9 May 2001
Source: Digital file from the Court Reporters Office, Southern District of New York; (212) 805-0300.

This is the transcript of Day 42 of the trial, May 9, 2001.

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


                                                                5978


   1   UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
       SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
   2   ------------------------------x

   3   UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

   4              v.                           S(7) 98 Cr. 1023

   5   USAMA BIN LADEN, et al.,

   6                  Defendants.

   7   ------------------------------x

   8
                                               New York, N.Y.
   9                                           May 9, 2001
                                               9:50 a.m.
  10

  11

  12   Before:

  13                       HON. LEONARD B. SAND,

  14                                           District Judge

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25




                                                                5979


   1                            APPEARANCES

   2   MARY JO WHITE
            United States Attorney for the
   3        Southern District of New York
       BY:  PATRICK FITZGERALD
   4        KENNETH KARAS
            PAUL BUTLER
   5        MICHAEL GARCIA
            Assistant United States Attorneys
   6

   7   SAM A. SCHMIDT
       JOSHUA DRATEL
   8   KRISTIAN K. LARSEN
       MARSHALL MINTZ
   9        Attorneys for defendant Wadih El Hage

  10   ANTHONY L. RICCO
       EDWARD D. WILFORD
  11   CARL J. HERMAN
       SANDRA A. BABCOCK
  12        Attorneys for defendant Mohamed Sadeek Odeh

  13   FREDRICK H. COHN
       DAVID P. BAUGH
  14        Attorneys for defendant Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al-'Owhali

  15   DAVID STERN
       DAVID RUHNKE
  16        Attorneys for defendant Khalfan Khamis Mohamed

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25




                                                                5980


   1            (In open court)

   2            THE COURT:  I received nothing from defendants with

   3   respect to the issue concerning alternates.

   4            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, just one quick thing on the

   5   alternates.  In the Johnson case, which was cited by the

   6   government, which is the 7th Circuit case I was thinking about

   7   yesterday, there's also a case the government doesn't cite out

   8   of the 5th Circuit, United States v. Webster.

   9            THE COURT:  United States v. Webster holds that it's

  10   harmless error at a time when the statute specifically

  11   mandated that the jurors be discharged.

  12            MR. RUHNKE:  Basically counsel messed up in both of

  13   those cases by not asking that the jurors be discharged.

  14            THE COURT:  Excuse me?

  15            MR. RUHNKE:  Essentially, counsel made a mistake in

  16   both of those cases by not asking that the jurors be

  17   discharged at the end of the guilt phase.

  18       I will tell you what our position is on behalf of Khalfan

  19   Khamis Mohamed:  While this is an unchartered area, if there

  20   is any tradeoff at all to be made on timing or the

  21   government's suggestion of combined penalty phasing, we're

  22   prepared to consent to your Honor keeping the alternates and

  23   substituting them in to penalty, if and when we come to that

  24   moment, consider substituting, depending what the

  25   circumstances are when we come do that.  Basically, we're not




                                                                5981


   1   asking you to discharge the alternates.

   2            MR. BAUGH:  On behalf of defendant Al-'Owhali, your

   3   Honor, again, because of the bifurcation issue, if there is a

   4   tradeoff, we would agree with Mr. Ruhnke and join in his

   5   position.

   6            THE COURT:  Whatever your motivation for agreeing

   7   with it, I am not going to discharge the alternates.  As the

   8   commentary to the latest revision to Rule 24(c) makes clear,

   9   the matter is discretionary with the Court.  There are a

  10   number of reasons, many of which I cited yesterday, why that

  11   would be particularly inappropriate in this case.

  12       I will add to yesterday's list, one is that Mr. Rogers has

  13   been promoted and is now in White Plains.  I don't really

  14   relish the thought of going through a voir dire process anew

  15   without his very able assistance.

  16            The rule in the Second Circuit even prior to the

  17   revision was that it was harmless error and it's the only

  18   instance in my practice in which I have ever adopted something

  19   which was harmless error, and I adopted it for an entirely

  20   different reason and in fact never had occasion to utilize the

  21   alternates.

  22       But I don't believe I have a right under the First

  23   Amendment to instruct a discharged alternate not to talk to

  24   the press, and so there is at least the possibility that a

  25   discharged alternate will give an extensive interview to press




                                                                5982


   1   less responsible than those that are presently in the

   2   courtroom, which gets published and is read by a

   3   non-sequestered jury.  And therefore, keeping alternates as

   4   members of the jury does empower the Court to say that.

   5       In any event, that's the practice that we'll follow here

   6   for many, many reasons.

   7            Let me have counsel for both Al-'Owhali and K.K.

   8   Mohamed, their statement of mitigating factors, requests to

   9   charge and special verdict form by May 17th.

  10            MR. RUHNKE:  Fine, your Honor.

  11            THE COURT:  Let's bring in the jury.

  12            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, we're just sort of asking

  13   ourselves whether we have gotten your Honor's final charge,

  14   and I don't know whether we have or not.  No one seems to have

  15   gotten it.

  16            THE COURT:  Yes, you have.  The only changes that

  17   were made were the insertion of the stipulation numbers, a

  18   statement to the fact that the indictment contains background,

  19   that the background is the government's version and is not

  20   evidence.  I think those are the only changes.

  21            MR. RUHNKE:  I suppose the inquiry is, are we going

  22   to get it at some point in the form that is going to go to the

  23   jury?

  24            THE COURT:  Yes.

  25            MR. RUHNKE:  Okay.




                                                                5983


   1            (Jury present)

   2            THE COURT:  Good morning.

   3            THE JURY:  Good morning.

   4            THE COURT:  We are in the midst of the government's

   5   rebuttal argument, and Mr. Fitzgerald, you may continue.

   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  Thank you, Judge.

   7            Good morning.

   8            THE JURY:  Good morning.

   9            MR. FITZGERALD:  I'll finish this morning.  I'm going

  10   to talk to you about four people.  I'm going to conclude the

  11   discussion, finish the discussion about the rebuttal to

  12   Mohamed Sadeek Odeh, then I'll discuss the case against

  13   Mohamed Rashid Al-'Owhali, then I'll discuss the case

  14   involving Khalfan Khamis Mohamed, and then I'll briefly talk

  15   to you about one person who you have heard precious little

  16   about.

  17       Let's start with defendant Mohamed Odeh.

  18            When Mr. Ricco and Mr. Wilford summed up to you,

  19   basically they invoked an image of sending him back to Witu

  20   and his mud hut, and there is something attractive about a mud

  21   hut.  It seems simple.  It seems peaceful, particularly if you

  22   forget the sketch that's in there that we'll talk about in a

  23   moment.  But I ask you to think of this.  August 7th, 1998,

  24   when those bombs went off, in Odeh's mind, in Odeh's physical

  25   presence, he was not in a mud hut, he was in Pakistan, hoping




                                                                5984


   1   to get to Afghanistan, to get to a cave where Bin Laden was.

   2            You heard argument as to why it is that if Mohamed

   3   Odeh was guilty, he left his family behind if others traveled.

   4   I submit to you to think about three things:  First, he often

   5   left his family to go do Jihad.  He went for months.  That's

   6   why you have those tape letters to the wife:  I'm off.  I'm

   7   doing what I have to do.  I'm doing good deeds.  Sorry I'm not

   8   home, but I'll come back when I can.  He made the choice on

   9   August 7th, 1998 -- earlier than that -- to go to the Hilltop

  10   Hotel rather than with this family.

  11            And I also submit to you that you learned that his

  12   wife was pregnant.  If your wife was pregnant, do you want her

  13   to travel?  Do you want her to travel to give birth in

  14   Afghanistan, when you know that the navy, the U.S. Navy, is

  15   supposed to send planes to retaliate?  It makes sense.  You

  16   would leave her somewhere else.

  17       Let's talk about the concept of innocent civilians for a

  18   moment.  It's one of those things about wishful thinking.

  19   Nobody wants anyone to kill innocent civilians, but the point

  20   is, what do people think?  Who do they think are innocent

  21   civilians?

  22       The scary thing about terrorism is no one gets up in the

  23   morning and says I'm going to be a bad person that day.  They

  24   do things, they commit crimes that have been justified as

  25   being proper.  And what have we learned about al Qaeda and




                                                                5985


   1   what al Qaeda thinks about people in the embassies?  Well,

   2   we've seen that al Qaeda thinks that if the U.S. forces are

   3   invited to Saudi Arabia and go there, that's blasphemy.  If

   4   U.S. forces go to Somalia to stop starvation, that's

   5   colonization.

   6       And what do we know from Kherchtou from the transcript at

   7   4741 to page 42, when he says some believe that embassies was

   8   a place for spying:

   9   "Q.  Were people told this in your presence?

  10   "A.  Yes.

  11   "Q.  Were people told that embassies were used to establish

  12   covert operations?

  13   "A.  Yes."

  14            What about the ABC speech, the speech or the

  15   interview by Bin Laden to John Miller from ABC in May of 1998

  16   where he talks about how, after the Khobar bombing, the

  17   embassies are used to gather information.  To al Qaeda,

  18   embassies are not innocent places.

  19            How about -- and we'll display Government Exhibit

  20   351, a document found in the home of that person Abu Mohamed

  21   al Amriki, the surveillance person.  If you look at Government

  22   Exhibit 351, page 1, section B, what does it talk about?  It's

  23   talking about a security system called Netaqat, the system of

  24   the Netaqat to serve, number 2, the Netaq is the term used in

  25   the security.




                                                                5986


   1       For example, an embassy of a foreign country will have

   2   several Netaq.  The first Netaq will be inside the fence and

   3   the security from the foreign country will take care of it.

   4   The second Netaq is the police outside the gate.  The third

   5   Netaq might be a patrol car stationed about two blocks from

   6   the embassy.  The fourth Netaq might be a police unit

   7   responsible to protect some sensitive targets in the area.

   8       How about that other person who did surveillance, the

   9   person Anas al Liby, the person whose passport photograph was

  10   recovered in Wadih El Hage's files in the search of his home.

  11   We'll display Government Exhibit 1677T, the translation, page

  12   12.

  13       When his house is searched in Manchester, that Jihad

  14   manual, this is what you find.  Down at the bottom, "The other

  15   missions consist of the following:  Number 7.  Blasting and

  16   destroying the embassies and attacking vital economic

  17   centers."

  18            I submit to you that when you look at Odeh's

  19   statement, the one that says "Odeh stated that the errant

  20   shock wave hit the wrong building," the right building is the

  21   embassy.  The right building is where they believe that the

  22   people are not innocent, and that serves as an introduction to

  23   the sketch.

  24            Before I address that, Mr. Wilford said, in

  25   addressing the sketch and the explosives residue, that this




                                                                5987


   1   case comes down to simple physical evidence.  I submit to you

   2   that it does not.  The physical evidence strongly

   3   corroborates, convincingly corroborates what is there.  But

   4   you have to look at everything in context, because what do you

   5   know aside from the sketches, aside from the residue?

   6            You know that this was a bombing carried out, in

   7   large part, by al Qaeda, and the al Qaeda people carrying out

   8   the bombing were in the Hilltop Hotel.  Who was Mohamed Odeh?

   9   An al Qaeda soldier.  Explosives training.  Architectural

  10   training.  And where is he?  At the Hilltop Hotel.  Under what

  11   name?  Abdel Basit Awad.  He's here.  He's heard about the

  12   fatwahs in '96 and '98.  He's still with the group.  He has

  13   heard from Mustafa Fadhil that there's discussions about

  14   whether or not an operation in Kenya is okay.

  15       And that's his version.  We'll see what it really means

  16   when you look at the sketch.  He's heard that it is urgent.

  17   Everyone has to leave town by August 6th.  You saw the way it

  18   operates.  Everyone gets out of town 24 hours beforehand,

  19   except those carrying out the bombing.

  20            He's got that tape in his house, the tape to his

  21   wife, September of 1997, when there's American activity in

  22   Kenya against the brothers where he says, "We will get them

  23   back 20 fold.  Time, thinking, and preparation."

  24            In that context, in that context, where he's told

  25   that the United States Navy is going to retaliate and the




                                                                5988


   1   people back in Afghanistan have to move, then look at the

   2   sketch, because its context is the whole picture taken

   3   together, not one piece of the puzzle.

   4            All right, 704.  This is an enlargement of that

   5   sketch.  It's on the screen as well.  Let me remind you that

   6   when Mr. Wilford addressed you, he told you in a loud voice

   7   that, you know what, this book had Mustafa Fadhil's

   8   fingerprint on it and no one else's.  And I'll look to the

   9   transcript at 5295, 5296.

  10       What Mr. Wilford told you is:  It had one fingerprint that

  11   the government was able to recover that the FBI found, and

  12   that was a fingerprint of Mustafa.  Not Mohamed Odeh, Mustafa.

  13   What does that tell you?  It was found in Mohamed Odeh's

  14   house, yes, okay.  Does it show you that he handled it?  No.

  15   That's not proof beyond a reasonable doubt.  It does show you,

  16   however, that Mustafa handled this book.  That's what the

  17   proof shows you.  Don't be confused.  You may be asked to make

  18   inferences that Mr. Odeh drew this.  The only proof we have in

  19   this case that shows that anybody handled this book is

  20   Mustafa.

  21            There are several problems with that.  First of all,

  22   Mustafa Fadhil's fingerprint was not found on the book.  The

  23   evidence in this case, you can look at Mitch Hollars'

  24   testimony, this book has many pages.  This is page 3, and

  25   we'll talk about page 3, page 4 and page 5 in a moment.  This




                                                                5989


   1   is page 3, this is page 4 -- what's left of it -- this is page

   2   5.

   3            The book has lots of writing in it.  In fact,

   4   Mr. Wilford said, "Elsewhere, you know when it's Odeh's

   5   handwriting and other things because of discussion of fish."

   6   You can look at this book.  You can get gloves, you can look

   7   through it in the jury room later on.  In the book there's

   8   discussion of king fish.

   9            What Hollars told you, with all the pages that have

  10   writing on it -- and there are more than a dozen pages of

  11   handwriting -- only one fingerprint could be recovered in the

  12   entire book.  It's on page 1.  Not on this page, not on that

  13   page.  And they compared the fingerprint on page 1 to Odeh and

  14   to Mustafa Fadhil and neither hit.  And as Mr. Wilford asked,

  15   Mr. Hollars:  You have no idea who that print belongs to; is

  16   that correct, sir?  And he said no.  You don't know who put

  17   that print on page 1?

  18       Well, one thing you do know is somebody handled the book.

  19   Somebody wrote on all those pages with writing, and the

  20   fingerprints -- there are no fingerprints recoverable from any

  21   of those pages, so you just don't know.

  22       You also heard that no one tested the writing.  Agreeable,

  23   no one tested the writing, neither the government, and the

  24   defense has no burden, but they didn't test the writing.  And

  25   I submit to you when Mr. Wilford implied to you that maybe the




                                                                5990


   1   government tested it and didn't like the result and ditched

   2   it --

   3            MR. WILFORD:  Objection.

   4            THE COURT:  Well, I sustain the objection and that

   5   comment is stricken.

   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  I just submit to you the defense has

   7   no burden, but if you think that there's something in here

   8   that shows the handwriting is elsewhere --

   9            MR. WILFORD:  Objection.

  10            THE COURT:  Overruled.

  11            MR. FITZGERALD:  -- the defense could call an expert,

  12   like they did Dr. Lloyd, and look at it.

  13            Well, let's take a look at the handwriting, okay?

  14   And look, don't rely upon amateur handwriting experts,

  15   yourself or myself, but let's take a look.  And when you look

  16   at the handwriting, let's focus on another document taken from

  17   the Odeh house, Government Exhibit 702.  That's what was

  18   referred to by the Odeh team as an inventory.  The original is

  19   the same type of brown paper, looks more like a budget.

  20            I'll tell you right up front, 702, the budget, was

  21   found at Odeh's house and that one does have Mustafa Fadhil's

  22   fingerprint on it.  Now, you may say, well, it's Mustafa's

  23   fingerprints on it.  Maybe Mustafa Fadhil wrote it.  If it's

  24   in Odeh's house, maybe Odeh wrote it.

  25       You can take a look at what the contents of the document




                                                                5991


   1   are, because you will see that this budget document is

   2   important because of what light it sheds on the sketch.  The

   3   budget document has a translation, Government Exhibit 702-T.

   4   We'll put up 702-T, page 1.

   5            And before you look at this page, I'll tell you what

   6   the significance is.  If you remember that spring 1997 report,

   7   that secret document that Wadih El Hage walked back from

   8   overseas from Bin Laden to Kenya, after that new policy came,

   9   you learned that four particular people got engaged in

  10   activity in Somalia:  The defendant Odeh, Marwan; Mustafa

  11   Fadhil, known as Khalid, and you have seen his picture a

  12   number of times; and this fella -- you heard about an Ahmed,

  13   Ahmed the Egyptian or Ahmed al Saghir; and you also heard

  14   about Harun.  And you have seen his picture often enough,

  15   Harun.

  16            When you look at 702-T, there's no year on it, but

  17   you can figure out it's not 1998.  It's got entries in it past

  18   August 7th, so when you see the references to weapons and

  19   artilleries, we're not claiming that's for August 7th, the

  20   bombing.  It makes more sense it's before, 1997, when the

  21   people are doing the work set forth in the policy.

  22            When you look at the budget, on the first page you

  23   will see in the lower right-hand corner and Ahmed al Saghir,

  24   and it says, "Ahmed al Saghir was sent to Mombasa to brother

  25   Khalid carrying a report to brother Khalid."




                                                                5992


   1       That is a nine-page document.  You can go through it.  The

   2   point is this:  You will see references to an Ahmed, you will

   3   see references to a Khalid and you will see references to a

   4   Harun, all written in the third person.  There is no reference

   5   to Odeh, no reference to a Marwan.  I submit to you either

   6   Odeh wrote it; he's talking about the other three guys in the

   7   third person; or one of those people wrote it and wrote a

   8   budget using his own name as a third person.  This is

   9   important because it's about, quote, military work, getting

  10   explosives, getting artillery, getting training.

  11       Now let's go to the original, Government Exhibit 702-P,

  12   and we'll go to 702-P1.  And if we could go to 702-P1 and

  13   focus on the number 3 on the first page as it's written on the

  14   budget.  If we could then magnify it and enlarge it on the

  15   left.

  16       Now if we could go to the sketch, 704P-2, on the right and

  17   enlarge the number 3 and compare.  Now if we could look at a

  18   6.  Go to Government Exhibit 702, page 5.  Focus on the 6.

  19   Magnify it on the left.  Go back to the sketch on the right.

  20   Magnify the 6.  Very similar.

  21            Now, you can go through different 3's different

  22   times, the 6's seem to match.  I tell you right now, if you

  23   look at the 1's, the 1's are odd because the 1 here sometimes

  24   it's drawn like this.  You can see a little bit of a hook.

  25   There's more hooks on the 1's there.




                                                                5993


   1       You know what, I submit to you that there could be more

   2   than one handwriting in this book or in that book, but it

   3   appears it's Mustafa Fadhil and Odeh and the group writing

   4   what's in the budget and drawing a sketch.  And that's the

   5   important piece, because if the people writing this budget,

   6   the budget about the military work, about explosives and

   7   artillery -- let's give them Mustafa Fadhil.  Mustafa Fadhil

   8   is drawing this and he's drawing this, this is not about a

   9   snow cone.  Mustafa Fadhil is not in the snow cone business.

  10   You don't go to Witu for a snow cone.

  11       And what did we hear from Odeh?  Talk about dancing with

  12   the truth.  I'll borrow a line from Fred Cohn:  "If you want

  13   to make up a lie, get one grounded in the truth."  Odeh tells

  14   you Mustafa Fadhil came to visit him in the spring of 1998,

  15   and he and Mustafa Fadhil were talking.  Mustafa Fadhil was

  16   talking about whether an operation in Kenya is something he's

  17   for or against, and Odeh says Mustafa Fadhil has the same

  18   mind-set.  He likes Kenyans.  But Saleh has a different

  19   mind-set.  He doesn't like Kenyans.

  20       And I submit to you this document, whether it's Odeh

  21   writing it down while he's discussing with Mustafa or Mustafa

  22   writing it down while he's discussing it with Odeh, shows you

  23   that they're not trying to decide whether an operation is a

  24   good thing or a bad thing, they're trying to get it right,

  25   point it at the right building, point it at the building that




                                                                5994


   1   has the generators on the side.

   2            Page 4, let's focus on page 4.  A lot was made on,

   3   where is page 4?  Mr. Wilford basically said to you, to me,

   4   have him get up here and tell us where page 4 is.  Mr. Ricco

   5   went a bit further.  Mr. Ricco said, a quote from page 5320 to

   6   5321 about the mystery of page 4:

   7       "You see this here?  You see this?  This torn out page?

   8   Do you see the writing on that torn-out part?  When you go in

   9   the back and deliberate, take the book out.  This is the book.

  10   You are going to find another torn-out page on here, another

  11   torn-out page on here that somebody put another 4 on the back

  12   of.  So you will find a 4, but that number 4 does not match

  13   this because the writing is not on the flip side of the tab."

  14   He showed you this tab.  He said, "Look at the writing.  It's

  15   not on the flip side."

  16            And then he continued, page 5321:  "This page on the

  17   back, somebody wrote in a small number 4 so you would think

  18   that when you take this, if you put it behind that and flip it

  19   around, this should match up.  What you are going to find?  If

  20   I put it on the Elmo and hold down that tab, what you see is

  21   that the writing is not there.  It's gone."

