cancelling feature.
        3    A.  Yes.
        4    Q.  Now, is that something similar to what some people have as
        5    noise-cancelling headphones?
        6    A.  Yes, to some degree, yes.  Some element of that in there,
        7    that's true.
        8    Q.  Because sound, as you said, is a wave form, correct, sine
        9    wave?  And it's cancelling out the wave?
       10    A.  Yes.
       11    Q.  Now, when you got to the D3, now you're in digital,
       12    correct?
       13    A.  That's correct.
       14    Q.  And does that mean that that digital file can be handled
       15    differently than an analogue file in terms of redacting,
       16    editing, adding and so on?
       17    A.  No.  The only reason it's in D3, other than the fact the
       18    quality's very good, it's a professional quality, it's made for
       19    editing.
       20    Q.  Made for what?
       21    A.  Editing.  Editing both video and audio.
       22    Q.  So the digital file can be edited by putting something at
       23    the beginning, correct?
       24    A.  The color bars.  That would be adding on, yes.
       25    Q.  So you can add on more easily than you could if you were
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    trying to add something onto an analogue file?
        2    A.  No, it's no easier.  It's just better.
        3    Q.  If you were going to add the color bars to the beginning of
        4    an analogue file and they had been on another analogue file,
        5    you'd have to create a second-generation analogue tape and
        6    you'd have to splice, correct?
        7    A.  Well, yeah.  You're talking about a signal that results in
        8    a copy of the original, regardless of what format, whether it's
        9    analogue or digital.
       10    Q.  You don't have to do any cutting or physical splicing to
       11    add the color bars to the beginning of the digital file,
       12    correct?
       13    A.  No.  Nor the analogue.
       14    Q.  And if we wanted to make sure -- I'm now going to ask you
       15    about this redaction process.  You put a time signal at some
       16    point on this file, correct?
       17    A.  When the D3 archive recording was made, it has a time
       18    display track recording at the time the recording's made, and
       19    you can access this track or not, depending on what you want to
       20    do.
       21    Q.  You chose to access the track?
       22    A.  In the case of the redactions, yes, we accessed the track
       23    so we could make an accurate redaction.
       24    Q.  When you brought up that D3 file on the video screen, do
       25    you see a timestamp on it there?
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    A.  On these?  No.
        2    Q.  When you play it?
        3    A.  No.
        4    Q.  Could you rig it or could you do it, rather, so that you
        5    could see the time signal?
        6    A.  Yes, I could have made recordings that had the time signal
        7    on it as well.
        8    Q.  But you can take your digital file and make sure that that
        9    time sequence hasn't been tampered with, correct?
       10    A.  You can't be tampered with.  Once it's recorded, it can't
       11    be tampered with.
       12    Q.  When you say can't be tampered with, you mean if somebody
       13    tried to alter that digital file by taking something out, you'd
       14    know, wouldn't you?
       15    A.  Yes.
       16    Q.  And how would you know that?
       17    A.  Because.
       18    Q.  How would you be able to tell?  I mean, if some person who
       19    wanted to change this for an improper purpose, hypothetically,
       20    were to go in there and change that digital file, how would you
       21    be able to detect that somebody had been in there?
       22    A.  Because you'd disrupt both the audio and the video signal
       23    in doing that.
       24    Q.  Would you also disrupt the timestamp?
       25    A.  Yes.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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        1    Q.  Would there be a piece of the time signal missing?
        2    A.  Yes.
        3    Q.  So you have -- the time signal is a kind of audit trailer,
        4    correct?
        5    A.  It's simply a way of providing a pulse that corresponds to
        6    the recording.  The pulse -- the time code is actually in the
        7    form of a series of pulses.  And they're read out as time
        8    display.  And they're unalterable.  I mean, you can alter them,
        9    but if you do, that messes everything up.  You'd know it.
       10    Q.  You would know it as an experienced agent if somebody tried
       11    to do something wrong with that, right?
       12    A.  Right.
       13    Q.  And what you've brought to us here today are things that
       14    you're able to say are exactly what you claim them to be,
       15    correct?
       16    A.  Yes.
       17    Q.  Because you have used the procedures that are designed to
       18    ensure accuracy at every step of the way, correct?
       19    A.  That's correct.
       20    Q.  Now, at one point you talk about an archive.  Do you
       21    remember that?
       22    A.  Right.
       23    Q.  You archive in a D3 format, correct?
       24    A.  Correct.
       25    Q.  Now, did you choose the D3 format for archiving?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    A.  Yes.
        2    Q.  Why did you choose that?
        3    A.  Because it's a very high quality, dependable format.
        4    Q.  High quality?  What do you mean?
        5    A.  I mean, it very accurately reproduces the audio and the
        6    video signal as received on the original recording.
        7    Q.  And what do you mean by dependable?
        8    A.  Well, I can even take a D3 tape and I can crinkle the tape.
        9    And I can play it back and you won't see any effect of the
       10    crinkling, because that's the nature of the way the D3 is
       11    designed.
       12    Q.  So even if the tape had been degraded by crinkling, you can
       13    still get the signal out?
       14    A.  Yes.
       15    Q.  When you archive, do you use a compression program?
       16    A.  No.
       17    Q.  Why not?
       18    A.  Because the D3 is uncompressed.
       19    Q.  Okay.  So you prefer to do your archiving by not
       20    compressing the original, correct?
       21    A.  That's correct.
       22    Q.  And you're the one that made that choice for your
       23    laboratory?
       24    A.  That's right.
       25    Q.  Do you know a man named Michael Elliott?
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    A.  Mike Elliott?
        2    Q.  Yes.
        3    A.  Yes, name sounds familiar.
        4    Q.  Have you ever worked with him?
        5    A.  No.
        6    Q.  You didn't work with him on this case?
        7    A.  No.
        8    Q.  Now, you told us, Sir, that you made the DVDs, and you have
        9    a C series of DVDs and a D series of DVDs, right?
       10    A.  Well, that's the Court nomenclature, but yes, C's and D's.
       11    Q.  I'm going to stick with the Court nomenclature if we could.
       12    And if you need to check to make sure we're getting it right,
       13    please do so.  But for the court reporter, it's important that
       14    I stick with the exhibit numbers.
       15    A.  Fine.
       16    Q.  Now, so the answer to my question is -- please take your
       17    time to check -- you have a C series of DVDs there and a D
       18    series?