  22            So now what you have, not only do you have a

  23   coincidence that he's got a sketch in his house that matches

  24   the description of what he thinks the physics works like, not

  25   only does he have al Qaeda conspiring against them, they're




                                                                5995


   1   dragging him to the Hilltop Hotel, under a fake name, making

   2   him hang out with the bombers for days before he leaves under

   3   a fake name, 24 hours ahead of time.  Now the FBI lab is

   4   joining in.  When they frame people, they make little notes.

   5   They draw a 4 on the page, rip it out, and put a new one in.

   6       That's pretty desperate.  But let's take a look.  Let's

   7   take a look, and I invite you to take this in the back with

   8   you, to take some gloves and walk through it.

   9            We have some of it scanned on the screen so we can

  10   show you, but do not take my word for it.  Take it in the

  11   back, take your gloves, take your time.  You can all look.

  12   The staples are now removed from the book.  It was processed

  13   at the lab.  But move the pages around and see if the 3, the 4

  14   and the 5 don't fit.

  15       If you look on the screen -- and I'll take this down so

  16   it's not a distraction -- if you look at the screen on the

  17   top, there's a picture 704-P, which is stipulated to be the

  18   photograph taken of the exhibit before forensic analysis,

  19   before the lab did their work.  We'll come back to that.

  20       Look at the lower left corner, if we could, Gerard, the

  21   lower left corner on the top of the exhibit, and if we could

  22   magnify that.  And there you see the 3.

  23            Now if we could go on the right.  Look in the lower

  24   right corner of that page and magnify it, and you see there's

  25   a 5.  It looks like a K538, which, if you check out, looks




                                                                5996


   1   like the lab number for that exhibit.

   2       Now let's look at the exhibit in the middle, down below

   3   from the original, which you can look at yourself and magnify

   4   that's on that little shred of paper.  What do you see?  A 4

   5   with K538 and some initials, which appear to be like the

   6   initials under the 5.

   7            Someone was careful enough to say, hey, this is a

   8   book, it's falling apart, number the pages, 3, 4 and 5.

   9            Okay.  We still got a problem, don't we?  We got a

  10   problem with what happened to the writing.  Well, I submit to

  11   you, you can take the book in there and you can flip the page

  12   over and we can display the page with the little shred turned

  13   over on the bottom.

  14       If we could magnify the other side of what's left of page

  15   4, if we could magnify the top, the picture from 704-P2, the

  16   photograph of the exhibit before the lab tested it, put them

  17   side by side, first look at the shape.  Those are the outline

  18   of what's in here.  And you can look at it for yourself and

  19   you can take -- there's an original exhibit that's smaller.

  20   Compare it.  They line up.  They line up with the size.

  21       What about the ink?  Well, I'll tell you two things.  Look

  22   at the book at the top.  Look at the book at the bottom.  You

  23   see those blue lines across the page?  They're gone.  They're

  24   gone from testing.  Remember that stipulation I told you?

  25   Government Exhibit 46 is a stipulation that the coloration of




                                                                5997


   1   the exhibit changed during testing.  All those blue lines are

   2   gone.  The lab isn't going around stealing the blue lines out

   3   of the page, it's gone from testing.

   4       And if you look on the left and you can look at the

   5   original, you can see outlines, little bits of blue on that

   6   page.  That's what's left of page 4.  There's no mystery.  It

   7   wasn't stolen.  It wasn't fabricated.  It wasn't stolen,

   8   documented and put back.

   9            Now, we heard about the box in the circle.  If you

  10   look at the comparisons that we've done -- and you'll see them

  11   in a moment -- on the comparison we did, we never put the box

  12   in the circle.  No one ever contended that Odeh or Mustafa or

  13   whoever was there drawing during the discussion drew the tent

  14   afterward.

  15       What is this?  We don't know.  Could there ever have been

  16   something on that circle beforehand?  Could that be the car?

  17   Remember Harun drives the lead truck?  What is it?  What, I

  18   submit to you, is look at the entire picture.  This is the

  19   traffic circle.  This is the embassy, and the direction is

  20   correct.

  21       They talked a bit about turning the sketches around.

  22   Remember when you looked at that big model that was in the

  23   courtroom, when you were asked to look at the model, if you

  24   are looking at the embassy, if the embassy is here and the

  25   traffic circle is there, south is this way.  And there's a




                                                                5998


   1   stipulation that this word written here is "south."  Another

   2   great coincidence.

   3       Look over here.  Look at this.  If this is a truck facing

   4   the embassy, lo and behold, right in the parking garage, where

   5   the truck is supposed to go, there's the generator, the round

   6   circles of the generator you can see in the screen.

   7            Now, you were told, why didn't they ask Mohamed Odeh

   8   about it?  They recovered it on August 25th.  He's on a plane

   9   on August 27th.  I submit to you, look at your common sense.

  10   There were searches going on all the over the place, the Mercy

  11   search, the search in Witu on the Khost of Kenya.  And when

  12   that search evidence came in, there were boxes piled up here,

  13   all different books.

  14       And you saw the defense put in, which is proper, some of

  15   the other books from that same bag.  And you saw that box and

  16   you saw things and papers and other things and other boxes and

  17   other things and searches happening in Tanzania and

  18   everywhere.

  19       Does that mean if an FBI agent in Witu grabs a box of

  20   papers, that he's suddenly read the back of this and knows

  21   there's a shred of paper and he studied everything, and

  22   everyone involved in the investigation in all the countries,

  23   including Agent Anticev who is in the interview, suddenly

  24   knows about every piece of paper from the Mercy search and the

  25   Witu search and the Ilala search and all those other searches




                                                                5999


   1   at once?  No.

   2            The blast cone.  We were told that, where is the

   3   expert testimony on the blast cone?  That's Mr. Karas twisting

   4   it.  I submit to you the expert testimony on the blast cone is

   5   right back here.  The expert testimony on Odeh's state of mind

   6   is what Odeh said.  That's what he thought, that's how it

   7   worked.

   8            Don Sachtleben didn't think it worked that way.  He

   9   couldn't give expert testimony about the wrong physics.  But

  10   the wrong physics is what Odeh thought about.  That's his

  11   blast physics and that's on the sketch in his house.

  12            Finally, my favorite argument on the sketch which

  13   let's you know they're fighting way too hard:  Government

  14   Exhibit 253.  Mr. Wilford said, you know what?  They turned it

  15   around.  The government turned the sketch around, because,

  16   look, it's facing that way.  And look in the book, it's facing

  17   this way.  Wow.  Who did that?

  18       Well, let me tell you something.  This looks pretty darn

  19   incriminating, doesn't it?  Because you've got the sketch

  20   thing facing that way and it lines up with the generator.

  21   Watch this:  It's still incriminating.  It doesn't change the

  22   position.  This sketch is facing down that way.  The generator

  23   is there.  You look on the screen, it's the same thing.  This

  24   is the blast cone, the bomb, whatever you want to call it, the

  25   force of the bomb being directed at what Odeh thinks is the




                                                                6000


   1   right building.  And these circles are the generators of the

   2   right building, the embassy.

   3            I submit to you that when you look at the case

   4   against Mohamed Sadeek Odeh, it is not a case where there's

   5   overwhelming evidence that he is there, that he's a member of

   6   the group and he knows everything, and it's compounded by a

   7   conspiracy by al Qaeda to drag him to the hotel and have him

   8   hang around and leave under a fake name, with a conspiracy by

   9   the lab and a conspiracy by the prosecutors to twist things,

  10   what I submit to you is at some point your common sense, your

  11   reason, your experience kicks in, it hits the evidence and it

  12   says, you know what?  He did it.

  13       He wanted to bomb that building.  He made a conscious

  14   decision to participate.  He sat and discussed with other al

  15   Qaeda members how to do it.  The Hilltop Hotel wasn't a

  16   layover on the travel to Pakistan to confer, it was place to

  17   go, a place to go where you can help.  It was a place to go

  18   where you could help under a fake name and get out of town,

  19   and the only thing wrong with what he did was he didn't make

  20   it all the way to Afghanistan, and now, after the fact, after

  21   putting those Kenyans at risk, he's upset that the plan didn't

  22   work, that it hit the right building, but it also hit the

  23   wrong building.

  24       And it's too late for sorry now.  He made that decision to

  25   participate.  He made a decision to put those Kenyans at risk.




                                                                6001


   1   He made the decision to kill Americans.  And I submit to you,

   2   look at the evidence as a whole picture:  A person trained in

   3   architecture and engineering, a person trained in explosives,

   4   trained in intelligence, who went to the al Qaeda camps and

   5   belonged to the group since 1992.

   6       And remember, you learned from the Somalia proof the most

   7   important thing:  Al Qaeda is against America at least as

   8   early as 1993.  And he's with the group and he stays with the

   9   group, and he stays with the group past August 1996 when the

  10   war becomes public, not when it began.  When Bin Laden

  11   declares the public war, he doesn't drop out.  And he stays

  12   past February 1998 when the war is against American civilians

  13   and military.  He stays in.

  14            He stays in the war in 1997.  They're working on a

  15   budget -- not for integration in Somalia, but for artillery

  16   and explosives.  He stays with the group when he hears from

  17   Mustafa Fadhil that they're discussing whether an operation in

  18   Kenya is a good thing or a bad thing.  That sketch is in his

  19   house.  Mustafa Fadhil went there.  I submit to you they

  20   discussed it, they planned it, and that's why he went to

  21   Nairobi.

  22            He stayed in al Qaeda when he was angry in September

  23   1997.  And don't forget that tape they don't want you to

  24   remember, the tape from Witu where he tells his wife, after

  25   American activity in Kenya in August 1997, "They have won this




                                                                6002


   1   time.  We will get them back 20-fold.  Time, thinking,

   2   preparation."

   3            He stays.  He makes a conscious decision to

   4   participate.  He helps plan where the bomb truck should go.

   5   He goes to Nairobi.  He knows, as a Kenyan with a Kenyan I.D.

   6   card, he doesn't want his name on that registry.  He checks

   7   into the hotel.  He admits he knows that he's told that it's

   8   urgent he leave, that an operation is coming, a big operation

   9   is coming, told to him by Mustafa Fadhil, the person he was

  10   talking to.  He even admits he knows the U.S. Navy is going to

  11   retaliate.

  12            He gets out, according to the plan, 24 hours

  13   beforehand.  He sees his bomb trainer/instructor in the hotel.

  14   He wasn't surprised.  He knew this was a bombing.  Maybe he

  15   didn't know which bomb maker would show up.  He even admits he

  16   walks out on Moi Avenue on the Wednesday but doesn't know

  17   where the embassy is.

  18       He sees Saleh and Harun going out for a small job, but

  19   says, "I know it wasn't shopping," and then he makes his

  20   decision to get out of town.  He flees.  He's caught with a

  21   fake passport and TNT and PETN.  You heard that PETN is used

  22   in detonators.  It's not from grinding.  You don't grind a

  23   detonator.  Detonators are to go pop.  It's not on that

  24   grinder in Dar es Salaam.

  25       I submit to you that the evidence taken together is of




                                                                6003


   1   such a convincing character, it's proof beyond a reasonable

   2   doubt that he did it.

   3            Let's talk about Mr. al-'Owhali.  When we talk about

   4   Mr. al-'Owhali I want to focus on law, justice and morality.

   5   I submit to you we don't agree that you have to check one or

   6   the other.

   7       I'm going to focus on three types of arguments with regard

   8   to Mr. al-'Owhali:  The arguments Mr. Cohn made about the

   9   conspiracy, the arguments Mr. Cohn made about voluntariness,

  10   and the arguments he made about what other evidence in the

  11   case there is besides the statement.

  12            The conspiracy arguments:  Mr. Cohn says he wasn't

  13   part of that conspiracy in that indictment.  That is wrong.

  14   What did he know?  He was, I don't know how old, 16, 19,

  15   whatever that first date is.  The judge will tell you the time

  16   frame -- if you join the conspiracy, you don't have to join

  17   when the conspiracy starts.  If Bin Laden starts in '92, you

  18   can join in '94, '96, '97, '98, you can join on August 6th of

  19   1998 once you meet the requirements:  You agree you are going

  20   to participate in a plot to kill Americans.

  21            And in looking at whether he joined the conspiracy,

  22   remember, actions speak louder than words.  In this case, from

  23   Al-'Owhali you've got both.  You've got actions, you've got

  24   words.

  25            The action, simple:  He blew up the embassy.  The




                                                                6004


   1   words:  He told you he did it and he told you why.  I don't

   2   think we should overlook how specifically he told us.

   3            I'm going to read from the transcript page 2020 with

   4   regard to Mr. al-'Owhali.  This is the examination of Agent

   5   Gaudin:

   6   "Q.  Did Saleh say anything about why the embassy in Nairobi

   7   was targeted?

   8   "A.  Al-'Owhali explained to me that there were several

   9   reasons for picking -- explained to him through Saleh there

  10   were several reasons why the embassy in Nairobi was picked.

  11       "First, there was a large American presence at the U.S.

  12   Embassy in Nairobi; that the ambassador of the U.S. Embassy

  13   was a female and if the bomb resulted in her being killed, it

  14   would further the publicity for the bombing.  Also, that there

  15   were embassy personnel in Nairobi who were responsible for

  16   work in the Country of Sudan.  There was also a number of

  17   Christian missionaries at the embassy in Nairobi; and, lastly,

  18   that it was what Al-'Owhali explained as ease of access to the

  19   embassy.  It was an easy target.

  20   "Q.  Did Mr. al-'Owhali discuss any other targets with Saleh

  21   at this time?

  22   "A.  Al-'Owhali explained to me, explained to me that there

  23   were -- there's a number of different targets.  He doesn't

  24   know where they all are, but they're in the planning stages.

  25       "Al-'Owhali discussed with Saleh when, you know, are there




                                                                6005


   1   targets in the United States that we can attack?  Saleh had

   2   explained to him there are targets in the U.S. that we could

   3   hit, but things aren't ready yet.  We don't have everything

   4   prepared to do that yet.  First, we must -- Saleh explains to

   5   Al-'Owhali that we have to have many attacks outside the

   6   United States and this will weaken you, the U.S., and make way

   7   for our ability to strike within the United States."

   8       And listen to the next part when you think back to that

   9   indictment section he posed about, well, was he trying to kill

  10   soldiers?  Was he trying to kill people in the embassies?  On

  11   the bottom of 2021:

  12   "Q.  Did Mr. al-'Owhali tell you about anything that he

  13   learned about targets during his training camps in

  14   Afghanistan?

  15   "A.  Al-'Owhali explained to me during his training they

  16   emphasized priorities of attacks, three of those to be

  17   military bases, U.S. missions or diplomatic posts, and

  18   kidnapping ambassadors."

  19       And just skipping ahead, make sure you understand exactly

  20   what the scope of the conspiracy that Mr. al-'Owhali knew he

  21   wanted to be part of, 2023:

  22   "Q.  Agent Gaudin, you testified, I believe, as to certain

  23   information that Mr. al-'Owhali learned about targets while he

  24   was in the training camps in Afghanistan.  Did he tell you

  25   anything about why embassies are specifically targeted?




                                                                6006


   1   "A.  In addition to telling me the types of targets, he also

   2   explained that hitting embassies achieves certain objectives

   3   that he was instructed or that he was taught at the camps.

   4   And by hitting an embassy, the objectives are that you would

   5   achieve -- would be you hit the ambassador by hitting the

   6   embassy.  You would also -- also, an objective would be the

   7   military attache, the press attache, and what Al-'Owhali

   8   described as, most importantly, the intelligence officers at

   9   the embassy."

  10       Mr. al-'Owhali is a bright man.  He went to those camps

  11   with a brain, well-educated, smart, fully capable of free

  12   choice, and he listened and he remembered, he understood and

  13   he agreed.  He understood this is war against America,

  14   military, civilian, embassies, whatever it takes, he's going

  15   to do.

  16       And remember, he wouldn't join al Qaeda because he wanted

  17   to have a military mission.  He didn't want to be the guy

  18   doing paperwork.  He wanted to kill.  And you know what else?

  19   His own statement told you that when he left Afghanistan to

  20   Africa, all he was told was that it was an American target.

  21   He didn't learn it was an embassy until he got to Africa.

  22   What better proof than his goal, his agreement is, okay, it's

  23   Americans, I'll kill them.

  24       Mr. Cohn described Al-'Owhali as a most minor participant.

  25   Those are the words, "most minor participant." This man over




                                                                6007


   1   here, not only did he travel to Africa knowing that it was a

   2   U.S. target, that's all he needed to know.  Not only did he

   3   want to kill, but he walked -- imagine him walking two days

   4   before the bombing, he walks up to the embassy, broad

   5   daylight, for surveillance.

   6       What does he see in the building?  People, downtown

   7   Nairobi crowded.  Did that stop him?  No.  Then, this man

   8   right here is in a truck.  The truck drives down the street,

   9   up into the embassy.  He throws the flash bang grenades.  And

  10   what do they do?  They bring all those people to a window, a

  11   window that gets blown out.  The lucky are blinded.  The

  12   unlucky are dead.  And as he turned his back to the bomb so he

  13   can save himself, the Ufundi House is crumbled.

  14       That carnage lays at his feet.  That is not the most minor

  15   participant.

  16       Let's keep it simple:  Conspiracy to kill Americans is an

  17   agreement.  You agree to kill.  He agreed.  He killed.  End of

  18   story.

  19       Let's talk about the voluntariness of the statement taken

  20   by Agent Gaudin from Mr. al-'Owhali.  You've had it thrown out

  21   there he is in mortal fear of his life.  No evidence of that.

  22       We've heard about prison conditions.  We heard about the

  23   jail conditions of Kherchtou.  He wasn't in the jail with

  24   Al-'Owhali.  He wasn't with the Americans or with the FBI and

  25   didn't have Agent Gaudin coming by to see if he had milk.




                                                                6008


   1   He's with some other people.

   2       Now, Kherchtou, you heard, all right, he had to pee in a

   3   bucket.  He wasn't washing.  What did you learn about

   4   Al-'Owhali?  Well, first of all, context.  Al-'Owhali's been

   5   training in Afghanistan, fighting the Taliban in the

   6   mountains, and he comes to Nairobi to kill and to die.  When

   7   he is there in Nairobi, he expected to be dead.  He walked

   8   into a bomb scene.  The bomb goes off.  He sees it.  He goes

   9   to the hospital along with his victims.

  10       I submit to you the evidence shows he didn't care.  Do you

  11   think if he didn't have a shower, that's going to overbear his

  12   will?  When he was with Agent Gaudin, Agent Gaudin told you he

  13   took him to the bathroom.  He took him to the bathroom so he

  14   could wash to pray.  And Agent Gaudin was alone with him.

  15       You know what else Agent Gaudin told you?  A couple of

  16   remarkable things.  Al-'Owhali never once complained.  He

  17   never said anyone was threatening me, anyone was ever hurting

  18   me.  You saw the pictures.  Those scratches aren't being from

  19   being beaten, those injuries, the only injuries he had, were

  20   from the bomb he set of.  Those cuts, that's from his running,

  21   running away from the bomb.  Let it kill someone else, not me.

  22   I'm scratched.

  23       Agent Gaudin told you another thing:  No complaints.  No

  24   handcuffs.  Can you imagine?  The whole time that Agent Gaudin

  25   was with him, that whole time, he never saw him in handcuffs




                                                                6009


   1   until he left.  Those are the conditions that struck fear into

   2   Al-'Owhali's heart.

   3       Mr. Cohn wanted to take a shot at Agent Gaudin and said,

   4   you saw a picture, you saw a picture in a jail cell.  That was

   5   his trophy picture because he cracked the case.  A little

   6   problem with that:  You learned he gave a statement on August

   7   22nd, and the photo was taken the morning before.  Don't let

   8   that get in the way.  We'll come back to how Mr. Cohn would

   9   like to treat Agent Gaudin.

  10       You have heard about the Kenyan handmaidens.  What are

  11   they doing?  There ain't no bruises.  There were no complaints

  12   from Al-'Owhali.  Why didn't we call them?  Okay.  Hi, sir.

  13   Were you working in the jail?  Did you beat Al-'Owhali?  No.

  14   What Mr. Cohn would say, maybe it was someone else.

  15       What, do we call 350 people to say we didn't beat him?

  16   Mr. Cohn will do what he did with Agent Gaudin.  He lied.  Do

  17   what he did to Muwaka Mula.  He lied.  I submit to you the

  18   agent is sitting there, talking to him alone, and he never

  19   once says he's hurt.

  20       The translator.  You didn't hear from the translator.  I

  21   submit to you, you think about the statement.  How bad could

  22   the translator have been?  He got it right.  He's given him

  23   the phone number in Yemen.  I called 00578 in Yemen.  Lo and

  24   behold, checked the phone records, he's calling 00578 in

  25   Yemen.  Says he went to the M.P. Shah Hospital.  Yep, he got




                                                                6010


   1   it.  Money transfer house.

   2       And you know what?  Look at the form.  Look at the form

   3   that Al-'Owhali signed.  You can look at it.  It's in

   4   evidence, Government Exhibit 557.  What does he say before he

   5   gives a statement?

   6       I'll back up a moment.  Why did he give a statement?

   7   Well, it's in evidence.  He gives a statement after he is

   8   picked out in the lineup by Muwaka Mula.  He walks up, "That's

   9   the guy."

  10       He knows he's been picked out.  He's shown the pictures of

  11   43 Runda Estates.  He now knows they got the bomb factory.

  12   That thing is going to light up like a Christmas tree.  And

  13   they got the phone records.  They showed him the phone

  14   records.  And what do the phone records from Runda show?  His

  15   name, or his fake name, Khalid Saleh.  Khalid Saleh calling

  16   that number in Yemen, 00578, the number in Yemen in touch with

  17   the satellite phone.  And you know what?  It's Khalid Saleh

  18   calling that number in Yemen an hour before the bombing,

  19   checking in before mass murder, 9:30 in the morning.