       19    A.  Correct.
       20    Q.  And when did you make the C series -- or, did you make the
       21    C series?
       22    A.  Yes, I made the C series.
       23    Q.  When did you make them?
       24    A.  I made them after I made the D series.
       25    Q.  And when did -- approximately -- did you make the D series
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    over a period of time?
        2    A.  Yes.
        3    Q.  And that was based on what -- on communications with the
        4    actual case agents who were communicating with you, correct?
        5    A.  And the receipt of the evidence when it came in, yes.
        6    Q.  So you received these things over a period of time?
        7    A.  Yes.
        8    Q.  When you made the D series, which is the first one you
        9    made, those are the ones that contained the redactions,
       10    correct?
       11    A.  Correct.  No, the D series is unredacted.
       12    Q.  I'm sorry -- okay.
       13    A.  I'm sorry.  Let me get this straight.  I got this mixed up
       14    here.  The D series is redacted.  The C series is unredacted.
       15    My error.
       16    Q.  The D series is --?
       17    A.  The D series is redacted, so it was made after the C
       18    series, which is unredacted.
       19    Q.  All right.
       20    A.  Okay.
       21    Q.  Take your time.  Please.  We're just trying to find this
       22    out.
       23             Now, how did you make the C series?  I mean,
       24    physically, you can help us here, what did you do?
       25    A.  Played back the -- I played back the original tape,
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    processed the signals --
        2    Q.  You say played back the original tape.  You played back the
        3    original high eight cassette?
        4    A.  That's right.
        5    Q.  And you played it through what?
        6    A.  Through a high eight playback system.
        7    Q.  All right.
        8    A.  And the output signals from that system were processed and
        9    recorded on the D3.
       10    Q.  Was it recorded on D3 in a digital or an analogue form?
       11    A.  It comes in as an analogue; and it's recorded as a digital
       12    signal.  There's an analogue-to-digital conversion that's done.
       13    We live in an analogue world.  We say analogue, we hear
       14    analogue, and so digital is simply a way of transforming that
       15    and working with that, and then it has to be transferred back
       16    out to analogue in order for us to hear it and see it, because
       17    we live in an analogue world.
       18    Q.  When you say we live in an analogue world, we hear sounds
       19    in that way; is that correct?
       20    A.  We hear sounds and you see things in an analogue way, yes.
       21    Q.  And digital is just a conversion for a storage mechanism,
       22    right?
       23    A.  It's a conversion for processing.  You can do a lot of
       24    manipulation of signals, improvement of signals, by converting
       25    it to digital.  And then once you have the processing done the
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    way it should be done, you reconvert it back out into analogue
        2    so it can be seen and heard.
        3    Q.  But a digital system, if you have things in a digital
        4    format, it's a lot easier to edit, add, subtract and work with
        5    the material.  Correct?
        6    A.  It's easier to process, yes.
        7    Q.  So when you had the signal that came out to get onto the
        8    DVD, was the DVD in a computer?
        9    A.  It's in a DVD recorder.
       10    Q.  Okay.  A DVD recorder.  And does that DVD recorder have an
       11    internal clock that puts on the DVD a timestamp that says on
       12    the readout or the Windows directory as to when it was created?
       13    A.  No.  All video recorders, whether they're analogue or
       14    digital, have clocks.  Because the timing of video is critical.
       15    Video is -- depends very highly on proper timing.  If the
       16    timing is off, the picture disintegrates.  The picture comes
       17    apart, it tears and folds, things like that.
       18             MR. TIGAR:  May I approach, your Honor?
       19             THE COURT:  Yes.
       20    Q.  Could you find for me 1700C?  Do you have it?
       21             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I approach also to see
       22    what Mr. Tigar is going to show the witness?
       23             THE COURT:  Yes.
       24    BY MR. TIGAR:
       25    Q.  I'd like to put 1700C in this DVD drive, and then I want to
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    open Windows Explorer.  I'm going to double-click on that icon
        2    And then view the file details.  And really, I just ask you to
        3    read this column here.  Does that have any significance at all?
        4    Those dates?
        5             Do you see the "date modified" column?
        6    A.  I see them.
        7    Q.  Does that have any significance at all?
        8    A.  It may or may not, depending on how the recording was made
        9    to begin with.
       10    Q.  Did you make 1700C?
       11    A.  Yes.
       12    Q.  And is it your testimony you don't recall what, if any,
       13    significance there is to that?
       14    A.  No, because the display on the DVD recorder has to be set
       15    in order for the timing to be significant.
       16    Q.  Okay.  And do you -- you don't recall as you sit there
       17    whether you set it or --
       18    A.  No.  I don't really care.
       19             MR. TIGAR:  May I have just a moment, your Honor?
       20             THE COURT:  Yes.
       21               (Off the record)
       22    BY MR. TIGAR:
       23    Q.  So the record is clear, Sir, what I showed you was the --
       24    what one would see if one put 17C in the drive --
       25             THE COURT:  Hold on, I think you misspoke as to the
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1    number.  1700.
        2    Q.  Excuse me.  Thank you, your Honor.
        3             I'm sorry, it's these acoustics again, Sir.
        4             We put 1700C into the CD drive of this laptop, and
        5    then, using Windows Explorer, we asked Windows Explorer to show
        6    us the details of the files on there, correct?
        7    A.  Correct.
        8    Q.  And looking at Windows Explorer, we saw names, size,
        9    height, date modified and location information on 1700C,
       10    correct?
       11    A.  Currently, yes.
       12    Q.  And what I was asking you, I was asking you questions about
       13    the dates under the date modified column, correct?
       14    A.  That's right.
       15             MR. TIGAR:  May I have just a moment, your Honor?
       16             THE COURT:  Sure.
       17               (Off the record)
       18             MR. TIGAR:  I have no further questions at this time.
       19    Thank you.
       20             THE WITNESS:  Yes.
       21             THE COURT:  All right.
       22             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, may I approach the witness to
       23    return this exhibit to its exhibit case?
       24             THE COURT:  Sure.
       25             MR. TIGAR:  Handing the exhibit to the witness.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3                 Herold - cross
        1             THE COURT:  All right.  Ms. Baker?
        2             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, I have no further questions
        3    for Mr. Herold.
        4             THE COURT:  All right.  Mr. Herold, you're excused.
        5    You may step down.
        6             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, may I step out for a moment?
        7             THE COURT:  Sure.
        8             MR. BARKOW:  May I have just a second, your Honor?
        9               (Ms. Baker exits the courtroom)
       10               (Off the record)
       11             THE COURT:  Mr. Barkow?
       12             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, at this point we'd ask
       13    permission to continue with the publication of some of the
       14    Sattar search evidence.
       15             THE COURT:  All right.
       16             MR. BARKOW:  May I have just a moment?  Mr. Tigar left
       17    his something at the podium.
       18             MR. TIGAR:  It was a pen, your Honor.
       19             THE COURT:  Okay.
       20             MR. BARKOW:  At this point, the government offers into
       21    evidence, if it has not been offered, a signed stipulation
       22    between the parties.  This relates to Sattar search evidence
       23    found during the search of Mr. Sattar's residence.  This is
       24    Government Exhibit 2010S, and we ask permission to publish it
       25    to the jury on the ELMO and read it.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3
        1             THE COURT:  All right.
        2             MR. BARKOW:  It has not yet been offered, your Honor.
        3             THE COURT:  Government Exhibit 2010S is received in
        4    evidence, with no objection.
        5             (Government's Exhibit 2010S received in evidence)
        6             MR. BARKOW:  May I publish it, your Honor?
        7             THE COURT:  Yes.
        8             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2010S, in evidence,
        9    was displayed and read to the jury).
       10             MR. BARKOW:  At this point, your Honor, could the
       11    government ask permission to publish and read to the jury
       12    Government Exhibit 2002, which has been admitted into evidence?
       13             THE COURT:  All right.
       14             MR. BARKOW:  This evidence is all, your Honor, from
       15    the Sattar search.  And Ms. Grant can publish the exhibit on
       16    the screen.
       17             THE COURT:  And this has already been admitted into
       18    evidence?
       19             MR. BARKOW:  Yes, your Honor.
       20             THE COURT:  Before you do that...
       21             Ladies and gentlemen, I've already given you an
       22    instruction on newspaper articles.  Newspaper articles are not
       23    admitted for the truth of what's said in the article but for
       24    the effect on anyone who may read them, and I've given you a
       25    longer instruction.  I will certainly apply the instruction
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KLSAT3
        1    here.
        2             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2002, in evidence,
        3    was displayed and read to the jury)
        4               (Continued on next page)
        5
        6
        7
        8
        9
       10
       11
       12
       13
       14
       15
       16
       17
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT4
        1             MR. BARKOW:  At this point, your Honor, the government
        2    requests permission to publish and read to the jury what has
        3    been admitted into evidence as Government Exhibit 2003.
        4             THE COURT:  All right.
        5             By the way, the same instruction, ladies and
        6    gentlemen, with respect to the newspaper articles, and I
        7    haven't checked my list.  I know that there are no objections
        8    to 2002, 2003.  I wasn't sure if they were already admitted in
        9    evidence and so --
       10             MR. BARKOW:  I thought I offered them in a series
       11    yesterday.  If not, at this point I would offer 2002 and 2003.
       12             THE COURT:  All right, 2002 and 2003 no objection,
       13    received in evidence.
       14             But again, ladies and gentlemen, I have given you
       15    instructions with respect to newspaper articles.  Newspaper
       16    articles are not received for the truth of anything that is
       17    contained in the article but, rather, for the effect on the
       18    state of mind of a person who reads the newspaper article.
       19             And I have also given you a longer instruction to
       20    explain to you how it is that newspaper articles are not
       21    received for the truth because newspaper articles reflect what
       22    reporters are reporting and reporters could be mistaken.  These
       23    are out-of-court statements by reporters about what happened
       24    and sometimes the newspaper articles themselves may include
       25    statements by other people in the course of the newspaper
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KSSAT4
        1    articles.  So the newspaper articles are not received for the
        2    truth of what is said in the articles, but if they are
        3    received, then, for example, its for the effect on the person
        4    who reads the article.
        5             MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, maybe I lost track as well.
        6             Are these admissible against all defendants?
        7             THE COURT:  Why don't we use this as our time to take
        8    our break.  It's about time for our luncheon break.
        9             We will break until 2 o'clock, ladies and gentlemen.
       10             Please remember my continuing instructions not to talk
       11    about the case.  Keep an open mind.
       12             All rise please.
       13             (Jury left the courtroom)
       14             (Government's Exhibits  2002 and 2003 received in
       15    evidence)
       16             THE COURT:  Please be seated all.
       17             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, those exhibits were received
       18    yesterday in the series that I offered.
       19             MR. RUHNKE:  If I am correct, these were articles
       20    taken during the Sattar search.  As I recall, they are
       21    admissible only against Mr. Sattar, not for the truth of the
       22    matters asserted but as they bear on Mr. Sattar's state of mind
       23    and knowledge.
       24             MR. BARKOW:  That is correct, your Honor.
       25             MR. RUHNKE:  And could we ask the jury be instructed
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT4
        1    as to that?
        2             THE COURT:  Sure.
        3             You are right.  Yes, I see from the transcript they
        4    are part of the list.
        5             Okay, the only thing I ask is if there are any
        6    limiting instructions for me to give that you remind me because
        7    the other day when I had the list of exhibits, I noted --
        8    several days ago -- I noted for myself the instructions to be
        9    given on the exhibits and the exhibits that were being
       10    introduced in accordance with any limiting instructions, and
       11    that was the group that included 2036, 2009 and 2009A, and then
       12    there was the second group that began with 2045 and included a
       13    series of exhibits going down through -- this isn't in order
       14    but took me through 2046.
       15             And if there are any limiting instructions with
       16    respect to any other exhibits that are to be offered, I should
       17    be told about that.
       18             MR. BARKOW:  I will do that, your Honor.  I think that
       19    the series that I was embarking upon all is offered only
       20    against Mr. Sattar.  I will confirm that over lunch and advise
       21    the court when we get back.  And some of them are newspaper
       22    articles and so the newspaper instruction would be appropriate
       23    for those.
       24             I will survey them and tell the court before I
       25    re-embark on that path.
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
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             47KSSAT4
        1             What we have at this point is a series of Sattar
        2    search exhibits, as well as at some point Government Exhibit
        3    508, which was dealt with this morning.  We didn't start that
        4    just now because it would have taken too long.
        5             THE COURT:  All right.  And I have already explained
        6    the instructions that I will give on 508.  And you have another
        7    stipulation with respect to 508 I take it.
        8             MR. BARKOW:  Yes, we do, your Honor.  When we come
        9    back from lunch, if that is okay, we can tell the court the
       10    order in which we are going to go, because I have this set of
       11    Sattar search exhibits and then we additionally have Exhibit
       12    508 and so we can tell the court so the court knows what
       13    instructions should accompany them.