  20       So as he's sitting there in Nairobi, he says, well, I got

  21   my fake name calling up Yemen from the place, the bomb

  22   factory.  They got pictures of the bomb factory and I got

  23   picked out in the lineup.  And you know what?  When he signs

  24   the form, what does he want?  I don't know what word to use,

  25   but he's got the gall to -- stronger words we can't use --




                                                                6011


   1   he's got the gall to make demands.

   2       Here it goes, after acknowledging that he was advised of

   3   his rights, 557:  "I understand that both Kenyan and American

   4   authorities are investigating the murder of the various

   5   American and Kenyan victims in and around the United States

   6   Embassy in Nairobi.  I have a strong preference to have my

   7   case tried in the United States court because America is my

   8   enemy and Kenya is not.

   9       "I would like my statements about what I have done and why

  10   I have done it to be aired in public in an American courtroom.

  11   I understand that the American authorities who are

  12   interviewing me want to know who committed the bombing of the

  13   embassy and how it was carried out."

  14       He wanted his day in the sun.  He wanted to be in an

  15   American courtroom with the media there to hear what he did,

  16   why he did it, before he talked.  He did, and he got it.

  17       And you know what?  This guy's fearing for his life and

  18   he's the one making the demands and now they're going to tell

  19   you, sit back and listen.  Basically, shut up, stupid.  I'm

  20   going to tell you what happened, and when I'm done, then you

  21   can ask me questions.

  22       And you know what?  The best proof of that is a defense

  23   exhibit.  Let's put up Defendant Al-'Owhali Exhibit C on the

  24   screen.  This is a man who just killed over 200 people, was in

  25   the hospital with the victims, saw the people he blew up.




                                                                6012


   1       There's no Agent Gaudin here.  This is the one with the

   2   reporter.  He thinks he's a champ.  Is he in fear of his life

   3   or is he just, just brazen, arrogant, in your face, saying,

   4   "Hey, America, you're the enemy.  I'm going to fight you.  I'm

   5   going to meet you in court.  I want to tell my story."

   6       Is his story reliable?  It's completely corroborated.  He

   7   talks about the gun, the .9 millimeter gun he left in the

   8   truck, the slide, the slide for the .9 millimeter was found

   9   there with the pitting, very close to the bomb and the

  10   bullets, the bullets matched and were found in the hospital

  11   where he was.

  12       What else did he tell you?  He told you about the Dihab

  13   Shil money, and this checked out.  And he told you about the

  14   French Embassy.  Remember, he said down in Dar there's this

  15   other bombing and they had to move the truck around because

  16   they didn't want to hit the French Embassy.  And lo and

  17   behold, Ambassador Lange comes out and says after the bombing,

  18   I come out, I go across the courtyard, I shake hands with the

  19   French ambassador.

  20       Now, another thing about Al-'Owhali.  You would think they

  21   want you to think that the only evidence in the case is his

  22   confession.  I submit to you, very clearly, that there's more

  23   than enough evidence, more than enough evidence to convict

  24   Al-'Owhali beyond a reasonable doubt without the confession.

  25   Strong words, but true.




                                                                6013


   1       Muwaka Mula.  Charles Muwaka Mula who came, the guy who

   2   had the stun grenade thrown at him.  How many times do you

   3   think that happened in his life?  Hopefully once.  You think

   4   he can remember the guy who threw it at him.  When he took the

   5   stand, you remember your recollection of what he did?  I

   6   submit to you, you may remember that he sat there and he

   7   looked when he was there, looked this way for a long time, and

   8   then he slowly started to turn around in his seat during the

   9   testimony, and then, when he was called upon, he identified

  10   him.

  11       And what does Mr. Cohn do?  Well, he calls it the worst

  12   I.D. witness in the history of the Western world, which fits

  13   if you make up that he cheated.  He said, well, there's only

  14   six bearded guys in the courtroom.  Okay.  Why would you have

  15   to assume that Al-'Owhali would have to be bearded in the

  16   courtroom?  He says, well, someone told him, implies someone

  17   told him where he sat.

  18       Let's look at the record, quote from 2155:

  19   "Q.  And they told you that the suspect would be in the

  20   lineup, yes, in the parade, right?

  21   "A.  No."

  22       2156:

  23   "Q.  Okay.  Well, since Friday, did anybody tell you where the

  24   person you identified would be sitting in this courtroom so

  25   that you could identify him?




                                                                6014


   1   "A.  No."

   2       But in the ultimate cheap shot in the trial, he just

   3   implies it must be that guy Gaudin.  Or, it wasn't the people

   4   at the table.  Somebody told him who did it.  There are plenty

   5   of candidates, maybe someone we've talked a lot about.  Didn't

   6   even bring up his name, just implied that an FBI agent

   7   obstructed justice by telling a witness something that the

   8   witness lied about.

   9       I submit to you he has no burden, but if he thinks that,

  10   ask the man the question.  He's available.  He was on the

  11   witness stand.  Ask him about it.

  12       What is the other evidence in this case?  Besides Muwaka

  13   Mula, here's what you have.  You have TNT and PETN on

  14   Al-'Owhali's clothes.  You have a receipt in his pocket,

  15   Khalid Saleh, when he is arrested, the fake name, the receipt

  16   to the M.P. Shah Hospital where they find those bullets that

  17   match the gun.

  18       You have his name, Khalid Saleh, tied to the travel

  19   records coming in.  You have his name tied to the calls placed

  20   in the bomb factory, 43 Runda; the name tied to the call on

  21   August 7th, 1998 at 9:30 to Yemen.

  22       You have him picking up the money from the wire service,

  23   and you have not only Muwaka Mula putting him at the scene of

  24   the crime, but you also have Harun's briefcase in the Comoros

  25   Islands.  Remember when they searched the house of Harun, the




                                                                6015


   1   guy who was all over the bombing?  His clothes test positive

   2   for TNT and PETN between his clothing and his shoes.

   3       They find Al-'Owhali's tickets under the fake name Khalid

   4   Saleh with Harun's stuff with Al-'Owhali's fingerprint on it.

   5   They find the passport for Al-'Owhali and for Azzam, who's

   6   dead, killed himself along with the others.

   7       I submit to you that Mr. Cohn would like you to think that

   8   maybe there's some other conspiracies we should also have

   9   charged.  The charges in the indictment have been proven.

  10   Mr. al-'Owhali had a brain, he had knowledge, he had an

  11   understanding of the scope of the agreement, the agreement to

  12   kill.  He agreed.  He killed.

  13       Let's turn to Khalfan Khamis Mohamed.  Mr. Ruhnke on

  14   behest of Mohamed also talked about the conspiracy.  I submit

  15   to you two things:  First, listen to the judge as to what he

  16   says about conspiracy, but one thing I submit he will tell you

  17   is that each member doesn't have to know every other member.

  18   Each member does not have to know every other detail.  Each

  19   member doesn't have to have joined at the same time.

  20       And I submit to you, one thing that should be crystal

  21   clear is that Khalfan Khamis Mohamed knew what the plan was,

  22   he knew the plan was to kill Americans, and he knew that the

  23   target was the embassy.  I'm going to walk through that in a

  24   moment when we get to the time line, because the timeline that

  25   Mr. Ruhnke went through yesterday, there are some things that,




                                                                6016


   1   I submit, in your mind you should add that paint a fuller

   2   picture.

   3       First of all, Mr. Ruhnke referred several times to the

   4   manual labor, Khalfan Mohamed was doing manual labor, always

   5   under the supervision of someone else.  He just had the sense

   6   of a blue collar guy just showing up, doing his job, and

   7   somebody else is telling him what to do.

   8       Okay, what was the manual labor?  The manual labor was

   9   grinding TNT.  It was loading TNT and explosives, a bomb onto

  10   a truck.  It's not manual labor, it's making a bomb.

  11

  12            (Continued on next page)

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25




                                                                6017


   1            MR. FITZGERALD:  (Continuing) You also heard, and

   2   this is important, you heard Mr. Ruhnke say that they had to

   3   tell him that it was TNT.  Didn't that sound like a pathetic

   4   bomber, they had to tell him it was TNT?  I submit to you, if

   5   you look at the record, if you look at the report, which is in

   6   evidence, they had to tell him it was TNT, they told him it

   7   was TNT because the TNT came, as he said, in a closed bag that

   8   was stitched up.  It's inside a closed bag.  Not knowing

   9   what's in the bag doesn't mean you don't know what TNT is.  In

  10   fact, if you read the rest of the statement, Khalfan Khamis

  11   Mohamed says, he admits he went to Afghanistan and got

  12   explosives training.  He was trained in how to join wires and

  13   do detonators.  He knows what TNT is.  He just may not know

  14   from a closed, stitched, non-see-through bag that it is in the

  15   bag at the time.  And he certainly knew what TNT was when he

  16   grinded it through the grinder for the bomb and loaded it up.

  17            If there is any doubt that Khalfan Khamis Mohamed

  18   didn't know what was going on, I will show you a couple of

  19   sections.  Page 20 of his report, KKM stated that all the

  20   members of the group -- he is referring to the people in the

  21   Dar es Salaam bombing, he said he didn't know about Nairobi.

  22   KKM stated that all the members of the group were aware of the

  23   plan to bomb the American Embassy in Dar es Salaam.  KKM

  24   stated that no one in the group was fooled or tricked into

  25   being involved.  KKM stated that this bombing could not have




                                                                6018


   1   been done without the entire group's knowledge.  He also said

   2   not only did he know the plan, he knew the target.

   3       I suggest if you put in your time line, five days before

   4   the bombing, August 7, KKM was told the target.  Take his word

   5   for that, not mine.

   6       Look at the report, page 10.  Quote, KKM stated that when

   7   he moved to the Ilala house -- the bottom paragraph -- he knew

   8   that a bomb was planned, not because of what he had been told

   9   at that point but because he had seen the TNT and other things

  10   associated with the bombing.  KKM stated that initially he did

  11   not know what was going to be bombed, where the bombing would

  12   take place or when the bombing would occur.  Before Hussein --

  13   this guy Hussein, Mustafa Fadhl -- before Hussein left to go

  14   to Kenya, approximately five days before the bombing, however,

  15   he told KKM that there was going to be a bomb at the American

  16   Embassy in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.  Hussein told him at that

  17   time that the bombing was going to occur sometime over the

  18   weekend of August 7, 1998, but did not inform him of the

  19   specific time.  KKM stated that Ahmed the driver told him on

  20   Thursday, August 6, that the bombing would occur at 10 a.m. on

  21   Friday, August 7, 1998.  KKM stated that he did not know why

  22   10 a.m. was chosen as the time for the bombing to happen and

  23   he never asked why that time was chosen.  KKM stated that the

  24   time must have been important but he did not know the reason.

  25   KKM stated that Hussein often spoke with a person in Kenya for




                                                                6019


   1   plans.  He stated that he really did not know anyone involved

   2   in the bombing other than those in the group around him.  Goes

   3   on to say that he knew nothing about the bombing in Nairobi

   4   until he saw it reported on television.  OK, he didn't know

   5   about the Nairobi bombing.  He is not charged with the Nairobi

   6   bombing.  But he says I knew, I was told, I was told five days

   7   before, he saw the TNT, he grinded it.  He did it.

   8            You know what's more important?  More important to

   9   put on the time line?  Later on you find out that when the

  10   bomb's going off he's praying.  He's praying and hoping things

  11   go well, and when he hears that the bombing happened, he's

  12   happy.

  13       And you know what else?  Put this in the time line for

  14   October 1999, because remember, when he is interviewed it's

  15   more than a year, more than a year after the bombing.  And

  16   what does he say?  Think about it.  Is he someone that says

  17   hey, what did I do, I killed 11 men, 11 people are dead

  18   because of what I did?  What do we hear?  Page 32 of his

  19   report, under KKM's motivation.  KKM stated that he was not

  20   sorry for the fact that Tanzanians were killed, and he

  21   described it as part of the business.  He goes on to say that

  22   KKM stated that Allah would take care of those Tanzanians who

  23   were killed.

  24       Below, skipping two sentences, KKM was asked whether he

  25   considered this bomb to be a successful operation, and he




                                                                6020


   1   stated that it was successful because the bomb worked.  It

   2   sent a message to America and it kept Americans busy

   3   investigating it.  KKM stated he would rather kill only

   4   Americans.

   5            Next paragraph, KKM stated that if he had not been

   6   caught by the police he would have done it again.  KKM

   7   specifically stated that he would kill Americans and he would

   8   help with another bombing against Americans.  KKM also stated

   9   that if he was ever released from custody he would kill

  10   Americans and help with another bombing.  KKM stated that he

  11   hopes that others will carry on now that he is caught, and

  12   stated that he would still carry on if he could.

  13            Down below, scope of the conspiracy:  KKM stated he

  14   must do anything necessary to get the American soldiers out of

  15   Saudi Arabia and that it is his duty to kill these soldiers.

  16   KKM stated that because it was very difficult to get to the

  17   soldiers, his group targets and attacks the United States

  18   government to include American embassies and other United

  19   States government buildings.

  20            He's had a year to think.  Eleven people killed by

  21   him, 11 people he wasn't even targeting, and after a year he

  22   says I ain't sorry, I wish I had killed more Americans.  This

  23   is not someone who accidentally got involved in a bombing.  He

  24   made a conscious determination that he had agreed to kill

  25   Americans.  Bombing the embassy was a way to do it and he did




                                                                6021


   1   it.  The key evidence, certainly the confession is important

   2   but I submit, without the confession you could still convict

   3   Khalfan Khamis Mohamed beyond a reasonable doubt.

   4            We heard about Mr. Ruhnke bringing up some problems

   5   about Agent Perkins' notes yesterday, some discrepancies.  I

   6   submit two things.  He has no burden to do anything but he had

   7   Agent Perkins on the stand.  He could have asked in front of

   8   you and saw what he said.  Remember when Mr. Stern implied the

   9   thing about killing Americans wasn't in her notes.

  10   Transcript, Stern:  You said in your report that Mr. Mohamed

  11   said if he hadn't been caught by the police he would have done

  12   it again, specifically stated that he would have killed

  13   Americans and would have helped with another bombing if ever

  14   released from custody.  Would kill Americans and help with

  15   another bombing.  Then he says where is it, OK, page 77, it

  16   says here, KK stated if released from custody or never caught

  17   would do it again, would kill Americans, would do bomb.  That,

  18   I submit to you, is why no further questions were asked of

  19   Agent Perkins.  It is in her report, it's in her notes.

  20            One other thing.  You also heard argument that one of

  21   the reasons there is evidence against K.K. Mohammed is that he

  22   talked, and without that there would be precious little to

  23   link him to the bombing.  Not true.  Go back to the

  24   cross-examination of Agent Perkins.  Mr. Sterns said you knew

  25   an awful lot of information when you talked to him, didn't




                                                                6022


   1   you?  He went through different things K.K. Mohammed already

   2   said, you knew that, you had already.  Remember, they were

   3   there to arrest Mr. Mohamed.  They had done an investigation.

   4   He didn't roll down the street.

   5       What does the independent evidence show apart from his

   6   confession?  The evidence places him at 15 Amani Street.

   7   Passport photos there, passport application with his

   8   fingerprints on it.  Also, there is a detonator.  The other

   9   evidence places him, different witnesses place him at 22

  10   Kidugalo Street with Mustafa Fadhl, this guy he calls Hussein.

  11   The items in there, the carpet you saw, the reddish carpet and

  12   the foam, they test positive for explosives residue.  The

  13   evidence shows he bought the Suzuki with Fahad, a bomber, the

  14   person you saw fleeing on the plane from Nairobi with Mohamed

  15   Odeh.  The evidence shows, proves he rented the bomb factory

  16   from the broker, from his nephew, from the lease.  And the

  17   bomb factory is the bomb factory.  Explosives test, light to

  18   place them up like a Christmas tree.  In there is that

  19   blasting cap and the detonator, and the razor with the DNA of

  20   Ahmed the German, the suicide bomber from Dar es Salaam.

  21            The nephew tells you that he gave him that grinder,

  22   the grinder that tested positive for TNT, not PETN.  You grind

  23   TNT.  PETN you don't grind.  It's a detonator.  He gave it to

  24   him and said clean it, it's been used for unclean things.

  25            There is something Mr. Ruhnke said that I think we




                                                                6023


   1   need to address.  It was a comment he made and I want to quote

   2   it accurately.  It was yesterday, at 5873.  Thanks.  I told

   3   Mr. Karas I'd lose it, bring an extra.  He said this:  As the

   4   world turns, as events go, if Khalfan Mohamed had left to go

   5   to London to start a new life, probably the embassy would have

   6   been bombed on August 7, 1998 anyway, and that would not have

   7   changed.  But everything would have changed for him and he

   8   would not be sitting here facing your judgment.  But that's

   9   not how the world turned.

  10            Two comments on that.  First, he assumes it would

  11   have happened anyway.  Let us not get to the point where we

  12   assume that if someone says I'm not participating in mass

  13   murder that there is just someone else there to do it.  Let us

  14   not be numb.  We talk about the 18th century, we talk about

  15   the 19th century, we talk about the 20th century.  In the 21st

  16   century, let's keep the fact in mind that you have a mind, you

  17   have a brain, you have choices, and you decide what you do.

  18   You are accountable for your actions.  As the world turns.

  19   This is not like the weather.  This wasn't an event that

  20   happened to him.  This was a bombing he did to others.

  21       I submit to you, the evidence is clear, the evidence is

  22   crystal clear that he knew the design was to kill Americans.

  23   He knew what the TNT was for.  He was told what the target

  24   was.  He did it.  He made a decision.  He didn't flee to

  25   London, he fled to South Africa.  He turned the world, the




                                                                6024


   1   world didn't turn him.  And you know what, a year later he is

   2   not saying gee, if only I had gone to London.  He is saying

   3   yeah, I did it, I'm glad I did it, I'm glad, I wish more

   4   Americans had died, I don't care that Tanzanians died and I

   5   would do it again.  That shows you beyond a reasonable doubt

   6   that he is guilty.

   7       I told you at the beginning I would talk about El Hage,

   8   that I would talk to you about Odeh, I would talk to you about

   9   Al-'Owhali, I would talk about Khalfan Khamis Mohamed, and

  10   then I would talk to you about someone you have had heard

  11   precious little about.  That is Roselyn Wanjiku Mwangi.

  12   Roselyn Wanjiku Mwangi.  You may not remember that name.  She

  13   was not a witness.  She could not be a witness.  She is a

  14   victim in this case.

  15       This trial is about her murder.  The pathetic part is, so

  16   many people got killed, so much human carnage.  Roselyn

  17   Wanjiku Mwangi.  She is Count No. 123 in the indictment.  You

  18   have to get to page 45 of the indictment to see her name.  But

  19   she is not just a name.  She is not just a count.  It is not a

  20   name on a list.  It's a person.

  21       You heard a little bit about the person.  I want to talk

  22   about her as a symbol, as a symbol because there were a lot of

  23   people who were killed.  A lot of people were killed in

  24   Nairobi and in Dar es Salaam.  You heard about that man that

  25   Lizzie Slater talked about lying there, burned and dying, so




                                                                6025


   1   bad she wished he would hurry up and die.  Rosie -- that's who

   2   Roselyn is -- Rosie you heard about from Sammy Nganga.  He was

   3   in Ufundi House, what Odeh calls the wrong building, next to

   4   the embassy, the right building.  Ufundi House that Sammy

   5   Nganga had his back to as Odeh sprinted away to save his life.

   6            MR. WILFORD:  Objection.

   7            MR. FITZGERALD:  I apologize.  Mohamed Al-'Owhali

   8   sprinted away from.  You know what, Sammy Nganga, when the

   9   bomb went off, was buried beneath the rubble.  He was the guy

  10   with the injured leg buried beneath the rubble, and he stayed

  11   there for two days.  He is in there in the darkness with the

  12   smell, with the sounds.  One of the sounds is Rosie's voice,

  13   because she is buried there too.  The searches come and they

  14   look for Rosie and look for Sammy.  They have a light and they

  15   are looking with the light to find them.  They save Sammy and

  16   he says they'll be back in two hours for you.  They don't make

  17   it back in time.

  18       Rosie dies.  She is Count 123, page 45.  Her life was

  19   lost.  Her life was taken from her.

  20            Now, I submit to you, this trial has been a search, a

  21   search through the rubble pile of the evidence, for truth and

  22   for justice, for those that did this, those that drove a truck

  23   or rode in a truck right into the embassy to bomb people,

  24   those who gave the advice as to where to place the bomb to hit

  25   the right building, those who helped set up the plot, the




                                                                6026


   1   terror cell in East Africa so it could operate, so people

   2   could do their work and get out of town, and those who grind

   3   TNT and drive a truck into a different embassy moments later

   4   and kill, and have no regrets.

   5            I submit to you it's been a long journey.  It takes

   6   work to go through the rubble pile of evidence, because we

   7   have to.  We have to uphold justice.  We have to work through

   8   it.  We have to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.  I

   9   submit to you, we have taken that journey, we have proved it,

  10   we are there.  Now it's time for light, light of the truth to

  11   shine through and give Rosie one thing:  Justice.  Thank you.

  12            THE COURT:  Thank you, Mr. Fitzgerald.  We will take

  13   a morning recess.