       14             THE COURT:  Fine.
       15             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, at various times in the trial
       16    we don't stand up and say "object" when exhibits come in
       17    because your Honor has ruled outside the presence of the jury.
       18    I hope it's clear that we have not waived our objections by our
       19    tactical silence.
       20             THE COURT:  If you have objected and I have ruled on
       21    that objection to the extent there was an objection and a
       22    ruling, you have it.
       23             MR. TIGAR:  Thank you, your Honor.
       24             THE COURT:  Okay.  So be back at a quarter of 2.  I
       25    will see you after lunch.           (Luncheon recess)
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT4
        1             AFTERNOON SESSION
        2             2 p.m.
        3             (In open court; jury not present)
        4             THE COURT:  Please have a seat
        5             MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, I assume your Honor has seen
        6    the letter that Mr. Schmidt telefaxed.
        7             THE COURT:  Yes.
        8             MR. RUHNKE:  Based on the letter Mr. Morvillo and I
        9    just had a conversation that we view the government is now free
       10    to start looking at their walled-off translations of the
       11    redacted content.
       12             I have also informed Mr. Morvillo that I hope by the
       13    end of business tomorrow we will produce for the government in
       14    CD form translations of the entire prison visits, the entire
       15    Yousry notebooks, and probably 80 to 90 percent of the prison
       16    telephone calls.  We still have a few calls that have not been
       17    fully translated.  Mr. Morvillo agrees to accept them in draft
       18    form with the same understandings that we have had, that it
       19    will not be used to cross examine anyone until they are
       20    designated as final transcripts.  But we seem to be making
       21    progress.
       22             THE COURT:  But we seem --
       23             MR. RUHNKE:  To be making progress.
       24             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, the only wrinkle to that
       25    whole thing, Mr. Ruhnke may not even be aware of this, is that
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             47KSSAT4
        1    there was an order of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
        2    Court that allowed the defendants to have access to the
        3    minimized portions.  That order I don't think applies to the
        4    government and so I would like to check with the Office of
        5    Intelligence Policy and review to make sure that that wouldn't
        6    be in violation of the FISA court order, or perhaps we can come
        7    back to your Honor and ask for an order allowing us to have
        8    access to this information.  But I will look into it this
        9    afternoon and get back with our position to you tomorrow.
       10             THE COURT:  Should that order come from me or from the
       11    FISA court?
       12             MR. MORVILLO:  That is the issue that we want to look
       13    into at this point, your Honor.  It may be that an order is not
       14    even necessary but to the extent there is one, I want to figure
       15    out which entity, which court, is the proper court to issue
       16    that order.
       17             THE COURT:  Okay.
       18             Mr. Schmidt's letter should be docketed, shouldn't it?
       19             MR. RUHNKE:  I agree, your Honor, it should be.
       20             THE COURT:  And there is no reason why it has to be
       21    docketed under seal, is there?
       22             MR. MORVILLO:  I don't see any reason, your Honor.
       23             MR. RUHNKE:  I agree, your Honor, no reason.
       24             THE COURT:  Okay.
       25             The 1700D series I reserved on and I will continue to
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        1    reserve on those.  There is one more tape or series of tapes
        2    with respect to the July 13th prison visit for which there is a
        3    witness tomorrow.  The issues with respect to authenticity have
        4    been argued and people can argue to me if they wish over the
        5    authenticity of the 1700D series.  But it seems to me I should
        6    rule -- yes?
        7             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, we have no objection to the
        8    authenticity of anything in the 1700 series.  We withdraw any
        9    such objection.
       10             THE COURT:  Okay.
       11             MR. TIGAR:  Now that I have heard the testimony of Mr.
       12    Herold about what happened, it supplied any gaps to which I
       13    would have referred in talking about the kinds of machines and
       14    so on because he had all his information about signals going
       15    and such.  So it would be fruitless of us to pursue that and we
       16    are not going to do it.
       17             THE COURT:  Let me just ask --
       18             MR. TIGAR:  Mr. Morvillo wanted to ask me a question.
       19    It might save the witness a trip.
       20             Can we take a minute to do that?
       21             THE COURT:  Sure.
       22             (Pause)
       23             MR. TIGAR:  We will take it up at the break, your
       24    Honor.  We may be able to reach some stipulation.
       25             THE COURT:  Okay.
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        1             So I will consider all of the 1700 series and any
        2    arguments that are to be made after you have had an opportunity
        3    to talk about them.
        4             MR. TIGAR:  There will be nonauthenticity type
        5    objections and questions, your Honor, but from Ms. Stewart's
        6    point of view we prefer to wait until Mr. Ruhnke and the
        7    government have worked out their process and then interpose
        8    those at the appropriate time.  The only one that is relevant
        9    to this entire process is we have had objected to the February
       10    prison visits on hearsay grounds.  And if we decide to maintain
       11    that objection we will interpose it at the point when the
       12    February evidence, the shape of it, becomes clear.
       13             THE COURT:  Okay.
       14             MR. TIGAR:  Excuse me, your Honor, Ms. Shellow-Lavine
       15    reminds me, my withdrawal objection is to the authenticity of
       16    things thus far marked for identification.  I have not heard
       17    yet any evidence about the prison calls.  I was talking about
       18    the prison visits, your Honor.  If it turns out that the prison
       19    calls are going to have 1700 exhibit numbers, I don't wish to
       20    be understood as waiving that objection because I haven't heard
       21    how they were recorded yet.
       22             THE COURT:  Right.  I took that as relating to the
       23    exhibits marked so far in the testimony with respect to those
       24    exhibits.  Okay.
       25             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, just before the break your
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        1    Honor had raised the issue of which instructions accompanied
        2    this set of Sattar search evidence and in the set that we are
        3    going to seek to publish to the jury they are all offered
        4    against Mr. Sattar only and to prove Counts 2 and 3 with one
        5    exception, which is Government Exhibit --
        6             THE COURT:  Hold on.  When you say this set of
        7    exhibits, this is the set that --
        8             MR. BARKOW:  That I had started with.
        9             THE COURT:  On page 3812 of the transcript of 2002?
       10             MR. BARKOW:  No, your Honor.  What I was talking about
       11    just now were the exhibits that we would like to present to the
       12    jury right now.  With respect to the list of exhibits that I
       13    offered into evidence yesterday this comprises some of them and
       14    we are not seeking to publish all of them now.  So I am only
       15    speaking about the ones that we are seeking to publish now.
       16             THE COURT:  All right.
       17             MR. BARKOW:  And of the ones we are seeking to publish
       18    now, they are all offered solely against against Mr. Sattar,
       19    solely as to Counts 2 and 3, and solely to show his state of
       20    mind, knowledge, and intent with one exception.
       21             THE COURT:  Hold on.
       22             Yes.
       23             MR. BARKOW:  That one exception is Exhibit 2037.
       24             THE COURT:  You should give me the list.
       25             MR. BARKOW:  Okay.  This is in the order in which we
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        1    are going to seek to present them to the jury.  We have already
        2    done 2002.  I started with 2003, 2052, 2068, 2067, 2037 -- that
        3    is the one exception -- 2026, and then 2020 and 2020T.  The one
        4    exception is 2037, and that is offered against Mr. Sattar for
        5    the purposes that I articulated, and also against Ms. Stewart.
        6    It's a fax from Ms. Stewart to Mr. Sattar of one of the SAMs
        7    and signed affirmations and it's offered against Ms. Stewart as
        8    an admission.
        9             THE COURT:  Well, the instruction is that these
       10    exhibits are offered solely against Mr. Sattar and solely with
       11    respect to his knowledge, intent and state of mind except that
       12    2037 is also offered against Ms. Stewart.
       13             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, I fail to see how all of 2037
       14    could be offered against Ms. Stewart.  Certainly anything that
       15    she wrote or anything that she signed, but just because she
       16    faxes something doesn't make that her statement.
       17             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, the first page of 2037 is the
       18    signed affirmation.  The rest of it is SAMs and the first page
       19    of it is Ms. Stewart's statement.  The rest of it is offered in
       20    essence for its effect on her.  She had it in her possession.
       21    Each page has a fax line that has a telephone number and her
       22    name, which indicates from where it was faxed.  And so it's
       23    offered to show that it came from her possession, it's effect
       24    on her, her knowledge thereof, and the first page is the signed
       25    affirmation which is her adopted statement.
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        1             And I think this is already admitted in evidence under
        2    a different exhibit number actually.  I don't know it off the
        3    top of my head, but this is just a copy that was faxed by Ms.
        4    Stewart to Mr. Sattar.
        5             THE COURT:  Well, you could give me -- I don't have
        6    the exhibit in front of me, but it sounds -- and certainly the
        7    parties can correct me if I am wrong -- like that the first
        8    page is offered against Ms. Stewart -- the first page is
        9    offered against Mr. Sattar with respect to his knowledge,
       10    intent, and state of mind.  The first page is offered against
       11    Ms. Stewart and the remaining pages are offered against Ms.
       12    Stewart with respect to her knowledge, intent, and state of
       13    mind.
       14             MR. BARKOW:  Well, your Honor, the --
       15             THE COURT:  She is not the spokesperson for the
       16    remaining pages.  The first page is a statement by her, right?
       17             MR. BARKOW:  It's incorporated though actually on the
       18    first page.  It incorporates by reference the remainder
       19    actually.  I can pass this up.  The court just said the court
       20    didn't have a copy but the first paragraph, the third and
       21    fourth lines, incorporates by reference actually the rest of
       22    the document.
       23             And this is also, as I said, admitted in another form
       24    without objection I think.  And so the whole document is
       25    incorporated together when she signs the affirmation.  She is
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        1    signing something that incorporates by reference the rest of
        2    the document.
        3             MR. TIGAR:  Your Honor, this is a SAM affirmation and
        4    a duplicate original that is already in evidence.  The
        5    relevance, if any, is that Ms. Stewart sent it to Mr. Sattar.
        6    So there is no 801 issue here that I see or if offered for that
        7    it's simply duplicative of something that is already in
        8    evidence.
        9             We suggest that the relevance of it is as to Ms.
       10    Stewart's state of mind, full stop.  I don't see any other
       11    thing.  I don't see how in the world the alleged incorporation
       12    of the SAMs should make Ms. Stewart the author of SAMs.
       13             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, it's our view that, one, when
       14    Ms. Stewart sends it to Mr. Sattar she is effectively saying to
       15    Mr. Sattar, just as she did when she said it to the government,
       16    therefore again it's an admission by her regardless of to whom
       17    she sent it.  Secondly, it doesn't seem to make sense to put a
       18    limiting instruction on this which, as Mr. Tigar says, is a
       19    duplicate of something else that is admitted without a limiting
       20    instruction.  It's the same document.  It was just sent to
       21    Mr. Sattar.
       22             THE COURT:  That is true.  There is no 801 objection.
       23    It's already admitted.  The objection is that it's a duplicate
       24    but there is no 403 objection -- there is no reasonable 403
       25    objection to something that is already in and has independent
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        1    significance because Ms. Stewart sends it to Mr. Sattar.  So
        2    it's a duplicate of a document that is already admitted without
        3    limitation and it's now being sent to Mr. Sattar, so it would
        4    be offered against Mr. Sattar for his knowledge, intent and
        5    state of mind, and also being offered against Ms. Stewart.
        6             And all of the other exhibits are being offered solely
        7    against Mr. Sattar and solely with respect to his knowledge,
        8    intent and state of mind.
        9             MR. BARKOW:  That is correct, your Honor.  And some --
       10    in fact, most are newspaper articles and so -- in fact, if I
       11    can just have a moment I can check to see if it's actually all.
       12             MR. TIGAR:  Does the government propose to read this
       13    to the jury?  2037.
       14             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor --
       15             THE COURT:  Hold on.  It's a fair question.
       16             Mr. Barkow, 2037, do you intend to read it to the
       17    jury?
       18             MR. BARKOW:  No, your Honor, we would just publish it
       19    by displaying for a few seconds each page, and the fax line we
       20    would like to read since that is the only part that is
       21    different.  And I found Mr. Dember has advised me, Government
       22    Exhibit 3 is the one that is the same as, so we would like to
       23    read the fax line which is the only part that is different than
       24    Government Exhibit 3.
       25             THE COURT:  All right.  Is that satisfactory?
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        1             MR. TIGAR:  Yes, your Honor.  It's certainly better
        2    than reading it.
        3             THE COURT:  Okay.
        4             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, the exhibits, except for 2037
        5    and except for 2026, are all newspaper articles.  So 2026 is
        6    not.
        7             THE COURT:  Okay.  And I will give that instruction.
        8    Even though I have already given it for 2002, I will give it
        9    again because you are picking up with 2003.