  14            (Jury excused)

  15            THE COURT:  We will place on every juror's seat three

  16   documents:  The indictment, the court's charge, and the

  17   special verdict form.  I received a note from a juror:  "Your

  18   Honor, I apologize in advance if my request is a major

  19   inconvenience.  Is it possible for us to adjourn at 3:30 on

  20   Friday?"  Then she goes on to detail a birthday and a surprise

  21   party which her husband has told her that her children are

  22   planning for her.

  23            (Laughter)

  24            THE COURT:  It gives some reflection of the impact on

  25   which jury service impacts on people's everyday lives.  Unless




                                                                6027


   1   there is objection, we will adjourn early on Friday.

   2            MR. RICCO:  No objection.  Can we adjourn to the back

   3   to be heard on one brief matter?

   4            MR. COHN:  And I would like to be heard here.

   5            During Mr. Fitzgerald's rebuttal he mentioned for the

   6   second time during summations, the first time during

   7   Mr. Karas's summation, certain material that was shown to

   8   Mr. Al-'Owhali that caused him to confess, and I think what he

   9   said was pictures about Runda Estates and something about

  10   telephone numbers.  We searched the record both times and

  11   cannot find that.  If the government would favor us with a

  12   record reference, we won't make the motion that you instruct

  13   the jury that it never happened and that it be stricken.

  14            MR. FITZGERALD:  We will do that.

  15            THE COURT:  Very well.  There was some other record

  16   inference?

  17            MR. WILFORD:  Yes, your Honor, page 5934.

  18            THE COURT:  What does it say?

  19            MR. WILFORD:  The portion of the transcript.

  20            MR. BAUGH:  Excuse me.  We are advised the

  21   translators cannot hear.

  22            MR. WILFORD:  We will speak loudly.

  23            THE COURT:  You can do that?

  24            MR. WILFORD:  Only when I have the microphone.  Your

  25   Honor, it's a portion of the transcript where Mr. Fitzgerald




                                                                6028


   1   is talking about an argument of Mr. Schmidt in terms of being

   2   a facilitator and what was needed to succeed as a facilitator.

   3   Then he goes on to say, particularly at line 12, Kherchtou

   4   explained it to you.  You don't have to shoot the gun if you

   5   are helping someone else you know is going to do it.  I think

   6   that is an oblique reference that Kherchtou pled guilty to the

   7   activities.

   8            THE COURT:  Overruled.

   9            MR. RICCO:  Your Honor, I might as well raise it

  10   since we are here.  I only have one point with respect to Mr.

  11   Fitzgerald's summation, and that was his explanation to the

  12   jury of what PETN is -- they can't hear?  My only objection is

  13   to what Mr. Fitzgerald said PETN is and how it was used in

  14   connection with this case.  He said it was only used in

  15   connection with detonator caps and explaining the role of

  16   Mohamed Odeh.  But the transcripts in the case said at page

  17   2483, the testimony of Kelly Mount, the question is, can you

  18   tell us whether or not PETN is a high explosive?  Answer, PETN

  19   is also a high explosive, yes.  Question, do you know what

  20   kind of use PETN is in connection with explosives?  Answer, it

  21   has several uses.  It may be found in blasting caps, it can be

  22   used in detonator coils, and it can be used as an explosive in

  23   and of itself.

  24       Maybe I misunderstood Mr. Fitzgerald.  Maybe he said it

  25   can be used for other purposes.  I didn't hear that and I




                                                                6029


   1   would like to have an opportunity to look at the record.  If

   2   he did say to be used in other connections, fine.  But if he

   3   is making a representation to the jury that the only way PETN

   4   is used, it's not mixed with TNT, I heard him say that, and it

   5   is only used for detonator caps, that is a mischaracterization

   6   of the record that should be corrected.

   7            THE COURT:  Why don't I take a recess, during which

   8   time we will do the distributions, and having consulted with

   9   the record we will take up these matters before the jury comes

  10   back in.

  11            (Recess)

  12            THE COURT:  With respect to the issue raised by Mr.

  13   Cohn, I understand reference to the record has satisfied you

  14   and the objection is withdrawn.

  15            MR. COHN:  The record reflects that a question about

  16   telephone numbers and the photos of the house was asked.

  17            MR. FITZGERALD:  On the other matter, Judge, I think

  18   it was fair argument to point out that with regard to the

  19   grinder in Dar es Salaam, first Kelly Mount said it could be

  20   used for a detonator and Mr. Ricco correctly described her

  21   testimony that you could use it for a detonator or an

  22   explosive.  In this case in Dar es Salaam, the grinder was

  23   tested and it had TNT but not PETN.  I think it is a fair

  24   conclusion to say that the PETN is used as a detonator.  I

  25   didn't say it was only used as a detonator and I think it is




                                                                6030


   1   fair argument on the evidence.

   2            MR. RICCO:  His statement on the record is that PETN

   3   is a detonator.  That's what he said.

   4            THE COURT:  I thought it was PETN is not ground.

   5   Isn't that the issue?

   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  I also said it is a detonator.  If I

   7   misspoke, it is in a detonator.

   8            THE COURT:  What would you have me do?

   9            MR. RICCO:  I would have the court instruct the jury

  10   that there was testimony in this case that PETN is also a high

  11   explosive.  It can be used in detonating coils, it can be used

  12   as an explosive in and of itself, which is the testimony in

  13   this case.

  14            THE COURT:  But that would only be part of the story.

  15   The other part of the story is that PETN was not found on the

  16   grinder.

  17            MR. RICCO:  That's right.  PETN was also found in the

  18   room where the grinder was.  That's beside the point.  I am

  19   not raising it, your Honor, to connect it to the grinder.

  20            THE COURT:  You want the jury to be told that the

  21   testimony indicates that PETN may be used --

  22            MR. RICCO:  Judge, the testimony was PETN is also a

  23   high explosive.  It may be found in blasting caps.  It can be

  24   used --

  25            THE COURT:  Let's keep it very short and very simple.




                                                                6031


   1            MR. RICCO:  There was testimony that PETN is also a

   2   high explosive and it can be used in detonating --

   3            THE COURT:  Is a high explosive, it is also used in

   4   detonators, no PETN was found on the grinder.  Yes?  Is that

   5   all right?

   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  Judge, my argument is, I remember

   7   discussing that you don't grind the PETN, it's like a blasting

   8   cap.  The argument is that there is no PETN on the grinder.  I

   9   think that is a fair argument.  There is TNT, blasting caps

  10   and no PETN in the grinder.  Her testimony is that PETN was

  11   found in blasting caps.  I understand Mr. Ricco would like to

  12   argue it differently.

  13            MR. RICCO:  It is not that I would like to argue it

  14   differently.  Mr. Fitzgerald said in his remarks to this jury

  15   that PETN is not an explosive.  There was another reference in

  16   addition to the reference we just found in the record, and I

  17   just want the record correct.

  18            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, I don't believe I stated

  19   that PETN --

  20            THE COURT:  Does the record indicate that it is not

  21   ground?

  22            MR. FITZGERALD:  I argued that it was not ground

  23   because the grinder in this case tested negative.

  24            THE COURT:  PETN is sometimes used as a high

  25   explosive.  It is also used for detonators and blasting caps.




                                                                6032


   1   No PETN was found on the grinder.  Is that all right?

   2            MR. FITZGERALD:  Fine.

   3            THE COURT:  When the verdict is returned, no one will

   4   leave the courtroom until the jury is outside the building.

   5            (Continued on next page)

   6

   7

   8

   9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25




                                                                6033


   1            (Jury present)

   2            THE COURT:  Ladies and gentlemen, it is now going to

   3   be your great pleasure to listen to me for many hours.  If at

   4   any point anybody wants to take a break, just raise your hand

   5   and we will take a break.  We will take our usual breaks.

   6            Let me first tell you, with respect to PETN, you

   7   heard references to that in closing statements.  PETN is

   8   sometimes used as a high explosive.  It is also used for

   9   detonators and blasting caps.  And no PETN was found in the

  10   grinder in this case.

  11            Let me also answer some questions that you had about

  12   the logistics.  Just before the jury begins deliberating,

  13   which will probably be tomorrow afternoon, because we are not

  14   sitting tomorrow morning, just before that happens the

  15   alternates, that is, assuming everyone stays healthy the last

  16   four persons in the back row, will be excused temporarily.

  17   You will continue to be members of the jury.  You will be

  18   subject to all the instructions that I have previously given

  19   about not reading, listening to or talking with anybody about

  20   the case.  And you will be on telephone call.  The jury

  21   clerk's office has both your work and home telephone numbers.

  22   When it becomes appropriate and if it becomes appropriate for

  23   you to return, we will give you a telephone call and you will

  24   have as much notice as possible.  And if it will not be

  25   necessary for you to return you will also be given a telephone




                                                                6034


   1   call to let you know that you are off the hook.

   2            I am sorry to say that you will not be paid when you

   3   do not come to the courthouse.  I looked into that rule and

   4   there is just nothing I can do about it.

   5            Tomorrow we start at 1:00.  On Friday we will adjourn

   6   at 3:30 to enable a juror to attend a happy event.

   7            There are three documents that you found on your

   8   seat.  One of them is the indictment, and I don't think I will

   9   be making too much reference to that where it is necessary

  10   that you look at the indictment yourself.  So that if you have

  11   difficulty juggling all the papers on your lap, the indictment

  12   is something that you can put on the floor.  The two other

  13   documents are the charge to the jury, sometimes referred to as

  14   the instructions, and the other is the verdict form, which we

  15   will go through during the course of my instructions to you,

  16   and that's the road map.  That tells you what it is that you

  17   will have to answer, and you will see that more clearly as we

  18   go through it.

  19            I am going to read the charge to you.  Sometimes the

  20   impulse to deviate from the printed text may be irresistible

  21   and I hope I will remember that, and to alert you and to alert

  22   the court reporter to the fact that I am doing that.  But

  23   otherwise I will follow the text.

  24            You may wonder why if I am going to do all this

  25   orally you have it in writing, and why if you are going to




                                                                6035


   1   have it in writing I am going to do it orally.  The reason for

   2   that is, it is very important, and we are not simply going

   3   through a ritual.  We are going through a process which I hope

   4   you will understand.  Our own experience and the experts on

   5   learning and understanding tell us that some people absorb

   6   concepts better when they hear them, when they just listen,

   7   and some people absorb them better when they read, and some

   8   people prefer to read and listen at the same time.  What we

   9   are doing is, we are giving you the option.  If you would like

  10   to put the charge, the written charge on the floor or face

  11   down on your lap and just listen, that's fine.  If you would

  12   like to read along with me, that's fine.  If you would like to

  13   vary it from time to time, that's OK.  There is no right way,

  14   there is no wrong way.  It is whatever you think will be most

  15   useful to you in following and understanding the very

  16   important functions that you will soon be called upon to

  17   discharge.

  18            The charge begins with a table of contents, and that

  19   is just to assist you if during your deliberations you want to

  20   check a point, and then it begins on page 1, where I welcome

  21   back members of the jury.  And I join the parties in thanking

  22   you for your service thus far.

  23       I told you at the outset of the trial before you begin

  24   your deliberations I will instruct you on the law in greater

  25   detail, and that time has now come.




                                                                6036


   1       It's been obvious to me and to everyone in this courtroom,

   2   you have faithfully discharged your duty to listen carefully

   3   and observe each witness who testified.  Your interest has

   4   never flagged and you have followed the testimony with close

   5   attention.  I ask that you give me the same careful attention

   6   as I instruct you on the law.

   7            The following instructions are rather extensive, so

   8   let me provide you with a brief overview of what to expect.  I

   9   will begin by instructing you on the rules generally

  10   applicable to all criminal trials.  Then I will proceed to

  11   review the counts which are charged in the indictment and

  12   instruct you on the specific rules of law that you will have

  13   to consider in deciding each count.  Finally, I will instruct

  14   you on the procedures you should follow while conducting your

  15   deliberations.

  16            Let me encourage you at the outset not to be dismayed

  17   or discouraged by the length of these instructions.  The

  18   instructions are extensive because you are being asked to

  19   resolve several different types of charges, and the various

  20   elements of each count must be explained separately.  I have

  21   tried to make these instructions as clear and concise as

  22   possible.  If you proceed step by step and count by count, you

  23   should have no difficulty applying these instructions to help

  24   you weigh the evidence and decide the case.

  25            For your convenience, there is a table of contents to




                                                                6037


   1   assist you in locating any particular instructions you may

   2   wish to consult, although, as I will instruct you later, no

   3   part of the charge should be considered out of context, and

   4   the captions are simply a reference and have no other

   5   significance.

   6            You have now heard all of the evidence in the case as

   7   well as the final arguments of the lawyers for the parties.

   8   My duty at this point is to instruct you as to the law.  It is

   9   your duty to accept these instructions of law and apply them

  10   to the facts as you determine them, just as it has been my

  11   duty to preside over the trial and decide what testimony and

  12   evidence are relevant under the law for your consideration.

  13            On these legal matters, you must take the law as I

  14   give it to you.  If any attorney has stated a legal principle

  15   different from any that I state to you in my instructions, it

  16   is my instructions that you must follow.  Moreover, if you

  17   find a conflict between the language of my instructions and

  18   the indictment, you rely on my instructions.

  19            You should not single out any instruction as alone

  20   stating the law but you should consider my instructions as a

  21   whole when you retire to deliberate in the jury room.  You

  22   should not any of you be concerned about the wisdom of any

  23   rule that I state, regardless of any opinion that you may have

  24   as to what the law may be or ought to be.  It would violate

  25   your sworn duty to base a verdict upon any other view of the




                                                                6038


   1   law than that which I give you.

   2            It is the role of the jury to pass upon and decide

   3   the fact issues that are in the case.  You the members of the

   4   jury are the sole and exclusive judges of the facts.  You pass

   5   upon the weight of the evidence, you determine the credibility

   6   of the witnesses, you resolve such conflicts as there may be

   7   in the testimony, and you draw whatever reasonable inferences

   8   you decide to draw from the facts as you have determined them.

   9            Before we proceed, let me explain to you what an

  10   inference is.  During the trial you have heard references by

  11   the attorneys to the term "inference" and in their arguments

  12   they have asked you to infer, on the basis of your reason,

  13   experience and common sense, from one or more established

  14   facts, the existence of some other fact.

  15       An inference is not a suspicion or a guess.  It is a

  16   reasoned, logical decision to conclude that a disputed fact

  17   exists on the basis of another fact which you know exists.  An

  18   inference is a deduction or conclusion which you, the jury,

  19   are permitted to draw -- but not required to draw -- from the

  20   facts which have been established by the evidence.

  21            In determining the facts, you must rely upon your own

  22   recollection of the evidence.  What the lawyers have said in

  23   their opening statements, in their closing arguments or in

  24   their questions or objections is not evidence.  In this

  25   connection, you should bear in mind that a question put to a




                                                                6039


   1   witness is never evidence.  It is only the answer that is

   2   evidence.  However, please keep in mind, you are not to

   3   consider any answer that I directed you to disregard or that I

   4   have directed be stricken from the record.  Do not consider

   5   such an answer.

   6            Nor is anything that I have said during the trial or

   7   may say during these instructions about an issue of fact to be

   8   substituted for your own independent recollection.  What I say

   9   is not evidence.  Because you are the sole and exclusive

  10   judges of the facts, I do not mean to indicate any opinion as

  11   to the facts or what your verdict should be.  The rulings I

  12   have made during the trial are not any indication of my views

  13   of what your decision should be as to whether or not the guilt

  14   of any defendant has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt.

  15            I also ask you to draw no inference from the fact

  16   that on occasion -- and I interject, I believe on very rare

  17   occasion -- I asked questions of certain witnesses.  These

  18   questions were only intended for clarification or to expedite

  19   matters.  They were not intended to suggest any opinions on my

  20   part as to either the verdict you should render or whether any

  21   particular witness may have been more credible than any other

  22   witnesses.  You are to expressly understand, the court has no

  23   opinion as to the verdict you should render in this case.  If

  24   there is any difference or contradiction between what any

  25   lawyer has said and what you decide the evidence showed, or




                                                                6040


   1   between anything I may have said or what you decide the

   2   evidence showed, it is your view of the evidence, not the

   3   lawyers' and not mine, that controls.

   4            I may refer to evidence during the course of this

   5   charge -- and, I interject, I do so, I think, very little if

   6   at all.  You have heard days and days of closing argument, and

   7   I see no point in reprising all that for you.  If I do make

   8   any reference to evidence, I will try to be as accurate as

   9   possible.  If I should make a mistake, it is your recollection

  10   and yours alone that governs.

  11            As to the facts, you, the members of the jury, are

  12   the exclusive judges.  I know that you will try the issues

  13   that have been presented to you according to the oath which

  14   you have taken as jurors in which you promised that you will

  15   well and truly try the issues joined in this case and a true

  16   verdict render.  If you follow your oath and try the issues

  17   without fear or prejudice or bias or sympathy, you will arrive

  18   at a true and just verdict.

  19            You should know that it is the duty of the attorneys

  20   on each side of the case to object when the other side offers

  21   testimony or other evidence that the attorney believes is not

  22   properly admissible.  Counsel also have the right and duty to

  23   ask the court to make rulings of law and to request

  24   conferences at the sidebar or in my robing room out of the

  25   hearing of the jury.  All such questions of law must be




                                                                6041


   1   decided by me the court.  You should not show any prejudice

   2   against an attorney or against an attorney's client because

   3   the attorney objected to the admissibility of evidence or

   4   asked for a conference out of the hearing of the jury, or

   5   asked the court for a ruling on the law.

   6            On a related note, you have also noticed throughout

   7   the trial that counsel for various defendants have consulted

   8   with each other in an effort to facilitate their presentation

   9   and to avoid duplication.  The fact that defense counsel have

  10   consulted and cooperated with each other in the conduct of

  11   their defense is not to be considered by you as having any

  12   significance with respect to the issues in the case.  The

  13   issue of each defendant's guilt is personal, and you must make

  14   a separate determination as to whether or not each defendant's

  15   guilt has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt.

  16            In making that judgment, you are to disregard

  17   entirely the circumstance that counsel for various defendants

  18   have worked together during the trial.  Indeed, especially in

  19   a case of this length, it would be unusual and wasteful of

  20   time and effort if counsel did not share the burdens of the

  21   defense and cooperate with the government where possible.

  22            In weighing the evidence presented to you, your

  23   assessment should not be influenced by how much time the

  24   lawyers spent on certain topics or how emphatically or

  25   eloquently they spoke about particular issues.  Similarly, it




                                                                6042


   1   is not who introduced an exhibit, or who read a stipulation,

   2   or who called a witness, or who did not question a witness

   3   that is important, but rather what the exhibit or stipulation

   4   or witness testimony proves.

   5            One of your principal tasks in deciding the weight

   6   and importance of the evidence you have heard is to separate

   7   the important from the unimportant.  Keep in mind that

   8   evidence that took five minutes to present may be as important

   9   or more than evidence that took an entire day to present.

  10   It's not how much time or effort the lawyers spent on

  11   particular evidence but what that evidence proves that is

  12   important.

  13            While I am on the subject of the lawyers, I imagine

  14   that over the last several months you have developed

  15   impressions of the lawyers in this case -- largely favorable,

  16   I hope.  Such impressions, whether positive, negative or

  17   mixed, are natural.  Please remember, though, it is not the

  18   lawyers who are on trial here.  Lawyers are here to help

  19   present evidence and to argue its significance, but it is the

  20   evidence or lack of evidence alone which must be the basis for

  21   your decision.  Your deliberations must be independent of your

  22   impressions of the attorneys and must be focused on the

  23   evidence which has been presented to you.  You are to perform

  24   the duty of finding the facts without bias or prejudice to any

  25   party.




                                                                6043


   1       The case is important to the government, for the

   2   enforcement of criminal laws is a matter of prime concern to

   3   the community.  Equally, it is important to each of the

   4   defendants, who are charged with serious crimes.

   5       The fact that the prosecution is brought in the name of

   6   the United States of America entitles the government to no

   7   greater consideration than that accorded to any other party in

   8   this case.  By the same token, it is entitled to no less

   9   consideration.  All parties, whether government or individual,

  10   stand as equals at the bar of justice.

  11            Your verdict must be based solely upon the evidence

  12   developed at trial, or lack of evidence.  It would be improper

  13   for you to consider, in reaching your decision as to whether

  14   the government sustained its burden of proof, any personal

  15   feelings you may have about the race, religion, national

  16   origin, sex or age of the defendant you are considering.  All

  17   persons are equally entitled to the presumption of innocence,

  18   and, as I will explain to you in a moment, the government has

  19   the same burden of proof with respect to all defendants.

  20            It would be equally improper for you to allow any

  21   feelings you might have about the nature of the crimes charged

  22   to interfere with your decision-making process.

  23       Under your oath as jurors, you are not to be swayed by

  24   sympathy.  You are to be guided solely by the evidence in this

  25   case.  The crucial question that you must ask yourselves as




                                                                6044


   1   you sift through the evidence is whether the government has

   2   proven the guilt of the defendant you are considering beyond a

   3   reasonable doubt.

   4       It is for you alone to decide whether the government has

   5   proven that the defendants are guilty of the crimes charged,

   6   solely on the basis of the evidence and subject to the law as

   7   I charge you.  I am sure you understand that once you let fear

   8   or prejudice, bias or sympathy interfere with your thinking,

   9   there is a risk that you will not arrive at a true and just

  10   verdict.

  11            If you have a reasonable doubt as to a defendant's

  12   guilt on a count, you must not hesitate for any reason to find

  13   a verdict of not guilty on the count you are considering.  On

  14   the other hand, if you should find that the government has met

  15   its burden of proving the defendant's guilt beyond a

  16   reasonable doubt, you should not hesitate because of sympathy

  17   or any other reason to render a verdict of guilty on the count

  18   you are considering against that defendant.