       10             MR. BARKOW:  Yes, your Honor.
       11             THE COURT:  Okay.
       12             Where are you going after 2020T?
       13             MR. BARKOW:  At that point, your Honor, we would turn
       14    to 508.
       15             THE COURT:  All right.  Okay.
       16             By then we should be at a break, I take it, if not
       17    beyond.
       18             MR. BARKOW:  Actually, your Honor, so the court is
       19    aware, 508, when that is published -- if I may just have a
       20    moment -- yes, 508 we would turn to next and then there is one
       21    Sattar search exhibit, 2029, which relates to 508 and so on the
       22    heels of presenting 508 and publishing it, we would then like
       23    to together or after publishing 2029 and 2029T.  That exhibit,
       24    2029 and 2029T, is a newspaper article from the Sattar search
       25    offered only against Mr. Sattar.  But it is the reportage of
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        1    508 effectively.  It was one of the articles referred to in our
        2    letter to the court.
        3             THE COURT:  It's a newspaper article also?
        4             MR. BARKOW:  Yes, your Honor.
        5             THE COURT:  Solely against Mr. Sattar?
        6             MR. BARKOW:  Yes.
        7             THE COURT:  And solely state of mind.
        8             MR. BARKOW:  Yes.
        9             THE COURT:  A newspaper article.
       10             All right, let's bring in the jury.
       11             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, just to clarify something I
       12    said, I said 2029 is a reportage of 508.  It's actually a
       13    reportage of the fatwah contained in 508.  It's not an article
       14    about the article.  It's an article about the fatwah.
       15             MR. MORVILLO:  Your Honor, if I may run down to my
       16    office to try to get in touch with Washington on this issue
       17    that we discussed previously.
       18             THE COURT:  Fine.
       19             (In open court; jury present)
       20             THE COURT:  Please be seated.
       21             Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.
       22             When we broke this morning, we had started to have
       23    read a series of documents which began with Government Exhibit
       24    2002 and then was continuing through 2003, and there are a
       25    series of other exhibits, I understand, 2052, 2068, 2067, 2037,
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        1    2026, 2020 and 2020T.
        2             Let me give you a limiting instruction with respect to
        3    all of these exhibits.
        4             As you heard, the exhibits were items that were
        5    obtained in the course of a search from Mr. Sattar's residence.
        6    They are offered solely against Mr. Sattar, solely with respect
        7    to his knowledge, intent and state of mind, except 2037, which
        8    is also offered against Ms. Stewart.
        9             With respect to all of the exhibits that are newspaper
       10    articles, I have given you an instruction with respect to
       11    newspaper articles before and I repeat it for you again, and
       12    you are to apply that as you go through all of the exhibits.  A
       13    newspaper article, as I have explained to you, is not offered
       14    for the truth because it's a statement by the reporter about
       15    various things.  The newspaper article is offered for the
       16    effect on people or how it affects people, so it's offered, for
       17    example, for their intent, state of mind when they see the
       18    article.
       19             The assertions in the newspaper article are those by
       20    the reporter which may or may not be true and may include
       21    statements by others which may or may not be true, and that is
       22    why newspaper articles are received, if they are, not for the
       23    truth of what is said in the article but, rather, for the
       24    effect on people who see it.  And if there are any other
       25    instructions to be given with respect to newspaper articles
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        1    when they come in, I will give you additional instructions.
        2    But with respect to this group of newspaper articles, that is
        3    how they are to be taken by you.
        4             All right.  You may proceed.
        5             MR. BARKOW:  Thank you, your Honor.
        6             Your Honor, if we may, may we publish to the jury
        7    Government Exhibit 2003, which was admitted into evidence
        8    yesterday?
        9             THE COURT:  Yes.
       10             MR. BARKOW:  First, your Honor, if I may, I would ask
       11    Ms. Grant to focus on the headline and the header.
       12             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2003 in evidence
       13    was read to the jury by Mr. Barkow)
       14             MR. BARKOW:  If I may ask Ms. Grant to turn to the
       15    next article.
       16             (Reading continued)
       17             MR. BARKOW:  At this point the article stops and the
       18    continuation is not part of the exhibit, so we now turn to the
       19    right column.
       20             THE COURT:  All right.
       21             (reading continued)
       22             THE COURT:  All right.
       23             Before we turn to the next exhibit, this is a
       24    convenient time for us to take a stretch break.
       25             Please be seated all.
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        1             MR. BARKOW:  Actually, your Honor, there is one more
        2    page to the exhibit.
        3             THE COURT:  All right.
        4             MR. BARKOW:  This is still Exhibit 2003, your Honor.
        5             (Reading continued)
        6             MR. BARKOW:  Actually, this is the same thing that is
        7    on the first page.  That is why it wasn't on the first copy I
        8    had.  This is exactly the same thing that I read.
        9             THE COURT:  All right.
       10             MR. BARKOW:  If we may, your Honor, we would like to
       11    publish to the jury Government Exhibit 2052, which is in
       12    evidence.
       13             THE COURT:  All right.
       14             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2052 in evidence
       15    was read to the jury by Mr. Barkow)
       16             (Continued on next page)
       17
       18
       19
       20
       21
       22
       23
       24
       25
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        1             THE COURT:  While you're turning the article over,
        2    let's take another stretch break.
        3               (Stretch break; continuation of reading and
        4    displaying article)
        5             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, at this point we'd ask to
        6    publish to the jury what's been admitted into evidence as
        7    Government Exhibit 2068.  We can do that on the ELMO as well,
        8    actually.
        9             THE COURT:  All right.  This is part of the series of
       10    exhibits that I've given you limiting instructions for.
       11             MR. BARKOW:  May I continue, your Honor.
       12             THE COURT:  Go ahead.
       13             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2068, in evidence,
       14    was displayed and read to the jury)
       15             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, at this point we'd ask
       16    permission to publish to the jury what's been admitted into
       17    evidence as Government Exhibit 2067.
       18             THE COURT:  All right.  Same limiting instructions,
       19    ladies and gentlemen.
       20             MR. BARKOW:  And I'll do it on the ELMO.
       21             THE COURT:  All right.
       22             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2067, in evidence,
       23    was displayed and read to the jury).
       24             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, at this point we'd ask
       25    permission to publish to the jury Government Exhibit 2067,
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        1    which has been admitted into evidence.  This is subject to a
        2    different instruction, your Honor.