  19            The question of the possible punishment of any

  20   defendant is of no concern to you at this stage of the

  21   proceedings and should not in any sense enter into or

  22   influence your deliberations.  Your function now is to weigh

  23   the evidence in the case and determine whether the government

  24   has proven each defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,

  25   solely on the basis of such evidence or the lack thereof.




                                                                6045


   1   Under your oath as jurors, you cannot allow a consideration of

   2   the punishment which may be imposed upon the defendants, if

   3   they are convicted, to influence your verdict in any way or in

   4   any sense enter into your upcoming deliberations.

   5            You may not draw any inference, favorable or

   6   unfavorable, towards the government or the defendants on trial

   7   from the fact that any person in addition to the defendants

   8   was not named as a defendant in this case or, whether or not

   9   named as a defendant in the indictment, was not tried with the

  10   defendants.  Those matters are wholly outside of your concern

  11   and should play no part in your deliberation.

  12       You are about to be asked whether or not the government

  13   has proven beyond a reasonable doubt the guilt of these

  14   defendants.  You are not being asked whether any other person


  15   has been proven guilty.  Your verdict should be based solely

  16   upon the evidence or lack of evidence as to these defendants,

  17   according to my instructions and without regard to whether the

  18   guilt of other people has or has not been proven.

  19            With respect to publicity, let me reiterate my

  20   earlier admonitions.  During your deliberations you should

  21   avoid reading, watching or listening to any press coverage

  22   about the case.  I have been vigilant about these reminders

  23   because you are required as jurors to limit the information

  24   that you get about this case to what comes to you in the

  25   courtroom through the rules of evidence.




                                                                6046


   1            Your verdict must be based solely on the evidence

   2   presented in this courtroom and in accordance with my

   3   instructions.  You must completely disregard any report which

   4   you have read in the press, heard on the radio or seen on

   5   television or elsewhere.  Indeed, it would be unfair to

   6   consider such reports since they are not evidence.  The

   7   parties have no opportunity to contradict their accuracy or

   8   otherwise explain them.  In short, it would be a violation of

   9   your oath as jurors to allow yourselves to be influenced in

  10   any manner by such publicity.

  11            Although the defendants have been indicted, you must

  12   remember that the indictment is only an accusation.  It is not

  13   evidence.  The defendants have each pled not guilty to the

  14   indictment.  As a result of the defendants' pleas of not

  15   guilty, the burden is on the government to prove guilt beyond

  16   a reasonable doubt.  This burden never shifts to any

  17   defendant, for the simple reason that the law never imposes

  18   upon a defendant in a criminal case the burden or duty of

  19   calling any witness or producing any evidence.

  20       The law presumes the defendants to be innocent of all the

  21   charges against them.  I therefore instruct you that the

  22   defendants are each presumed by you to be innocent throughout

  23   your deliberations until such time, if ever, you as a juror

  24   are satisfied that the government, with respect to the

  25   defendant you are considering and the count you are




                                                                6047


   1   considering, has proven him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

   2       Each defendant begins the trial here with a clean slate.

   3   The presumption of innocence alone is sufficient to acquit a

   4   defendant unless you as jurors are unanimously convinced

   5   beyond a reasonable doubt of his guilt on the count you are

   6   considering, after careful and impartial consideration of all

   7   the evidence in this case.  If the government fails to sustain

   8   its burden as to a defendant on a particular count, you must

   9   find the defendant not guilty on that count.

  10       The presumption of innocence was with each defendant when

  11   the trial began and remains with him even now as I speak to

  12   you, and will continue with each defendant into your

  13   deliberation.  It is not removed with respect to a defendant

  14   and with respect to a particular count unless and until you

  15   are convinced the government has proven that defendant's guilt

  16   beyond a reasonable doubt on that count.

  17            The defendants did not testify in this case.  Under

  18   our Constitution, a defendant has no obligation to present any

  19   evidence, because it is the government's burden to prove each

  20   defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.  That burden

  21   remains with the government throughout the entire trial and

  22   never shifts to the defendants.  A defendant is never required

  23   to prove that he is not guilty.

  24            You may not attach any significance to the fact that

  25   a defendant did not testify, nor should you speculate as to




                                                                6048


   1   why that defendant did not testify.  No adverse inference

   2   against him may be drawn by you because he did not take the

   3   witness stand.  You may not consider this against any

   4   defendant in any way in your deliberations in the jury room.

   5            I have said that the government must prove each

   6   defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.  The question

   7   naturally is, what is a reasonable doubt?  The words almost

   8   define themselves.  It is a doubt based upon reason and common

   9   sense.  It is a doubt that a reasonable person has after

  10   carefully weighing all the evidence.  It is a doubt that would

  11   cause a reasonable person to act in a matter of importance in

  12   his or her personal life.  Proof beyond a reasonable doubt

  13   must therefore be proof of such a convincing character that a

  14   reasonable person would not hesitate to rely and act upon it

  15   in the most important of his affairs.  A reasonable doubt is

  16   not a caprice or whim.  It is not a speculation or suspicion.

  17   It is not an excuse to avoid the performance of an unpleasant

  18   duty.  And it is not sympathy.

  19            In a criminal case, the burden is at all times upon

  20   the government to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.  The

  21   law does not require the government to prove guilt beyond all

  22   possible doubt.  Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is sufficient

  23   to convict.  This burden never shifts to a defendant, which

  24   means that it is always the government's burden to prove each

  25   of the elements of the crimes charged beyond a reasonable




                                                                6049


   1   doubt.

   2            If, after careful and impartial consideration of all

   3   of the evidence, or the lack of evidence, on a particular

   4   count, you have a reasonable doubt as to the defendant you are

   5   considering, it is your duty to find that defendant not guilty

   6   on that count.  On the other hand, if, after careful and

   7   impartial consideration of all the evidence on a particular

   8   count, you are satisfied of the guilt of the defendant you are

   9   considering beyond a reasonable doubt, you should find that

  10   defendant guilty on that count.

  11            The fact that one party called more witnesses and

  12   introduced more evidence than the other does not mean that you

  13   should necessarily find the facts in favor of the side

  14   offering the most witnesses.  By the same token, you do not

  15   have to accept the testimony of any witness who has not been

  16   contradicted or impeached if you find the witness not to be

  17   credible.  You have to decide which witnesses to believe and

  18   which facts are true.  To do this, you must look at all the

  19   evidence, drawing upon your own common sense and personal

  20   experience.

  21            In a moment I will discuss the criteria for

  22   evaluating credibility.  Let me say again, though, you should

  23   keep in mind that the burden of proof is always on the

  24   government.  The defendants are not required to call any

  25   witnesses or offer any evidence, since they are presumed to be




                                                                6050


   1   innocent.

   2            You have heard reference in the arguments of counsel

   3   in this case to the fact that certain investigative techniques

   4   were used by the government and that certain others were not

   5   used.  You may consider these facts in deciding whether the

   6   government has met its burden of proof because, as I have told

   7   you, you should look to all the evidence or lack of evidence

   8   in deciding whether a defendant is guilty.  However, you

   9   should understand that there is no legal requirement that the

  10   government use any of these specific investigative techniques

  11   to prove its case.  Your concern is to determine whether or

  12   not, on the evidence or lack of evidence, the government has

  13   proved the guilt of each of the defendants beyond a reasonable

  14   doubt.

  15            There are two types of evidence which you may

  16   properly use in deciding whether a defendant is guilty or not

  17   guilty.  One type of evidence is called direct evidence.

  18   Direct evidence is where a witness testifies about something

  19   the witness knows by virtue of his own senses, something the

  20   witness has seen, felt, touched or heard.  Direct evidence may

  21   also be in the form of an exhibit, where the fact to be proved

  22   is its present existence or condition.

  23       The second type of evidence is circumstantial evidence,

  24   which tends to prove a disputed fact by proof of other facts.

  25   In other words, to say that something is circumstantial




                                                                6051


   1   evidence merely means that one needs to use some kind of

   2   reasoning power to draw inferences from one fact to arrive at

   3   some conclusion.

   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




                                                                6052


   1            THE COURT:  (Continuing) In case that sounded

   2   complicated, let me give you an example of circumstantial

   3   evidence that is often used in the courthouse.

   4       Assume, as is the case, that when you came into the

   5   courthouse this morning the sun was shining, it was a clear

   6   day.  Assume that the courtroom blinds were drawn, so you

   7   could not look outside.  Assume as you were sitting in the

   8   jury box, a man walked into the courtroom with an umbrella

   9   that was dripping wet, followed shortly by a woman wearing a

  10   raincoat, and the raincoat was wet.

  11       Now, under our assumptions you cannot look out of the

  12   courtroom and see whether it is raining, so you have no direct

  13   evidence of that fact.  But certainly on the combination of

  14   facts that I have asked you to assume, even though when you

  15   entered the building it was not raining outside, it would be

  16   reasonable and logical for you to conclude that it had been

  17   raining recently.

  18            You would arrive at this conclusion from

  19   circumstantial evidence.  In other words, you infer on the

  20   basis of reason and experience from one or more established

  21   facts -- in this example, the dripping umbrella and the wet

  22   raincoat -- the existence of some other fact.  That is all

  23   there is to circumstantial evidence.

  24            In this case, you have been asked to draw inferences

  25   from the evidence that you have seen and heard.  You are not




                                                                6053


   1   required to draw any inference unless you believe that such an

   2   inference follows reasonably from the evidence.

   3            The law does not distinguish between direct and

   4   circumstantial evidence.  Circumstantial evidence is of no

   5   less value than direct evidence.  You may consider both.  The

   6   question in this case is whether based on all the evidence,

   7   both direct and circumstantial, you find that the government

   8   has proven its case against the defendant you are considering

   9   beyond a reasonable doubt.

  10            There are times when different inferences may be

  11   drawn by the facts, whether they are proved by direct or

  12   circumstantial evidence.  The government asks you to draw one

  13   set of inferences.  The defendants ask you to draw other

  14   inferences.  It is for you, and you alone, to decide which

  15   inferences you will draw.

  16            There has been evidence that some of the defendants

  17   made statements in which the government claims they admitted

  18   certain facts relevant to the charges in the indictment.

  19            In deciding what weight, if any, to give those

  20   statements, you should first examine with great care whether

  21   each statement was made and whether it was voluntarily and

  22   understandingly made.  I instruct you that you are to give the

  23   statements such weight as you feel they deserve in light of

  24   all the evidence.

  25       You are cautioned that, unless I explicitly instruct you




                                                                6054


   1   otherwise, the evidence of one defendant's statement to the

   2   authorities after his arrest may not be considered or

   3   discussed by you in any way with respect to any defendant on

   4   trial other than the defendant who made the statement.

   5            You have heard evidence that one or more of the

   6   defendants made certain statements outside the courtroom to

   7   law enforcement officials in which they exonerated or

   8   exculpated themselves in connection with some aspect of the

   9   charges against them, and the government claims that these

  10   statements are false.

  11            If you find that a defendant gave a false statement

  12   to divert suspicion from himself, you may, but are not

  13   required to, infer that the defendant believed that a truthful

  14   answer would have placed him in jeopardy, legal or otherwise,

  15   or that he believed that he may be guilty of some crime.  You

  16   may not, however, infer on the basis of this alone that the

  17   defendant is, in fact, guilty of the crimes for which he is

  18   charged.  Nor can any such false exculpatory statements alone

  19   establish, or be sufficient for an inference to be drawn, that

  20   the defendant knew of and intentionally joined the

  21   conspiracies charged.

  22            Whether or not the evidence as to a defendant's

  23   statements shows that the defendant believed that he was

  24   guilty, and the significance, if any, to be attached to such

  25   evidence, are matters for you, the jury, to decide.




                                                                6055


   1            You have had the opportunity to observe all the

   2   witnesses.  It is now your job to decide how believable each

   3   witness was in his or her testimony.  You are the sole judges

   4   of the credibility of each witness and of the importance of

   5   his or her testimony.

   6            It must be clear to you by now that you are being

   7   called upon to resolve various factual issues under the counts

   8   of the indictment, in the face of the very different pictures

   9   painted by the government and the defense, which cannot be

  10   reconciled.  You will now have to decide where the truth lies,

  11   and an important part of that decision will involve making

  12   judgments about the testimony of the witnesses you have

  13   listened to and observed.  In making those judgments, you

  14   should carefully study all of the testimony of each witness,

  15   the circumstances under which each witness testified, and any

  16   other matter in evidence which may help you to decide the

  17   truth and the importance of each witness's testimony.

  18            Your decision whether or not to believe a witness may

  19   depend on how that witness impressed you.  Was the witness

  20   candid, frank and forthright?  Or, did the witness seem as if

  21   he or she was hiding something, being evasive or suspect in

  22   some way?  How did the way the witness testified on direct

  23   examination compare with how the witness testified on

  24   cross-examination?  Was the witness's testimony consistent, or

  25   did he or she contradict himself?  Did the witness appear to




                                                                6056


   1   know what he or she was talking about and did the witness

   2   strike you as someone who was trying to report his or her

   3   knowledge accurately?

   4            How much you choose to believe a witness may be

   5   influenced by the witness's bias.  Does the witness have a

   6   relationship with the government or the defendant which may

   7   affect how he or she testified?  Does the witness have some

   8   incentive, loyalty or motive that might cause him or her to

   9   shade the truth; or, does the witness have some bias,

  10   prejudice or hostility that may have caused the witness --

  11   consciously or not -- to give you something other than a

  12   completely accurate account of the facts he or she testified

  13   to?

  14            Even if the witness was impartial, you should

  15   consider whether the witness had an opportunity to observe the

  16   facts he or she testified about and you should also consider

  17   the witness's ability to express himself or herself.  Ask

  18   yourselves whether the witness's recollection of the facts

  19   stands up in light of his or her demeanor, the explanations

  20   given, and in the light of all the other evidence in the case.

  21   Approach the task of assessing credibility just as you would

  22   in any important matter when you are trying to decide if a

  23   person is truthful, straightforward, and accurate in his or

  24   her recollection.  In deciding the question of credibility,

  25   remember that you should use your common sense, your good




                                                                6057


   1   judgment and your own life experience.

   2            In connection with your evaluation of the credibility

   3   of the witnesses, you should specifically consider evidence of

   4   resentment or anger on the part of any witness, if you find

   5   this to be the case.

   6            Evidence that a witness is biased, prejudiced, or

   7   hostile requires you to view that witness's testimony with

   8   caution, to weigh it with great care, and to subject it to

   9   close and searching scrutiny.

  10            In evaluating the credibility of the witnesses, you

  11   should further take into account any evidence that the witness

  12   who testified may believe that he or she will benefit in some

  13   way from the outcome of this case.  Such an interest in the

  14   outcome creates a motive to testify falsely and may sway the

  15   witness to testify in a way that advances his or her own

  16   interests.  Therefore, if you find that any witness whose

  17   testimony you are considering may have an interest in the

  18   outcome of this trial, then you should bear that factor in

  19   mind when evaluating the credibility of his or her testimony

  20   and accept it with great care.

  21            This is not to suggest that every witness who has an

  22   interest in the outcome of a case will testify falsely.  It is

  23   for you to decide to what extent, if at all, the witness's

  24   interest has affected or colored his or her testimony.

  25            You have heard witnesses who testified they were




                                                                6058


   1   actually involved in some of the conspiracies charged in the

   2   indictment.  There has been a great deal said about these

   3   so-called accomplice witnesses in the summations of counsel

   4   regarding whether or not you should believe them.

   5            You have been presented with evidence that the

   6   government agreed not to further prosecute certain of these

   7   witnesses in exchange for those witnesses' agreement to plead

   8   guilty to various charges and testify at this trial against

   9   the defendants.  The government also promised to bring those

  10   witnesses' cooperation to the attention of the court that

  11   sentences them.  Some of these witnesses and their families

  12   have been placed in federal protective custody, and some have

  13   received money in connection with their protective custodial

  14   status.

  15            The government argues, as it is permitted to do, that

  16   it must take the witnesses as it finds them.  It argues that

  17   only people who themselves take part in criminal activity have

  18   the knowledge required to show criminal behavior by others,

  19   and that without such witnesses it would often be difficult or

  20   impossible to detect or prosecute wrongdoers.

  21            For those very reasons, the law allows the use of

  22   accomplice testimony, and such testimony is properly

  23   considered by you.  Indeed, it is the law in the federal

  24   courts that the testimony of accomplices may be enough in

  25   itself for conviction, if you find that the testimony




                                                                6059


   1   establishes guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.  Like the

   2   testimony of any other witness, an accomplice's testimony

   3   should be given such weight as it deserves in light of all the

   4   facts and circumstances.

   5            However, as the defense argues, you should bear in

   6   mind that a witness who has entered into an agreement with the

   7   government has an interest in this case different than an

   8   ordinary witness.  A witness may have a motive to testify

   9   falsely if he realizes that he may be able to obtain his own

  10   freedom, gain federal protection for himself and his family,

  11   or receive a lighter sentence by giving testimony favorable to

  12   the prosecution.  Accomplice testimony is thus of such a

  13   nature that it must be scrutinized with great care and viewed

  14   with particular caution when you decide how much of that

  15   testimony to believe.

  16            You should ask yourselves whether the so-called

  17   accomplice would benefit more by lying, or by telling the

  18   truth.  Was his testimony made up in any way because he

  19   believed or hoped that he would somehow receive favorable

  20   treatment by testifying falsely?  Or did he believe that his

  21   interests would be best served by testifying truthfully?  If

  22   you believe that a particular witness was motivated by hopes

  23   of personal gain, was the motivation one which would cause him

  24   to lie, or was it one which would cause him to tell the truth?

  25   Did this motivation color his testimony?




                                                                6060


   1            You should reject the testimony if you find it was

   2   false.  However, if, after a cautious and careful examination

   3   of the testimony and the witness's demeanor, you are satisfied

   4   that the testimony is true, you should accept it as credible

   5   and act on it accordingly.  As with any other witness, let me

   6   emphasize that the issue of credibility need not be decided on

   7   an all-or-nothing fashion.  Even if you find that a witness

   8   testified falsely on one part, you still may accept his or her

   9   testimony in other parts.  That is a determination entirely

  10   for you, the jury.

  11            In sum, you should look at all of the evidence in

  12   deciding what credence and what weight, if any, you should

  13   give to the testimony of an accomplice witness.

  14            On a related note, let me say a few words about the

  15   agreements between the government and certain of its witnesses

  16   other than alleged accomplices.  Some of these witnesses and

  17   their families have been placed in federal protective custody,

  18   and some have received money in connection with their

  19   protected custodial status.

  20       Again, you must examine the testimony of such a witness

  21   with caution.  Weigh it with great care.  If, after

  22   scrutinizing such testimony you decide to accept it, you may

  23   give it whatever weight, if any, you think it deserves.

  24            Some of the witnesses who testified for the

  25   government have pleaded guilty to charges arising out of




                                                                6061


   1   circumstances relating to the facts of this case.  You are

   2   instructed that you are to draw no conclusions or inferences

   3   of any kind about the guilt of the defendants on trial here

   4   from the fact that a prosecution witness pleaded guilty to

   5   similar charges.  The decision of that witness to plead guilty

   6   was based on a personal decision of his concerning his own

   7   guilt, and in light of the benefits afforded by the government

   8   to a cooperating witness.  In short, a witness's decision to

   9   plead guilty may not be used by you in any way as evidence

  10   against or unfavorable to the four defendants on trial here.

  11            During the course of this trial you have heard

  12   testimony from what the law calls expert witnesses --

  13   interjecting:  Handwriting, chemists, witnesses of that sort.

  14   An expert is allowed to express his or her opinion on those

  15   matters about which he or she has special knowledge and

  16   training.  Expert testimony is presented to you on the theory

  17   that someone who is experienced in the field can assist you in

  18   understanding the evidence or in reaching an independent

  19   decision on the facts.

  20            In weighing an expert's testimony, you may consider

  21   the expert's qualifications, opinions, reasons for testifying,

  22   and all of the other considerations that ordinarily apply when

  23   you are deciding whether or not to believe a witness's

  24   testimony.  You may give expert testimony whatever weight, if

  25   any, you find it deserves in light of all the evidence in this




                                                                6062


   1   case.  You should not, however, accept the testimony merely

   2   because the witness is an expert.  Nor should you substitute

   3   it for your own reason, judgment, and common sense.  The

   4   determination of the facts in this case rests solely with you.

   5            You have also heard testimony of government law

   6   enforcement officials.  The fact that a witness may be

   7   employed by the government as a law enforcement official does

   8   not mean that his or her testimony is necessarily deserving of

   9   more or less consideration or greater or lesser weight than

  10   that of an ordinary witness.

  11            At the same time, it's quite legitimate for defense

  12   counsel to try to attack the credibility of a law enforcement

  13   witness on the ground that his or her testimony may be colored

  14   by a personal or professional interest in the outcome of the

  15   case.

  16            It is your decision, after reviewing all the

  17   evidence, whether to accept the testimony of the law

  18   enforcement witnesses and to give that testimony whatever

  19   weight, if any, you find it deserves.

  20            You have heard argument about witnesses who have not

  21   been called to testify.  The defense has argued that the

  22   witnesses could have given material testimony in this case and

  23   that the government was in the best position to produce these

  24   witnesses.

  25            If you find that any uncalled witness could have been




                                                                6063


   1   called by the government and could have given important new

   2   testimony, and that the government was in the best position to

   3   call him, but failed to do so, you are permitted, but are not

   4   required, to infer that the testimony of the uncalled witness

   5   would have been unfavorable to the government.