        3             THE COURT:  Right.  Ladies and gentlemen, this was
        4    offered against Mr. Sattar with respect to his knowledge,
        5    intent and state of mind.  It's also admitted against
        6    Ms. Stewart.
        7             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, if I may publish this, not
        8    read it but publish it and read as we discuss this?
        9             THE COURT:  Yes.
       10             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2067, in evidence,
       11    was displayed to the jury)
       12             MR. BARKOW:  At this point, your Honor, we'd ask
       13    permission to publish to the jury Government Exhibit 2026,
       14    which is in evidence and is offered with respect to Mr. Sattar.
       15             THE COURT:  All right.
       16             I've already given you limiting instructions with
       17    respect to this exhibit, ladies and gentlemen.
       18             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2026, in evidence,
       19    was displayed and read to the jury)
       20             MR. BARKOW:  Your Honor, at this point in this series,
       21    this is the final set.  I'd ask we be permitted to first
       22    publish on the computer Government Exhibit 2020, which has been
       23    admitted into evidence.
       24             THE COURT:  All right.  Same instructions, ladies and
       25    gentlemen.
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        1             (At this point, Government Exhibit 2020, in evidence,
        2    was displayed to the jury)
        3             MR. BARKOW:  And now I'd ask that we be permitted to
        4    publish to the jury Government Exhibit 2020T.
        5             THE COURT:  All right.  But why don't we take our mid
        6    afternoon break.  It's about 3:25.
        7             Ladies and gentlemen, please remember my instructions
        8    not to talk about the case; keep an open mind.
        9             All rise, please.  Please follow Mr. Fletcher to the
       10    jury room.
       11               (The jury exits the courtroom)
       12             THE COURT:  See you shortly.
       13               (Recess)
       14             THE COURT:  There's something up on the screen.
       15             MS. BAKER:  There is.  We had just exhibited the
       16    Arabic Exhibit 2020.  Actually, in light of the limited amount
       17    of time left today, we were hoping to switch and in lieu of
       18    showing the translation of that Exhibit 2020T, to switch to
       19    Government Exhibit 508, which was discussed this morning, and
       20    its translations.
       21             And what we would request permission to do in
       22    connection with that exhibit is to begin by displaying to the
       23    jury the page which is now on the screen for the Court and
       24    counsel, which is Page 19 of government Exhibit 1002X, which
       25    is, of course, in evidence and was previously published.  We do
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        1    not intend to reread that document, but we'd like to display
        2    just that portion of that page before turning to Government
        3    Exhibit 508 in the revised, redacted form.
        4             MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, we do object to that way of
        5    proceeding.  It's like having sort of a mini summation --
        6             THE COURT:  I agree.
        7             MR. RUHNKE:  Okay.  Thank you.
        8             THE COURT:  I think the connections should really be
        9    drawn in summation rather than now.  And it's publishing the
       10    exhibit twice to the jury.
       11             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, as I said, we don't seek to
       12    reread it.  We seek merely to display that portion of that
       13    page.  And I understand the Court's concern.  We certainly
       14    don't intend to be republishing all of our exhibits twice.  We
       15    had some difficulty when we started presenting the calls and
       16    reading them, they proceeded more quickly than we anticipated.
       17    Thus we did not have 508 ready to present immediately at the
       18    end of the call, which would have been our preference.
       19             THE COURT:  But you really wouldn't have -- after the
       20    call, you wouldn't have published this again.
       21             MS. BAKER:  We would not, your Honor, but
       22    respectfully, this is Page 19 of a transcript.  It's not that
       23    far from the end of the transcript.  And had we finished
       24    presenting the transcript of the call and then immediately
       25    turned to Government Exhibit 508, the connection would have
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        1    been apparent because they would have followed immediately one
        2    after the other.  And because of the amount of time that has
        3    lapsed in between and the number of other exhibits that have
        4    been presented to the jury, we seek simply to make that brief
        5    display.  It will make it easier for the jury to understand
        6    Government Exhibit 508, which otherwise appears to them without
        7    any context whatsoever.
        8             THE COURT:  All right.  I still think the objection is
        9    correct.  Particularly when -- I have a long instruction which
       10    sufficiently gives the introduction and limitations to 508.
       11    And summation really is the time to draw the connections.
       12             So, the desire is to move directly to 508?
       13             MS. BAKER:  Yes, your Honor.
       14             THE COURT:  Okay.  You have to offer, right?  And
       15    there also is a stipulation?
       16             MS. BAKER:  Yes, we offer 508 right now, based on the
       17    fact that it's a news article which is self-authenticating and
       18    it's been redacted in accordance with the Court's directions
       19    and various objections raised by the various parties.  And so
       20    we offer 508 now.
       21             508S, which is the stipulation, provides the basis for
       22    authenticating the translations, and so we would ask to offer
       23    508S -- well, we can make all these offers again in the
       24    presence of the jury, but we would offer 508S, the stipulation,
       25    in the presence of the jury, seek to read it, and then, based
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        1    on that, offer the translations, and then seek to display 508,
        2    and then read the translations.
        3             THE COURT:  The translations are 508T, 508T-2 and
        4    508-T3?
        5             MS. BAKER:  Yes, your Honor.  With 508T and 508-T3
        6    redacted as required.
        7             THE COURT:  Right.  Okay.  Let's bring in the jury.
        8               (Continued on next page)
        9
       10
       11
       12
       13
       14
       15
       16
       17
       18
       19
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       21
       22
       23
       24
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        1             MR. PAUL:  I wanted to alert the court that
        2    Mr. Fallick could not be here, and we can proceed in his
        3    absence.
        4             THE COURT:  I am sorry.  It's all right to proceed?
        5             MR. PAUL:  It is.
        6             THE COURT:  Okay.
        7             (In open court; jury present)
        8             THE COURT:  Please be seated all.
        9             All right, Ms. Baker.
       10             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, before proceeding with the
       11    previously displayed exhibit, the government would like to
       12    instead offer at this time Government Exhibit 508.
       13             THE COURT:  All right.
       14             MR. TIGAR:  We have made our position clear, your
       15    Honor.
       16             THE COURT:  All right.
       17             You want to offer the series of exhibits at the same
       18    time?
       19             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, at this time we also offer the
       20    stipulation which is marked as Government Exhibit 508S.  The
       21    stipulation itself will afford the basis for offering the three
       22    other documents which are marked as 508T, 508T2 and 508T3.  I
       23    am happy to offer them all now or if I need to read the
       24    stipulation first, then I would request that that be admitted
       25    first so that I may read it.