   6            In deciding to draw an inference that the uncalled

   7   witness would have testified unfavorably to the government,

   8   you may consider whether the witness's testimony would have

   9   merely repeated other testimony and evidence already before

  10   you.

  11            Now let me just say a few words about stipulations.

  12       And going beyond the text, I'm sure you realize that the

  13   fact that stipulations have been entered into is a reason why

  14   I'm instructing you now on the law in May rather than July.

  15            Numerous stipulations have been entered into by the

  16   parties and have been reported to you.  A stipulation is an

  17   agreement among the parties that a certain fact is true or

  18   that a certain witness, if called, would have given certain

  19   testimony.  Each of these stipulations is the equivalent for

  20   your purposes of the presentation of evidence or live

  21   testimony to the same effect.  You should regard such agreed

  22   facts as true, and accept that the witness would have given

  23   that testimony.  However, it is for you to determine the

  24   effect to be given those facts or that testimony.

  25            Exhibit GX7 contains a list and brief description by




                                                                6064


   1   the government of all the stipulations which have been entered

   2   entered into this case and which were introduced during the

   3   government's case.  Exhibit WEHX-S14 contains a list and brief

   4   description of all the stipulations which have been entered

   5   into this case on behalf of defendant El Hage.

   6            Some of the witnesses testified with respect to

   7   various charts and summaries which were based on other

   8   evidence in this case.  The documents from which they were

   9   made are before you as evidence.  The charts and summaries

  10   were intended to make the other evidence more meaningful and

  11   to aid you in considering the evidence.  Charts and summaries

  12   which are not admitted into evidence are no better than the

  13   testimony or the documents upon which they are based, and are

  14   not independent evidence.  Therefore, you are to give no

  15   greater consideration to these charts and summaries than you

  16   would give to the underlying evidence.

  17            It is for you to decide whether the charts or

  18   summaries correctly present the information contained in the

  19   testimony and in the exhibits on which they are based.  In the

  20   event that a chart or summary differs from your recollection

  21   of the testimony or actual documents on which the chart or

  22   summary is based, you are to rely upon the actual testimony or

  23   document, not the chart or summary.  You are entitled to

  24   consider the charts and summaries if you find that they are of

  25   assistance to you in analyzing and understanding the evidence.




                                                                6065


   1            The government and defendant El Hage have offered

   2   evidence in the form of tape recorded conversations with the

   3   defendants and the defendants' alleged coconspirators.  These

   4   conversations were obtained by the United States Government

   5   without the knowledge of the parties to the conversations.

   6   You are instructed that these intercepted conversations were

   7   lawfully obtained and the parties are entitled to use such

   8   evidence in this case.  You must, therefore, regardless of any

   9   personal opinions, give this evidence equal consideration

  10   along with all the evidence in the case in determining whether

  11   the government has proven a defendant's guilt beyond a

  12   reasonable doubt.  That is to say, you should give this

  13   evidence such weight as you believe it deserves in light of

  14   all the facts and circumstances.

  15            In connection with these tapes, the party presenting

  16   the evidence has been permitted to hand out or otherwise

  17   display typed documents which it prepared containing its

  18   interpretation of what appears on the tape recordings.

  19            With respect to those conversations which were

  20   conducted in English, any documents which were distributed to

  21   you are merely aids or guides to assist you in listening to

  22   the tapes and are not evidence.  You should make your own

  23   assessment of what appears on those tapes based on what you

  24   heard when the tapes were played.

  25            Some of the transcripts, however, are translations of




                                                                6066


   1   the tapes because some of the conversations were in a foreign

   2   language.  Those transcripts are provided to you because that

   3   is the only way you can understand what was said during those

   4   conversations.  Those transcripts are in evidence in order to

   5   assist you to find out what the tapes say and you may rely on

   6   them during your deliberations.  If, however, during your

   7   deliberations you would like to hear any of the tapes, they

   8   will be made available to you.

   9            During the trial, different parties introduced

  10   exhibits which were marked for identification, but not

  11   admitted into evidence.  Also, at various times, witnesses

  12   were asked to refresh their recollection by consulting

  13   documents or other materials which were not admitted into

  14   evidence.  Exhibits marked for identification but not admitted

  15   are not evidence, nor are any materials brought forth only to

  16   refresh the recollection of any witness.  You cannot consider

  17   or speculate as to the content of any exhibit not received in

  18   evidence.

  19            With all of the aforementioned preliminary

  20   instructions in mind, let us now turn to the indictment.

  21       And I'm going to pause for a few minutes and stand and

  22   stretch, and if you would like to pause for a few minutes and

  23   stand and stretch, that's okay.  Your lunch is on order for

  24   1:00, and at 1:00, if I'm in the middle of a sentence, I'll

  25   stop.




                                                                6067


   1       (Pause)

   2            THE COURT:  Returning, then, to the charge, and if

   3   you are all following me, I'm on page 27.

   4       The indictment, you have the indictment.  That's the

   5   document in the plastic cover.

   6       In a moment I will explain to you what the elements are of

   7   the various violations of the United States with which the

   8   defendants are charged.  I instruct you now, however, that

   9   unless the government proves beyond a reasonable doubt that

  10   the defendant you are considering committed each and every

  11   element of an offense with which he is charged, you must find

  12   him not guilty of that offense.

  13            The indictment in this case contains 302 individual

  14   counts, each charging a separate offense or crime.

  15       Let me interject.  I see some of you shaking your head.

  16   Understand that the vast majority of these counts relate to

  17   victims and the evidence with respect to the victims is

  18   evidence which relates to all of them.

  19            Some of the counts involve crimes allegedly committed

  20   by just one of the defendants, others involve allegedly some

  21   but not all of the defendants, and still others involve

  22   allegedly all four defendants.  You must, therefore, as a

  23   matter of law, consider each count of the indictment and each

  24   defendant's involvement in that count separately, and you must

  25   return a separate, unanimous verdict as to each defendant on




                                                                6068


   1   each count in which he is charged.  You will be given a

   2   special verdict form that will ask you to mark a separate

   3   verdict for each count and for each defendant named in that

   4   count.  Your answer to each of these special verdicts will be

   5   "yes" or "no" or "guilty" or "not guilty" and must be

   6   unanimous.  Throughout these instructions, I will advise you

   7   that when there is a verdict or finding, I will advise you

   8   when there is a verdict or finding that you must indicate on

   9   the special verdict form.

  10            In reaching your verdict, you must bear in mind that

  11   guilt is personal and individual.  Your verdict of guilty or

  12   not guilty must be based solely upon the evidence about each

  13   defendant and you may only find a defendant guilty of a

  14   particular count if the government has proven each element

  15   beyond a reasonable doubt.  The case against each defendant on

  16   each count stands or falls upon the proof or lack of proof

  17   against that defendant alone, and your verdict as to any

  18   defendant on any count should not control your decision as to

  19   any other defendant or any other count.  No other

  20   considerations are proper.

  21            Let me also remind you that the indictment itself is

  22   not evidence.  It is nothing more than a set of accusations, a

  23   statement of what the government intends to prove by offering

  24   evidence at trial.  It gives the defendant notice of the

  25   charges against him and informs the court and the public of




                                                                6069


   1   the nature of the accusation.  As such, you cannot find a

   2   defendant guilty of any crimes that are not charged in the

   3   indictment.

   4            Because the indictment merely describes the charges

   5   made against the defendants, it may not be considered by you

   6   as any evidence of the guilt of any defendant.  Only the

   7   evidence or the lack of evidence decides that issue.

   8            In the indictment, the conspiracy counts are preceded

   9   by a section captioned "Background."  The information

  10   contained in that section is the government's version of the

  11   origin and history of the conspiracies which are set forth in

  12   Counts One through Four.  Likewise, there is a "Background"

  13   section prefacing the perjury counts in which the government

  14   outlines its view of the relevant events which preceded the

  15   alleged Grand Jury perjury by defendant El Hage as set forth

  16   in Counts 285 through 302.  You should understand that these

  17   background sections, as with the rest of the indictment, are

  18   not evidence.

  19            The indictment makes reference to various dates.  It

  20   does not matter if the indictment charges that a specific act

  21   occurred on or about a certain date and the evidence indicates

  22   that, in fact, the act occurred on a different date.  The law

  23   requires only a substantial similarity between the dates

  24   alleged in the indictment and the dates established by the

  25   evidence.  It is for you to determine whether any such




                                                                6070


   1   difference is material and, if you find it was material, then

   2   you must find the defendant you are considering not guilty on

   3   the counts for which you find the evidence to be materially

   4   different from the charges in the indictment.

   5            Before you begin your deliberations, you will of

   6   course be provided with a copy of the indictment containing

   7   these charges, and you already have that.  I will not read the

   8   entire indictment to you at this time.

   9       Rather, I will first group the offenses charged in the

  10   indictment into three general categories.  Then I will

  11   proceed, category by category, explaining in detail the

  12   elements of each alleged offense contained within each of the

  13   three general categories.  By the way, you should by no means

  14   draw any significance from the fact that I have grouped

  15   certain counts in the indictment together for purposes of my

  16   instructions to you; I do so simply for organizational

  17   clarity, not because of any legal import.

  18            The first category of charges includes Counts One

  19   through Four of the indictment.  These charges all allege

  20   conspiracies to violate certain laws of the United States.

  21   All four defendants face charges in this category.  However,

  22   while three of the alleged conspiracies charge all four

  23   defendants, one charges only three of defendants.

  24            The second category of charges includes Counts Five

  25   through 284 of the indictment.  These charges all allege




                                                                6071


   1   substantive offenses arising out of the bombings of the United

   2   States embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.  Only defendants

   3   Mohamed Sadeek Odeh, Mohamed Rashid Daoud Al-'Owhali and

   4   Khalfan Khamis Mohamed face charges in this category.

   5   Defendants Odeh and Al-'Owhali are charged only in those

   6   substantive counts from Five through 284 that arise out of the

   7   Nairobi, Kenya bombing.  Likewise, defendant Khalfan Khamis

   8   Mohamed is charged only with those counts from Five through

   9   284 that arise out of the Dar es Salaam, Tanzania bombing.

  10            The third category of charges includes Counts 285 to

  11   302 of the indictment.  These charges all relate to alleged

  12   perjury by defendant Wadih El Hage -- the perjury count,

  13   alleged perjury, by defendant Wadih El Hage.

  14            The first portion of the indictment alleges four

  15   separate conspiracies to violate certain laws of the United

  16   States, and they may be summarized briefly as follows.

  17            Count One charges that all four defendants, while

  18   they were situated outside the United States, conspired to

  19   murder nationals of the United States.

  20            Count Two charges that all four defendants conspired

  21   to murder officers or employees of the United States, as well

  22   as internationally protected persons.

  23            Count Three -- which involves only defendants Mohamed

  24   Sadeek Odeh, Mohamed Rashid Daoud Al-'Owhali, and Khalfan

  25   Khamis Mohamed -- charges that these three defendants, without




                                                                6072


   1   lawful authority, conspired to use weapons of mass

   2   destruction -- that is, bombs -- against United States

   3   nationals while such nationals were outside of the United

   4   States, and against property that is owned, leased or used by

   5   the United States.

   6            Count Four charges that all four defendants conspired

   7   to maliciously damage or destroy United States property, by

   8   means of an explosive.

   9            I reiterate that each of these four counts

  10   constitutes a separate alleged conspiracy and thus is a

  11   separate offense or crime.  Again, each of the four charged

  12   conspiracies must be considered separately by you, and you

  13   must return a separate, unanimous verdict as to each count and

  14   as to each defendant charged in the count.

  15            Before I instruct you in detail on the specific

  16   elements of each of the four conspiracies alleged in the

  17   indictment, I want to first instruct you on the law of

  18   conspiracy in general.  This is because there are certain

  19   requirements that the government must always satisfy whenever

  20   it seeks to prove any allegation of criminal conspiracy

  21   against any defendant.  Of course, there are some exceptions

  22   to the general rule and when those exceptions are relevant to

  23   this case, I will so instruct you.  But unless I say

  24   otherwise, whatever I tell you to be true of conspiracy law

  25   generally should be considered by you to be equally true of




                                                                6073


   1   the four specific conspiracies alleged in the indictment.

   2   Remember, however, that each of the four alleged conspiracies

   3   is an independent crime and that, as to each charged

   4   defendant, each alleged conspiracy must independently be

   5   proven by the government beyond a reasonable doubt.

   6            As I have indicated, the indictment alleges four

   7   separate conspiracies.  A conspiracy is a kind of criminal

   8   partnership -- a combination or agreement of two or more

   9   persons to join together to accomplish some illegal objective

  10   in violation of the laws of the United States.

  11       Let me repeat that.  A conspiracy is a kind of criminal

  12   partnership -- a combination or agreement of two or more

  13   persons to join together to accomplish some illegal objective

  14   in violation of the laws of the United States.

  15       Although the government has presented evidence that some

  16   of the defendants and alleged coconspirators engaged in

  17   activities in foreign countries that may or may not have

  18   violated the laws of those foreign countries, the crime of

  19   conspiracy applies only to those illegal agreements that seek

  20   to violate United States law.  Of course, a given activity,

  21   even if it occurs abroad, may sometimes constitute a violation

  22   of both foreign and United States law.

  23            The crime of conspiracy to violate United States law

  24   is an independent offense.  It is separate and distinct from

  25   the actual violation of any specific laws, which the law




                                                                6074


   1   refers to as "substantive crimes."

   2            Indeed, you may find a defendant guilty of the crime

   3   of conspiracy to commit an offense even though the substantive

   4   crime that was the object of the conspiracy was not actually

   5   committed.  Moreover, you may find a defendant guilty of

   6   conspiracy despite the fact that he himself was incapable of

   7   committing the substantive crime.

   8       Generally speaking, and unless I tell you otherwise, in

   9   order to sustain its burden of proof with respect to one

  10   allegation of conspiracy, the government must establish,

  11   beyond a reasonable doubt, each of the following four elements

  12   as to each defendant charged in that conspiracy.

  13            First, that there in fact existed the alleged

  14   conspiracy, the object of which was to violate United States

  15   law, as charged in the indictment;

  16            Second, that the defendant you are considering

  17   knowingly and willfully became a member of that conspiracy,

  18   with the intent to further its illegal purpose;

  19            Third, that one or more of the conspirators, not

  20   necessarily the defendant you are considering, knowingly

  21   committed at least one of the overt acts charged in the

  22   indictment, at or about the time alleged; and

  23            Fourth, that at least one overt act which you

  24   unanimously find to have been committed was knowingly and

  25   willfully committed to effect the object of the conspiracy.




                                                                6075


   1            And after lunch we will separately consider these

   2   four elements.

   3       We'll break for lunch and resume at 2:15.

   4            (Luncheon recess)

   5

   6

   7

   8

   9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25




                                                                6076


   1                         AFTERNOON SESSION

   2                             2:20 p.m.

   3            (Jury present)

   4            THE COURT:  There was an inquiry as to whether you

   5   may take material home with you and the answer is no.  It will

   6   be left in the jury room.

   7            You will recall, when we broke for lunch we were

   8   talking about the general principles of conspiracy law which

   9   apply to the first four counts, which are the conspiracy

  10   counts.  The other counts in the indictment are referred to as

  11   the substantive counts.  We are now going to proceed with a

  12   discussion in more detail of what the various elements are of

  13   the crime of conspiracy as it applies to the first four

  14   counts.  If you are following me, I am on page 33, and if you

  15   are not following me, I'm on page 33.

  16            The first element which the government must prove

  17   beyond a reasonable doubt to establish the offense of

  18   conspiracy is that two or more persons entered into the

  19   unlawful agreement charged in the indictment.  You must ask:

  20   Did the conspiracy alleged in the indictment exist?  Was there

  21   such a conspiracy?

  22            Since the indictment in this case charges four

  23   separate conspiracies on the part of the multiple defendants,

  24   you must independently determine as to each conspiracy count

  25   and as to each defendant charged in the count whether that




                                                                6077


   1   conspiracy in fact existed and whether it was in fact directed

   2   at the unlawful purpose or purposes specifically alleged in

   3   the indictment.

   4            As I mentioned just a few moments ago, a conspiracy

   5   is a combination, an agreement or a mutual understanding of

   6   two or more persons to accomplish, by concerted action, a

   7   criminal or unlawful purpose.  The gist, the essence of the

   8   crime of conspiracy is the unlawful combination or agreement

   9   to violate the laws of the United States.  The success of the

  10   conspiracy or the actual commission of the criminal act which

  11   is the object of the conspiracy is not an essential element of

  12   the crime.  In other words, a conspiracy alleges an agreement

  13   to commit a crime and is an entirely distinct and separate

  14   offense from the actual commission of that crime.

  15            To show that a conspiracy existed, the government is

  16   not required to show that two or more people sat around a

  17   table and entered into a solemn pact, orally or in writing,

  18   stating that they had formed a conspiracy to violate the law

  19   and spelling out all the details.  It is sufficient if the

  20   evidence demonstrates that two or more persons, in some way or

  21   manner, formally or informally, impliedly or tacitly, came to

  22   a common understanding that they would violate the law and

  23   accomplish an unlawful plan.

  24            The proof that people simply met together from time

  25   to time and talked about similar conduct is not enough to




                                                                6078


   1   establish a criminal agreement.  That is something that you

   2   may consider in deciding whether the government has proved an

   3   agreement.  Without more, that is not enough.

   4            You may, of course, find the existence of the

   5   agreement to disobey or disregard the law has been established

   6   by direct proof.  However, because conspiracy is by its very

   7   nature characterized by secrecy, you may also infer its

   8   existence from the circumstances of this case and the conduct

   9   of the parties involved.

  10            In a very real sense then, in the context of

  11   conspiracy cases, actions often speak louder than words.  In

  12   this regard you may, in determining whether an agreement

  13   existed, consider the actions and statements of all those

  14   persons you find to be participants as proof that a common

  15   design existed on the part of the persons charged to act

  16   together to accomplish an unlawful purpose.

  17            However, remember that if you choose to consider a

  18   defendant's postarrest statements made to law enforcement

  19   officials for purposes of determining the existence and scope

  20   of the alleged conspiracy, you may only consider those

  21   postarrest statements in connection with the specific

  22   defendant who made those postarrest statements.  In order for

  23   you to find that the existence and scope of the alleged

  24   conspiracy has been proven in connection with those defendants

  25   who did not make the postarrest statements at issue, you will




                                                                6079


   1   have to rely on evidence other than the postarrest statements.

   2            To recap, it is sufficient to establish the existence

   3   of the conspiracy if, from the proof of all the relevant facts

   4   and circumstances, you find beyond a reasonable doubt that the

   5   minds of at least two alleged coconspirators met in an

   6   understanding way to accomplish, by the means alleged, the

   7   objective of the conspiracy.

   8            In finding the existence of the conspiracy, you must

   9   also conclude that the conspiracy in fact had the unlawful

  10   purpose specifically alleged in the indictment.  If you find

  11   beyond a reasonable doubt that the conspirators agreed to

  12   accomplish the illegal objective charged in the indictment,

  13   the illegal purpose element of the conspiracy offense will be

  14   satisfied.  And if the indictment alleges that a given

  15   conspiracy had more than one unlawful purpose, then you need

  16   only find that the conspirators agreed to accomplish any of

  17   those multiple unlawful objectives.  Although the finding of

  18   one unlawful objective is sufficient to satisfy the illegal

  19   purpose element, I instruct that you the jury must unanimously

  20   agree on which, if any, was the specific unlawful objective of

  21   the alleged conspiracy.

  22       On the special verdict form, if you find that the charged

  23   conspiracy existed, you must indicate unanimous agreement as

  24   to the conspiracy's specific unlawful objectives.

  25       If the government fails to prove beyond a reasonable doubt




                                                                6080


   1   that at least one of the unlawful purposes alleged in the

   2   indictment was in fact an objective of the conspiracy named in

   3   a particular count, or if you cannot unanimously agree as to

   4   which of the unlawful purposes alleged in that count of the

   5   indictment have been proven beyond a reasonable doubt, then

   6   you must find the defendants named in the count not guilty as

   7   to that conspiracy charge.

   8       Moreover, if you conclude that an agreement existed but

   9   that its purpose, even if unlawful, was in fact not one of the

  10   specific unlawful purposes described in that count of the

  11   indictment, you must also find the defendants named in that

  12   count not guilty.

  13            Just a few more general points relating to this first

  14   element of the offense of conspiracy.

  15       First, while the indictment may allege that a given

  16   conspiracy existed on certain dates, it is not essential that

  17   the government prove that the conspiracy started and ended on

  18   those specific dates.  Instead, it is enough if you find that

  19   the conspiracy was formed and that it existed for some

  20   substantial time within the period set forth in the

  21   indictment.

  22            Second, a conspiracy, once formed, is presumed to

  23   have continued until its objectives are accomplished or there

  24   is an affirmative act of termination by its members or it is

  25   otherwise terminated.




                                                                6081


   1            Third, you heard me repeatedly use the terms

   2   "unlawful purpose," "unlawful objective," "illegal purpose,"

   3   "illegal objective" in discussing the elements of the offense

   4   of conspiracy.  Understand that these terms are all synonymous

   5   and that they refer only to violations of United States law.

   6   As I said before, the crime of conspiracy applies only to

   7   those illegal agreements that seek to violate United States

   8   law.  An agreement to violate foreign law standing alone does

   9   not satisfy the illegal purpose element of the offense of

  10   conspiracy.

  11            One last word about the government's burden of

  12   proving the existence of a charged conspiracy.  In this case

  13   the indictment contains four different conspiracy counts.