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        1             THE COURT:  All right.
        2             No objection to the stipulation.  Government Exhibit
        3    508S received in evidence.
        4             (Government's Exhibit 508S received in evidence)
        5             MR. TIGAR:  Is there an instruction with respect to
        6    these, your Honor?
        7             THE COURT:  This is just the stipulation.
        8             MR. TIGAR:  I am sorry.  I am ahead of myself.
        9             THE COURT:  All right, Ms. Baker.
       10             MS. BAKER:  May I read 508S to the jury?
       11             THE COURT:  Yes.
       12             (At this point, Government Exhibit 508S in evidence
       13    was read to the jury by Ms. Baker)
       14             THE COURT:  All right.
       15             As I said, 508S is received in evidence, and you offer
       16    then a redacted version of 508, and a redacted version of 508T,
       17    an unredacted version of 508T2, and a redacted version of
       18    508T3, is that right?
       19             MS. BAKER:  That is correct, your Honor.
       20             THE COURT:  All right.
       21             Government Exhibits 508 redacted, 508T redacted, 508T2
       22    unredacted, and 508T3 received in evidence.
       23             Ladies and gentlemen, let me give you some
       24    instructions with respect to these exhibits.
       25             First, you will see that certain portions of
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        1    Government exhibits 508, 508T and 508T3 have been "redacted,"
        2    and that is a term which you have heard before in the course of
        3    the case.  That simply means that parts have been taken out or
        4    removed.  That is done for legal reasons that do not affect
        5    your consideration and you should not be concerned about that.
        6    That concerns legal matters that don't affect your
        7    consideration.
        8             These exhibits are admitted only against Mr. Sattar
        9    and not against Ms. Stewart or Mr. Yousry and you cannot
       10    consider these exhibits against Ms. Stewart or Mr. Yousry for
       11    any purpose.
       12             With respect to Mr. Sattar, the exhibits are admitted
       13    only as to Counts 2 and 3 and you may assign to these exhibits
       14    whatever weight you consider appropriate in your consideration
       15    of Counts 2 and 3.  However, I instruct you that Exhibit 508T,
       16    which is redacted, is received subject to connection with
       17    respect to the truth of any matters asserted in the article.
       18             What that means, ladies and gentlemen, the term
       19    subject to connection, and you may hear that subsequently in
       20    the course of the trial, and it means that you can consider in
       21    this case the article for the truth of any statements made in
       22    the article unless at some point I instruct you to disregard
       23    them for that purpose.
       24             And that completes my limiting instructions with
       25    respect to these exhibits.
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        1             All right.
        2             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, at this time I request
        3    permission to publish Government Exhibit 508 by displaying it
        4    to the jury and pointing out certain portions of it and then
        5    would request permission to display to the jury and read 508T.
        6             THE COURT:  All right.
        7             MS. BAKER:  Across the bottom of Government Exhibit
        8    508 it says in English "Al-Quds Al-Arabi, Volume 10, Issue
        9    2881, Saturday/Sunday, 15/16 August 1998."
       10             In the upper right-hand corner of the exhibit is the
       11    marking "1" denoting Section 1 which corresponds to the
       12    translation 508T.  In the lower right-hand corner of the
       13    exhibit is the marking "2" which indicates the portion that
       14    corresponds to the translation 508T2, and in the center, in the
       15    upper half of the article is a line of text marked with the
       16    number 3, which corresponds to the translation in evidence as
       17    508T3.
       18             Turning now to Government Exhibit 508T, if I might
       19    display it on the ELMO and read it to the jury.
       20             THE COURT:  All right.
       21             (Government's Exhibits  508, 508T, 508T2 and 508T3
       22    received in evidence)
       23             (At this point Government Exhibit 508T in evidence was
       24    read to the jury by Ms. Baker)
       25             THE COURT:  Why don't we take a stretch break.  This
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                                                                           4110
             47KSSAT6
        1    is kind of long.
        2             All right, please be seated.
        3             Go ahead.
        4             (Reading continued)
        5             MS. BAKER:  Your Honor, I would ask permission now to
        6    display and read 508T2.
        7             THE COURT:  All right.
        8             (At this point, Government Exhibit 508T2 in evidence
        9    was read to the jury by Ms. Baker)
       10             MS. BAKER:  Finally, your Honor, if I might, if I can
       11    display and read to the jury Government Exhibit 508T3.
       12             THE COURT:  Yes.
       13             (At this point, Government Exhibit 508T3 in evidence
       14    was read to the jury by Ms. Baker)
       15             THE COURT:  All right.  It's now 4:30, so we will
       16    break for the day.
       17             Ladies and gentlemen, please remember to follow my
       18    continuing instructions.  Please don't look at or listen to
       19    anything to do with the case.  Please remember if you should
       20    see something just turn away.  Remember please not to talk
       21    about this case at all or anything to do with it.  It's not
       22    among yourselves, not with anyone when you go home this
       23    evening.
       24             Please always remember to keep an open mind until you
       25    have heard all of the evidence, I have instructed you on the
                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
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             47KSSAT6
        1    law, and you have gone to the jury room to begin your
        2    deliberations.  Fairness and justice to the parties requires
        3    that you do that.
        4             Have a very good evening.  I look forward to seeing
        5    you tomorrow.
        6             All rise please.
        7             Follow Mr. Fletcher to the jury room.
        8             (Jury left the courtroom)
        9             THE COURT:  All right.  Please be seated all.
       10             THE COURT:  Is there anything further for me?
       11             MR. RUHNKE:  Not from us, your Honor.
       12             THE COURT:  All right.  See you all tomorrow at 9:15.
       13             (Trial adjourned to July 2l, 2004 at 9:15 a.m.)
       14                                 o 0 o
       15
       16
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       18
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       21
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       23
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                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300
                                                                           4112
        1                          INDEX OF EXAMINATION
        2    Examination of:                               Page
        3    NOEL HEROLD
        4    Direct By Ms. Baker  . . . . . . . . . . . .  4021
        5    Cross By Mr. Tigar . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4065
        6                                 o 0 o
        7
        8                          GOVERNMENT EXHIBITS
        9    Exhibit No.                                  Received
       10     2010S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4080
       11     2002 and 2003 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4083
       12     508S    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4107
       13      508, 508T, 508T2 and 508T3   . . . . . . .  4109
       14                                 o 0 o
       15
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       18
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       21
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                            SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS, P.C.
                                      (212) 805-0300



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