  14   Each count alleges a single overall conspiracy the existence

  15   of which must be independently proved as to each charged

  16   defendant beyond a reasonable doubt.  Here, some of the

  17   defendants contend that the government's proof fails to show,

  18   under any of the four conspiracy counts, that there existed

  19   only one overall conspiracy.  Rather, they claim that as to

  20   each of the four conspiracy counts, to the extent the

  21   government has proven the existence of any conspiracy, there

  22   were actually several separate and independent conspiracies by

  23   various members of the group.

  24            By way of illustration and illustration only,

  25   consider Count 1 of the indictment.  It alleges a conspiracy




                                                                6082


   1   on the part of all four defendants to murder United States

   2   nationals.  Whether under this count there existed a single

   3   unlawful agreement, or many such agreements, or indeed no

   4   agreement at all, is a question of fact for you the jury to

   5   determine in accordance with the instructions I am about to

   6   give you.

   7            When two or more people join together to further one

   8   common unlawful design or purpose, in violation of United

   9   States law, a single conspiracy exists.  In contrast, multiple

  10   conspiracies exist when there are several unlawful agreements

  11   to achieve distinct purposes.  Proof of several separate and

  12   independent conspiracies is not proof of the single overall

  13   conspiracy charged in Count 1 of the indictment unless one of

  14   the conspiracies proved happens to be the single conspiracy

  15   described in Count 1.

  16            You may find that there was a single conspiracy

  17   despite the fact that there were either changes in

  18   personnel -- by the termination, withdrawal or addition of new

  19   members -- by changes in activities, or both, so long as you

  20   find that some of the coconspirators continued to act for the

  21   entire duration of the conspiracy for the purposes charged in

  22   Count 1 of the indictment.  The fact that members of the

  23   conspiracy are not always identical does not necessarily imply

  24   that separate conspiracies exist.

  25            On the other hand, if you find that the conspiracy




                                                                6083


   1   charged in Count 1 of the indictment did not exist, you cannot

   2   find any defendant guilty of the conspiracy charged in Count 1

   3   of the indictment.  This is so even if you find that some

   4   conspiracy other than that which is charged in Count 1 of the

   5   indictment existed, even though the purposes of both

   6   conspiracies may have been the same, and even though there may

   7   have been some overlap in membership.

   8            Similarly, if you find that a particular defendant

   9   was a member of another conspiracy but not the one charged in

  10   Count 1 of the indictment, then you must find the defendant

  11   not guilty of the conspiracy charged in Count 1.

  12            Therefore, what you must do is determine whether the

  13   conspiracy charged in Count 1 of the indictment existed.  If

  14   it did, you then must determine the nature of the conspiracy

  15   and who were its members.

  16       These principles concerning the distinction between the

  17   proof of a single, overall conspiracy and proof of multiple

  18   conspiracies apply not just to Count 1 of the indictment but

  19   to all four conspiracy counts.

  20            Let us move on now to the second element necessary to

  21   establish the offense of conspiracy.  The government must

  22   prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant you are

  23   considering knowingly, willfully and voluntarily became a

  24   member of the charged conspiracy with the intent to further

  25   its illegal purpose.  Each time you are satisfied that one of




                                                                6084


   1   the four conspiracies charged in the indictment existed, you

   2   must next ask yourself whether a defendant on trial was a

   3   member of that particular conspiracy.

   4            In deciding whether or not the government has proved

   5   beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant you are

   6   considering was in fact a member of the charged conspiracy,

   7   you should consider whether that defendant knowingly and

   8   willfully joined the conspiracy.  Did he participate in it

   9   with knowledge of its specific unlawful purpose, and with a

  10   specific intent of furthering that illegal objective?

  11       An act is done knowingly and willfully if it is done

  12   purposefully and deliberately; that is, the defendant's act

  13   must have been the product of the defendant's conscious

  14   determination rather than the product of mistake or accident

  15   or mere negligence or some other innocent reason.

  16            "Unlawful" simply means contrary to United States

  17   law, as I have already told you.  The defendant you are

  18   considering need not have known that he was breaking any

  19   particular provision of law or any particular rule.  The

  20   defendant you are considering need only have been aware of the

  21   generally unlawful nature of his act.

  22            As I have mentioned, before the defendant you are

  23   considering can be found to have been a conspirator, you must

  24   find that he knowingly joined in the unlawful agreement or

  25   plan.  The key question is whether the defendant joined the




                                                                6085


   1   conspiracy and did so with an awareness of at least some of

   2   the illegal aims and purposes of the unlawful agreement to

   3   violate the laws of the United States.

   4            It is important for you to note that each defendant's

   5   participation in the conspiracy must be established beyond a

   6   reasonable doubt, by independent evidence of his own acts or

   7   statements, as well as acts or statements of persons alleged

   8   to be coconspirators in the same conspiracy, and the

   9   reasonable inferences that may be drawn from them.

  10            Let me remind you of the rule regarding a defendant's

  11   postarrest statements to law enforcement authorities.  Such

  12   statements may be considered by you as evidence only as to the

  13   specific defendant who made those statements, including for

  14   the purpose of your determining whether or not that specific

  15   defendant was a member of the alleged conspiracy.

  16   Accordingly, the defendant's postarrest statements may not be

  17   considered by you in determining whether any of the other

  18   defendants charged in the same conspiracy were in fact also

  19   members of that conspiracy.

  20            A defendant's knowledge is a matter of inference from

  21   the facts proved.  Science has not yet devised a manner of

  22   looking into a person's mind and knowing what that person is

  23   thinking.  However, you do have before you evidence of certain

  24   acts and conversations alleged to have taken place with

  25   certain defendants or in their presence.  The government




                                                                6086


   1   contends that these acts and conversations show beyond a

   2   reasonable doubt knowledge on the part of the defendant in

   3   question of the unlawful purpose of the charged conspiracies.

   4   On the other hand, each defendant denies that these acts and

   5   conversations showed that he had such knowledge.  It is for

   6   you to determine, with respect to each of the four conspiracy

   7   counts alleged in the indictment, whether the government has

   8   established beyond a reasonable doubt that such knowledge and

   9   intent on the part of the defendant you are considering

  10   existed.

  11            To become a member of the conspiracy, the defendant

  12   in question need not have known the identities of each and

  13   every other member, nor need he have been apprised of all

  14   their activities.  Moreover, the defendant need not have been

  15   fully informed as to all of the details or the scope of the

  16   conspiracy to justify an inference of knowledge on his part.

  17   Furthermore, the defendant need not have joined in all of the

  18   conspiracy's unlawful objectives.  Nor is it necessary that a

  19   defendant receive any monetary benefit from participating in

  20   the conspiracy.  All that is required is that the government

  21   prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant you are

  22   considering participated in the conspiracy with knowledge of

  23   some of its unlawful purposes and with the intent of

  24   furthering those unlawful purposes.

  25            You heard during the trial about certain




                                                                6087


   1   organizations, including Al Qaeda, Egyptian Islamic Jihad, and

   2   others.  All four of the conspiracies charged in the

   3   indictment are alleged to have been formed by members and

   4   nonmembers of these organizations.  You need not find that a

   5   particular defendant was a member of Al Qaeda or any other

   6   organization to find that the defendant was a member of the

   7   conspiracy in question.  Similarly, even if you find that a

   8   particular defendant was a member of Al Qaeda, that does not

   9   necessarily mean that the defendant was a member of the

  10   charged conspiracy you are considering.

  11            I caution you that individuals, including the

  12   defendants in this case, have the right under our Constitution

  13   to assemble and discuss even the most unpopular ideas,

  14   including discussion of unlawful acts.  Such assembly and

  15   discussion does not by itself necessarily establish an

  16   unlawful agreement unless, of course, you find that an

  17   unlawful agreement was reached during that conversation.

  18   Expressions of sympathy and support for those who commit

  19   unlawful acts do not, without more, constitute entry into an

  20   unlawful agreement.  Nor does vigorous criticism of the United

  21   States government.  One may belong to a group, knowing that

  22   some of its members commit illegal acts, without having

  23   entered into an agreement that those unlawful acts be

  24   committed.  A frank expression or exchange of political views,

  25   no matter how vehement, radical or unpopular, does not,




                                                                6088


   1   without more, constitute an unlawful agreement.

   2            If you determine that a defendant became a member of

   3   the conspiracy, the extent of his participation in that

   4   conspiracy has no bearing on the issue of the defendant's

   5   guilt.  A defendant need not have joined the conspiracy at the

   6   outset.  A conspirator's liability is not measured by the

   7   extent or duration of his participation.  Indeed, each member

   8   of a conspiracy may perform separate and distinct acts and may

   9   perform them at different times.  Some conspirators may play

  10   major roles, while others play minor roles in a scheme.  An

  11   equal role is not what the law requires.  In fact, even a

  12   single act may be sufficient to draw the defendant within the

  13   ambit of the conspiracy, so long as the defendant has

  14   knowingly and willfully joined the conspiracy.

  15       I want to caution you, however, that the following

  16   factors, standing alone, do not make the defendant you are

  17   considering a member of the conspiracy:  (1) his mere presence

  18   at the scene of the alleged crime; (2) his mere presence at

  19   meetings with other conspirators; or (3) his mere residence in

  20   a particular country or neighborhood.

  21       Similarly, mere association with one or more members of

  22   the conspiracy does not automatically make that defendant a

  23   member, even coupled with knowledge that a conspiracy is

  24   taking place.  A person may know or be friendly with a

  25   criminal, or persons who are members of a conspiracy, without




                                                                6089


   1   being a criminal or coconspirator himself.  Mere similarity of

   2   conduct or the fact that they may have assembled together or

   3   discussed common aims or interests does not necessarily

   4   establish proof of the existence of a conspiracy.

   5       I also want to caution you that mere knowledge or

   6   acquiescence, without participation, in the unlawful plan is

   7   not sufficient to satisfy the government's burden of proof.

   8   Moreover, the fact that the defendant you are considering,

   9   without knowledge of the conspiracy's illegal objectives,

  10   merely happens by his actions to further the purposes or

  11   objectives of the conspiracy does not make the defendant a

  12   member of the conspiracy.  More is required under the law.

  13   What is necessary is that the defendant in question must have

  14   participated in the conspiracy with knowledge of at least some

  15   of the illegal purposes or objectives of the charged

  16   conspiracy and with the intention of aiding in the

  17   accomplishment of those unlawful acts.

  18            Remember too that the unlawful objective which you

  19   find the defendant had knowledge of, and which he sought to

  20   further through his participation in the agreement, must have

  21   been an objective in violation of United States law and must

  22   have been an actual objective, as determined by you, of the

  23   specific conspiracy count you are considering.

  24            In sum, the defendant you are considering, having had

  25   an understanding of the unlawful character of the conspiracy,




                                                                6090


   1   must have intentionally engaged, advised or assisted in it for

   2   the purpose of furthering the illegal undertaking.  The

   3   defendant thereby becomes a knowing and willing participant in

   4   the unlawful agreement -- that is to say, a coconspirator.

   5            A conspiracy, once formed, is presumed to continue

   6   until either of its objectives is accomplished or there is

   7   some affirmative act of termination by its members.  So, too,

   8   once a person is found to be a member of a conspiracy, that

   9   person is presumed to continue being a member in the venture

  10   until the venture is terminated, unless it is shown by some

  11   affirmative proof that that person withdrew and disassociated

  12   himself from it.

  13            One last issue.  The distinction I mentioned earlier

  14   between proof of a single, overall conspiracy versus proof of

  15   multiple or different conspiracies also arises with regard to

  16   the question of a defendant's membership in an alleged

  17   conspiracy.  As I have already stated, you may not find a

  18   defendant guilty of any conspiracy count in the indictment

  19   unless you find beyond a reasonable doubt that he joined the

  20   specific conspiracy alleged in this count.  In this regard, if

  21   the defendant joined a different or separate conspiracy --

  22   that is, if you find that he, one, joined a conspiracy other

  23   than the one charged in the particular count of the indictment

  24   which you are considering, but, two, did not also join the

  25   count you are in fact considering -- then you must find the




                                                                6091


   1   defendant not guilty of the conspiracy charged in the count

   2   you are considering, even if the conspiracy he did join had a

   3   similar purpose.

   4       For example, let us assume that under the first element of

   5   the offense of conspiracy, you the jury unanimously find that

   6   conspiracy X existed and that such conspiracy was directed to

   7   unlawful purpose X, an unlawful purpose specifically charged

   8   in the indictment.  Let us also assume that you find that the

   9   defendant you are considering was aware only of unlawful

  10   purpose Y and intended to further only unlawful purpose Y.

  11   Under these circumstances, you the jury may not find that the

  12   defendant knowingly, willfully and voluntarily joined in

  13   conspiracy X, even if unlawful purpose Y and unlawful purpose

  14   X are substantially similar and even if unlawful purpose Y is

  15   alleged elsewhere in the indictment.  Because the second

  16   element of the offense has not been proven, you must find the

  17   defendant not guilty of conspiracy X.

  18            Of course, if you find that the conspiracy charged in

  19   any count of the indictment existed and the defendant

  20   knowingly, willfully and voluntarily joined in that conspiracy

  21   and its specific illegal objectives, then the first two

  22   elements of the offense of conspiracy are satisfied.

  23            Before moving on to the third element of the offense

  24   of conspiracy, I want to mention a word about coconspirator

  25   evidence.  You will recall that during the trial you heard




                                                                6092


   1   evidence concerning the acts and statements of persons whom

   2   the government charges were coconspirators with the defendants

   3   on trial here.

   4       I instruct you that, in determining the factual issues

   5   before you, you the jury are permitted to consider

   6   coconspirator evidence against a defendant but only according

   7   to the conditions I now describe.

   8       The reason for allowing this type of evidence to be

   9   received against a defendant has to do with the nature of the

  10   crime of conspiracy.  Conspiracy has often been referred to as

  11   a partnership in crime.  Thus, as with other types of

  12   partnerships, when people enter into a conspiracy to

  13   accomplish an unlawful end, each and every member becomes an

  14   agent for the other conspirators in carrying out the

  15   conspiracy.

  16       Accordingly, the reasonably foreseeable acts,

  17   declarations, statements and admissions of any member of a

  18   conspiracy which are made in furtherance of the unlawful

  19   purpose of that conspiracy are deemed under the law to be the

  20   acts of all the members, and all of the members are

  21   responsible for such acts, declarations, statements and

  22   omissions.

  23       What does this mean?  It means that if you the jury find

  24   beyond a reasonable doubt that a conspiracy charged in the

  25   indictment existed and that the defendant you are considering




                                                                6093


   1   was a member of that particular conspiracy -- in short, if you

   2   find that the first two elements of the offense of conspiracy

   3   have been met as to a conspiracy charged in the indictment and

   4   as to the defendant you are considering -- then any acts done

   5   or statements made during and in furtherance of that

   6   particular conspiracy, by persons also found by you to have

   7   been members of that conspiracy, may be considered as evidence

   8   against the defendant under consideration.  This is so even if

   9   such acts were done and statements were made in the

  10   defendant's absence and without his knowledge.

  11            However, before you may consider the statements and

  12   acts of a coconspirator in determining the factual issues

  13   before you, you must first determine that the acts and

  14   statements were made during the existence and in furtherance

  15   of the charged conspiracy.  If the acts were done or the

  16   statements made by someone whom you do not find to have been a

  17   member of the charged conspiracy, or if they were not done or

  18   said during and in furtherance of the charged conspiracy, they

  19   may be considered by you as evidence only against the person

  20   who did or said them.

  21       That is why on numerous prior occasions I have instructed

  22   you that a defendant's postarrest statements to law

  23   enforcement officials are to be considered by you only as to

  24   the particular defendant who made the statements and not ever

  25   as to any of his codefendants.  Such postarrest statements,




                                                                6094


   1   under the law, are not statements made during the existence

   2   and furtherance of the conspiracy, and thus do not qualify as

   3   coconspirator evidence which a jury may properly consider.

   4            Let us now return to our discussion of the core

   5   elements of the offense of conspiracy.

   6            The third element that the government must prove

   7   beyond a reasonable doubt to establish the offense of

   8   conspiracy is that one or more of the conspirators in that

   9   conspiracy knowingly committed at least one of the overt acts

  10   charged in the relevant conspiracy count, at or about the time

  11   and place alleged.  The purpose of the overt act requirement

  12   is clear.  There must have been something more than mere

  13   agreement.  Some overt act, some overt step or action must

  14   have knowingly been taken by at least one of the conspirators

  15   in furtherance of the conspiracy.

  16            In order for the government to establish this

  17   element, it is not required that all of the overt acts alleged

  18   in the relevant conspiracy count have been proven.  All that

  19   is required is that you find beyond a reasonable doubt that at

  20   least one such act was knowingly committed by at least one of

  21   the coconspirators in that particular conspiracy.

  22       Although the finding of one overt act is sufficient to

  23   satisfy the overt act element, I instruct you that the jury

  24   must unanimously agree on which, if any, was the specific

  25   overt act committed.




                                                                6095


   1            Similarly, you need not find that the defendant you

   2   are considering committed the overt act.  It is sufficient for

   3   the government to show that an individual whom you find beyond

   4   a reasonable doubt to be a conspirator knowingly committed an

   5   overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy.  This is because

   6   such an act becomes, in the eyes of the law, the act of all

   7   the members of the conspiracy.

   8            You are further instructed that the overt act need

   9   not have been committed at precisely the time alleged in the

  10   indictment.  It is sufficient if you are convinced beyond a

  11   reasonable doubt that it occurred at or about the time and

  12   place stated in the indictment.

  13            To be clear, in this case the indictment alleges four

  14   separate conspiracy counts.  As to each of these four counts,

  15   as to each defendant charged in the count, unless I inform you

  16   otherwise, you must independently determine whether the overt

  17   act element has been satisfied in the manner I have just

  18   explained.  Of course, a single act may satisfy the overt act

  19   requirement with respect to more than one conspiracy.  Indeed,

  20   as you will see from the indictment, many acts are alleged to

  21   have been in furtherance of a number of the alleged

  22   conspiracies.

  23            Each of the four conspiracy counts indicates which

  24   overt acts were allegedly taken in furtherance of the

  25   particular conspiracy charged in that count, which of the




                                                                6096


   1   various conspirators allegedly committed those overt acts, and

   2   the approximate dates and locations those overt acts allegedly

   3   occurred.

   4            The fourth element that the government must prove

   5   beyond a reasonable doubt to establish the offense of

   6   conspiracy is that at least one of the overt acts which you

   7   unanimously find to have been committed was knowingly and

   8   willfully committed for the purpose of carrying out the

   9   unlawful agreement.  For the government to satisfy this

  10   element, it must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that at least

  11   one overt act was knowingly and willfully done by at least one

  12   conspirator in furtherance of what you determine to be the

  13   unlawful objective or purpose of the conspiracy.  In this

  14   context, "knowingly and willfully" means that the conspirator

  15   committed the overt act with knowledge of some of the illegal

  16   objectives of the conspiracy to violate United States law and

  17   with intent to further those illegal objectives.

  18            You should bear in mind that the overt act standing

  19   alone may be an innocent, lawful act.  Frequently, however, an

  20   apparently innocent act sheds its harmless character if it is

  21   a step in carrying out, promoting, aiding or assisting the

  22   conspiratorial scheme.  You are therefore instructed that the

  23   overt act does not have to be an act that, in and of itself,

  24   is criminal or constitutes an objective of the conspiracy.

  25            As was the case with respect to the three other




                                                                6097


   1   elements of the offense of conspiracy, the government must

   2   independently prove this element beyond a reasonable doubt for

   3   each of the four conspiracy counts charged in the indictment

   4   and for each defendant charged in the count.  In other words,

   5   the fact that you have already found that an overt act was

   6   committed for the purpose of carrying out one of the other

   7   charged conspiracies does not relieve you of your obligation

   8   to find, unanimously and beyond a reasonable doubt, that it,

   9   or some other overt act, was committed in furtherance of the

  10   specific conspiracy that you are considering.

  11            I have now finished explaining to you the four core

  12   elements of the offense of conspiracy.  To recap, they are:

  13       First, that the alleged conspiracy, the object of which

  14   was to violate United States law, in fact existed as charged

  15   in the indictment;

  16       Second, that the defendant you are considering knowingly

  17   and willfully became a member of that conspiracy, with the

  18   intent to further its illegal purpose;

  19       Third, that one or more of the conspirators, not

  20   necessarily the defendant you are considering, knowingly at

  21   committed at least one of the overt acts charged in the

  22   relevant conspiracy count, at or about the time alleged; and

  23       Fourth, that at least one overt act which you unanimously

  24   find to have been committed was knowingly and willfully

  25   committed to effect the object of the conspiracy.




                                                                6098


   1            In this case, as to each conspiracy charged in the

   2   indictment, that is, Counts 1 through 4, and as to each

   3   defendant charged in the count, the government must

   4   independently prove each of these four elements beyond a

   5   reasonable doubt, unless I instruct you otherwise.  I say

   6   "unless I instruct you otherwise" because there are some

   7   allegations of conspiracy in the indictment where the

   8   government's burden of proof will not require all of these

   9   four elements, or where its burden will require proof of

  10   additional elements other than those four, or both.

  11            Whenever such circumstances exist, I will of course

  12   inform you.  In the meantime, I instruct you that proof beyond

  13   a reasonable doubt as to all four core elements is necessary

  14   for the government to establish any allegation of criminal

  15   conspiracy as to any defendants.

  16            We are now ready to consider in detail, count by

  17   count, the specific elements of each of the four conspiracies

  18   alleged in the indictment.  I am going to break for a minute

  19   and stand and stretch, and if you want to break for a minute

  20   and stand and stretch, be my guest.  If you don't, that's OK

  21   too.

  22            (Pause)

  23            THE COURT:  So we are now, if you are following, on

  24   page 52, looking at the specific counts in the indictment.

  25   The first count in the indictment alleges that all four




                                                                6099


   1   defendants, while they were situated outside the United

   2   States, engaged in a conspiracy to murder nationals of the

   3   United States.  Specifically, Count 1 charges, and I am now

   4   reading from paragraphs 10 and 11 of the indictment, that:

   5            From at least 1991 until the date of the filing of

   6   this indictment, which was May 8, 2000, in the Southern

   7   District of New York, in Afghanistan, the United Kingdom,

   8   Pakistan, the Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Somalia, Kenya,

   9   Tanzania, Azerbaijan, and elsewhere out of the jurisdiction of

  10   any particular state or district, the defendants and others,

  11   at least one of whom was first brought to and arrested in the

  12   Southern District of New York, together with other members and

  13   associates of Al Qaeda, Egyptian Islamic Jihad, and others

  14   known and unknown to the grand jury, unlawfully, willfully and

  15   knowingly combined, conspired, confederated, and agreed to

  16   kill nationals of the United States.

  17            It was a part and object of said conspiracy that the

  18   defendants, and others known and unknown, would and did murder

  19   United States nationals.

  20            The federal statute that the defendants are charged

  21   with violating in Count 1 is a provision of the United States

  22   Code which provides in relevant part:

  23            Whoever outside the United States ... engages in a

  24   conspiracy to kill a national of the United States shall ...

  25   in the case of a conspiracy by two or more persons to commit a




                                                                6100


   1   killing that is a murder ... if one or more of such persons do

   2   any overt act to effect the object of the conspiracy, is

   3   guilty of a crime.

   4            As to each of the four defendants charged, in order

   5   to satisfy its burden of proof as to Count 1, the government

   6   must establish each of the following five elements beyond a

   7   reasonable doubt:

   8            First, that two or more persons entered into an

   9   unlawful agreement, the object of which was to murder

  10   nationals of the United States as charged in Count 1 of the

  11   indictment;

  12       Second, that the defendant you are considering knowingly

  13   and willfully became a member of that conspiracy, with the

  14   intent to further its illegal purpose of murdering United

  15   States nationals;

  16            Third, that the defendant you are considering

  17   knowingly and willfully engaged in the conspiracy while

  18   outside of the United States;

  19            Fourth, that one or more of the conspirators, but not

  20   necessarily the defendant you are considering, knowingly

  21   committed at least one of the overt acts charged in Count 1 of

  22   the indictment, at or about the time alleged; and

  23            Fifth, that at least one overt act which you

  24   unanimously find to have been committed was knowingly and

  25   willfully committed to effect the object of the conspiracy.




                                                                6101


   1            The first element of Count 1 that the government must

   2   prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that two or more persons

   3   entered into the unlawful agreement charged in Count 1 of the

   4   indictment.  I have already instructed you as to what a

   5   conspiracy is and how you should go about determining whether

   6   one exists or not.  However, you must keep in mind that each

   7   of the conspiracy counts in the indictment charges a different

   8   conspiracy, and you must make an independent determination on

   9   each count as to whether the government has proven beyond a

  10   reasonable doubt that the particular conspiracy existed.

  11            In Count 1, the alleged purpose of the conspiracy was

  12   to murder United States nationals.  If you unanimously find,

  13   beyond a reasonable doubt, that the conspirators agreed to

  14   accomplish this unlawful objective, then the illegal purpose

  15   element will have been satisfied.

  16            I instruct you that a murder is defined as the

  17   "unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought."

  18   A killing is done with malice aforethought if it is done

  19   consciously, with the intent to kill another person.  In order

  20   to establish this element, the government must prove that the

  21   defendant you are considering acted willfully, with a bad or

  22   evil purpose to break the law.  However, the government need

  23   not prove spite, malevolence, hatred or ill will.

  24            I further instruct you that a "national of the United

  25   States" is simply a citizen of the United States.




                                                                6102


   1            The second element of Count 1 that the government

   2   must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant you

   3   are considering knowingly, willfully and voluntarily became a

   4   member of the conspiracy, with the intent to further its

   5   unlawful purpose of murdering nationals of the United States.

   6            I have previously explained to you how you are to

   7   determine whether or not a person was a member of a charged

   8   conspiracy, and you should rely on those instructions here and

   9   in connection with the remaining counts.  I have also defined

  10   the terms "knowingly and willfully" and what sort of evidence

  11   may help you guide your assessment of a defendant's state of

  12   mind.  Please rely on those instructions as you consider Count

  13   1 and the other conspiracy counts.

  14            The third element of Count 1 that the government must

  15   prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant you are

  16   considering engaged in the charged conspiracy while outside

  17   the United States.

  18            Thus you must find that the conspirators' illegal

  19   agreement to murder United States nationals existed outside

  20   the United States, and that the defendant you are considering

  21   knowingly and willfully engaged in that conspiracy while

  22   outside the United States.  It does not matter if you find

  23   that he also engaged in that conspiracy while in the United

  24   States.

  25            The term "United States" is used in its territorial




                                                                6103


   1   sense.  It includes all the states, territories and

   2   possessions of the United States and all places whether on the

   3   North American continent or on islands, and all waters subject

   4   to the jurisdiction of the United States.

   5       I instruct you that the following places, to name but a

   6   few, are all outside of the United States:  Afghanistan,

   7   Azerbaijan, Canada, Iran, Kenya, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia,

   8   Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania, the United Kingdom, and Yemen.

   9            The fourth element of Count 1 that the government

  10   must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that one or more of

  11   the conspirators, but not necessarily any of the four

  12   defendants, knowingly committed at least one of the overt acts

  13   charged in Count 1 of the indictment, at or about the time and

  14   place alleged.  Count 1 alleges that various conspirators

  15   committed 65 overt acts, which appear in paragraphs 12A to

  16   12MMM of the indictment.  For the government to satisfy this

  17   element, you must find beyond a reasonable doubt that at least

  18   one of these overt acts was knowingly committed by at least

  19   one individual whom you find to be a coconspirator in Count 1,

  20   and you the jury must unanimously agree on which, if any, was

  21   the specific overt act committed.

  22            The fifth and final element of Count 1 that the

  23   government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that at

  24   least one of the overt acts which you unanimously find to have

  25   been committed was knowingly and willfully committed for the




                                                                6104


   1   purpose of carrying out the unlawful agreement to murder

   2   nationals of the United States.

   3            I have already instructed you as to this element in

   4   my general remarks on conspiracy law, and you should rely on

   5   those instructions in evaluating this element of Count 1.

   6       When you reach a unanimous verdict as to each defendant

   7   charged in Count 1, you must enter that verdict in the

   8   appropriate space of the special verdict form.

   9            Now, let's just turn from this document to the

  10   document headed "Verdict Form".  It says on the cover:  Please

  11   note that as to each question on this form and as to all

  12   verdicts on this form, your vote as a jury must be unanimous.

  13       Then you see on page 1 it says:  Count 1 charges that

  14   defendants Wadih El Hage, Mohamed Sadeek Odeh, Mohamed Rashed

  15   Daoud Al-'Owhali, and Khalfan Khamis Mohamed, while they were

  16   situated outside the United States, engaged in a conspiracy to

  17   murder nationals of the United States.  Do you find that the

  18   defendant listed below is guilty or not guilty of this

  19   offense?  The four defendants are listed below and there is a

  20   place to check your verdict, guilty or not guilty.

  21            Going back to the on page 57, we turn to Count 2 of

  22   the indictment, charging all four defendants with conspiring

  23   to murder officers or employees of the United States while

  24   such officers or employees were engaged in or on account of

  25   the performance of official duties, and to murder




                                                                6105


   1   internationally protected persons.  Specifically, Count 2

   2   charges, and I am now reading from paragraphs 14 and 15 of the

   3   indictment, that:

   4            From at least 1991 until the date of the filing of

   5   this indictment, May 8, 2000, in the Southern District of New

   6   York, in Afghanistan, the United Kingdom, Pakistan, the Sudan,

   7   Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Somalia, Kenya, Tanzania, Azerbaijan, the

   8   Philippines and elsewhere out of the jurisdiction of any

   9   particular state or district.... the defendants, at least one

  10   of whom was first brought to and arrested in the Southern

  11   District of New York, together with other members and

  12   associates of Al Qaeda, Egyptian Islamic Jihad, and others

  13   known and unknown to the grand jury, unlawfully, willfully,

  14   and knowingly combined, conspired, confederated and agreed

  15   unlawfully to kill individuals.

  16            It was a part and objective of said conspiracy that

  17   the defendants, and others known and unknown, would and did:

  18   (1) kill officers and employees of the United States and

  19   agencies and branches thereof while such employees were

  20   engaged in, and on account of, the performance of their

  21   official duties, and persons assisting such employees in the

  22   performance of their duties ... including members of the

  23   American military stationed in Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Somalia

  24   and elsewhere, and employees of the United States embassies in

  25   Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania; and (2) kill




                                                                6106


   1   internationally protected persons ...

   2            The statute which the defendants are charged with

   3   violating in Count 2 is a statute which provides in relevant

   4   part:

   5            If two or more persons conspire to violate section

   6   1114 or 1116 of this title and one or more of such persons do

   7   any overt act to effect the object of the conspiracy, each is

   8   guilty of a crime.

   9            Section 1114 makes it a crime to kill any officer or

  10   employee of the United States while such officer or employee

  11   is engaged in or on account of the performance of official

  12   duties, or any person assisting such officer or employee in

  13   the performance of such duties, or on account of that

  14   assistance.  Section 1116 makes it a crime to kill an

  15   internationally protected person.

  16            With respect to each of the four defendants charged,

  17   in order to satisfy its burden of proof as to Count 2, the

  18   government must establish each of the following four elements

  19   beyond a reasonable doubt:

  20            First, that two or more persons entered into a

  21   conspiracy, the objects of which were to murder officers or

  22   employees of the United States while such officers or

  23   employees were engaged in or on account of the performance of

  24   official duties, as well as to murder internationally

  25   protected persons, as charged in Count 2 of the indictment;




                                                                6107


   1            Second, that the defendant you are considering

   2   knowingly and willfully became a member of that conspiracy,

   3   with the intent to further one or both of these two unlawful

   4   purposes;

   5            Third, that one or more of the conspirators, but not

   6   necessarily the defendant you are considering, knowingly

   7   committed at least one of the overt acts charged in Count 2 of

   8   the indictment at or about the time alleged; and

   9            Fourth; that at least one overt act which you

  10   unanimously find to have been committed was knowingly and

  11   willfully committed to effect the illegal objective of the

  12   conspiracy.

  13            The first element of Count 2 that the government must

  14   prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that two or more persons

  15   entered into the unlawful agreement charged in Count 2 of the

  16   indictment.  I have already instructed you as to what a

  17   conspiracy is and how you should go about determining whether

  18   one existed.

  19            In Count 2, the unlawful objectives alleged to be the

  20   objects of the conspiracy were:  (1) to kill, in a manner

  21   which constitutes murder, officers or employees of the United

  22   States, or agencies and branches thereof, while such officers

  23   or employees were engaged in, or on account of, the

  24   performance of their official duties, or persons assisting

  25   such employees in the performance of their duties, including




                                                                6108


   1   members of the American military stationed in Saudi Arabia,

   2   Yemen, Somalia or elsewhere, or employees of the United States

   3   embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, or Dar es Salaam, Tanzania; and

   4   (2) kill, in a manner which constitutes murder,

   5   internationally protected persons.

   6       Recall that "murder" is defined as a killing which is done

   7   consciously, that is, with the intent to kill another person.

   8            If you find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the

   9   conspirators agreed to accomplish one or both of these two

  10   unlawful objectives as charged in Count 2 of the indictment,

  11   then the illegal purpose element will be satisfied.  Although

  12   the finding of one unlawful objective is sufficient to satisfy

  13   the illegal purpose element, you the jury must unanimously

  14   agree on which, if any, were the specific unlawful objects of

  15   the alleged conspiracy.  You must indicate your unanimous

  16   finding on the special verdict form, and we will look at that

  17   in a moment.

  18            I instruct you that an individual performs an

  19   "official duty" when he acts within the scope of what he is

  20   employed to do.  To murder someone "on account of the

  21   performance of their official duties" is to murder someone

  22   because he or she performs that duty.

  23            The term "officers and employees of the United

  24   States" is self-explanatory.  It includes officers and

  25   employees of any agency in any branch of the United States




                                                                6109


   1   government, including members of the uniformed services.

   2       The parties have stipulated that 41 persons were inside

   3   the United States Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, on August 7,

   4   1998, and that they were officers and employees of the United

   5   States, and that two persons were inside the American Embassy

   6   in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on August 7, 1998, and they were

   7   officers and employees of the United States.

   8            An "internationally protected person" is a

   9   representative, officer, employee or agent of the United

  10   States government who at the time and place concerned was

  11   entitled, pursuant to international law, to special protection

  12   against attack upon his person, freedom or dignity.  The

  13   parties have also stipulated that two persons who were inside

  14   the American Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, on August 7, 1998,

  15   fall under the definition of "internationally protected

  16   persons."

  17            The second element of Count 2 that the government

  18   must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant you

  19   are considering knowingly, willfully and voluntarily became a

  20   member of the conspiracy, with intent to further its unlawful

  21   purpose.

  22            I have previously explained to you how you are to

  23   determine whether a person was a member of a charged

  24   conspiracy, and also the definition of the terms "knowingly"

  25   and "willfully," and you should rely on those instructions as




                                                                6110


   1   you consider Count 2 and the other conspiracy Counts.

   2            The third element of Count 2 that the government must

   3   prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that one or more of the

   4   conspirators, but not necessarily the defendant you are

   5   considering, knowingly committed at least one of the overt

   6   acts charged in Count 2 of the indictment, at or about the

   7   time alleged.

   8            Count 2 alleges as overt acts the same 65 overt acts

   9   that are charged in Count 1, which are found in paragraphs 12A

  10   to 12MMM of the indictment.

  11            To satisfy this element of Count 2, you must find

  12   that at least one of these overt acts was committed by at

  13   least one individual whom you find to be a coconspirator in

  14   Count 2.  You the jury must unanimously agree on which, if

  15   any, was the specific overt act committed.

  16            Even if you may have already found one of these overt

  17   acts to have been knowingly committed in connection with the

  18   other conspiracy counts, you still must separately find beyond

  19   a reasonable doubt that one of these overt acts was knowingly

  20   committed with respect to Count 2.

  21            The fourth element of Count 2 that the government

  22   must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that at least one

  23   overt act was knowingly and willfully committed for the

  24   purpose of carrying out the unlawful agreement.  I have

  25   already instructed you as to the same element in connection




                                                                6111


   1   with my general remarks on the law of conspiracy, and you

   2   should rely on those instructions in evaluating this element

   3   of Count 2.

   4            Here too, the fact that you have already found that

   5   an overt act was knowingly and willfully committed for the

   6   purpose of carrying out some other conspiracy charged in the

   7   indictment does not relieve you of your obligation to find,

   8   beyond a reasonable doubt, that it, or some other overt act,

   9   was knowingly and willfully committed in order to fulfill the

  10   unlawful purposes of the conspiracy charged in Count 2.

  11       For each of the defendants charged in Count 2, once you

  12   have reached a unanimous verdict, you must indicate that

  13   verdict on the special verdict form.  Let's turn again to the

  14   special verdict form on Count 2, which is on page 2 of the

  15   special verdict form.  It reads:

  16       Count 2 charges Wadih El Hage, Mohamed Sadeek Odeh,

  17   Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al-'Owhali and Khalfan Khamis Mohamed

  18   with conspiring to murder officers or employees of the United

  19   States while such officers or employees were engaged in or on

  20   account of the performance of official duties, and to murder

  21   internationally protected persons.

  22       Do you find that the defendant listed below is guilty or

  23   not guilty of this offense?

  24       And then there are the names and the box for guilty or not

  25   guilty.




                                                                6112


   1            (Continued on next page)

   2

   3

   4

   5

   6

   7

   8

   9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25




                                                                6113


   1            THE COURT:  (Continuing) But Count Two goes on, as

   2   Count One did not, because the conspiracy alleged in Count Two

   3   has two separate objectives.  Count One has only one

   4   objective:  To kill nationals of the United States.  Count Two

   5   has two objectives.  For that reason, we ask you in the middle

   6   of that page, "If you find at least one defendant guilty of

   7   Count Two, answer part A below.  If you find all four

   8   defendants not guilty of Count Two, skip part A below."

   9            And what part A below asks is:  Did the conspiracy

  10   charged in Count Two include one or both of the following

  11   objectives?  And we ask you to check "yes" or "no" as to the

  12   objective alleged in the indictment as an objective of this

  13   conspiracy.  If you found both, then you check "yes" as to

  14   both.  If you found neither, then you check "no" as to both

  15   and your verdict would be not guilty.  If you found "yes" as

  16   to one and "no" as to the other, the object of the conspiracy

  17   requirement would be satisfied.

  18            And that takes us to Three.  You get to reserve as

  19   you go along because you see there's a pattern and there's a

  20   repetition here, although it is important that you follow

  21   carefully these instructions and the language of the

  22   indictment.

  23            We'll turn to Count Three after we take our mid

  24   afternoon recess.

  25            (Recess)




                                                                6114


   1            THE COURT:  Turning then to Count Three and page 62

   2   of the court's instructions, if you are reading along with me,

   3   Count Three of the indictment charges only defendants Mohamed

   4   Sadeek Odeh, Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al-'Owhali, and Khalfan

   5   Khamis Mohamed with conspiring to use weapons of mass

   6   destruction -- to wit, bombs -- against United States

   7   nationals while such nationals were outside the United States,

   8   and against property owned, leased, or used by the United

   9   States.

  10       Defendant Wadih El Hage is not named as a defendant in

  11   this Count.

  12            Count Three charges, and I am now reading from

  13   paragraphs 18 and 19 of the indictment, that:

  14            From at least 1991 until the date of the filing of

  15   this indictment [May 8, 2000], in the Southern District of New

  16   York, and in those other countries, those three defendants,

  17   that is, all of the defendants except the defendant Wadih El

  18   Hage, at least one of whom was first brought to and arrested

  19   in the Southern District of New York, together with other

  20   members and associates of al Qaeda, Egyptian Islamic Jihad,

  21   and others known and unknown to the Grand Jury, unlawfully,

  22   willfully, and knowingly combined, conspired, confederated,

  23   and agreed unlawfully to use weapons of mass destruction, to

  24   wit, bombs, against nationals of the United States while such

  25   nationals would be outside the United States and against




                                                                6115


   1   property that is owned, leased, and used by the United States

   2   or by departments and agencies of the United States.

   3            It was a part and an object of said conspiracy that

   4   the defendants, and others known and unknown, would and did:

   5   (i) bomb the American embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es

   6   Salaam, Tanzania, and employees of the American government

   7   stationed at those embassies, and (ii) attack American

   8   military facilities in the Gulf region and the Horn of Africa,

   9   and members of the American military stationed in Saudi

  10   Arabia, Yemen, Somalia, and elsewhere with bombs.

  11            The statute that defendants Odeh, Al-'Owhali and

  12   Mohamed are charged with violating in Count Three is a section

  13   of the criminal code which provides, in relevant part, that:

  14            A person who, without lawful authority ... conspires

  15   to use a weapon of mass destruction ... against a national of

  16   the United States while such national is outside of the United

  17   States ... or against any property that is owned, leased or

  18   used by the United States or by any department or agency of

  19   the United States, whether the property is within or outside

  20   of the United States, [is guilty of a crime].

  21            With respect to each of the three defendants charged,

  22   in order to satisfy its burden of proof as to Count Three, the

  23   government must establish each of the following three elements

  24   beyond a reasonable doubt:

  25            First, that two or more persons entered into an




                                                                6116


   1   unlawful agreement to use weapons of mass destruction against

   2   nationals of the United States while such nationals were

   3   outside of the United States, and against any property owned,

   4   leased, or used by the United States or any department or

   5   agency of the United States;

   6            Second, that the defendant you are considering

   7   knowingly and willfully became a member of that conspiracy,

   8   with the intent to further one or both of these two illegal

   9   purposes; and

  10            Third, that the conspiracy existed on or after

  11   September 13, 1994, and that the defendant you are considering

  12   was a knowing and willful member of that conspiracy on or

  13   after that date.

  14            The first element of Count Three that the government

  15   must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that two or more

  16   persons entered into the unlawful agreement to use weapons of

  17   mass destruction against United States nationals while such

  18   nationals were outside the United States, and against any

  19   property owned, leased, or used by the United States.  Again,

  20   the principles of conspiracy that I have already explained to

  21   you apply here as well.

  22            You need to understand the definition of certain

  23   terms used in the count.  A "weapon of mass destruction" is

  24   defined to include, among other things, any explosive or

  25   incendiary bomb or similar device.  As I instructed you




                                                                6117


   1   earlier, a "national of the United States" is simply a citizen

   2   of the United States.  Finally, the term "outside the United

   3   States" depends on the territorial definition of "United

   4   States" that I gave you earlier.

   5            In Count Three, the unlawful objectives alleged to be

   6   the objects of the conspiracy were:  (i) to bomb the American

   7   Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, or Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, or

   8   employees of the American government stationed at those

   9   embassies; and (ii) attack American military facilities in the

  10   Gulf region or the Horn of Africa, or members of the American

  11   military stationed in Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Somalia, or

  12   elsewhere with bombs.

  13            If you find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the

  14   conspirators agreed to accomplish one or both of these two

  15   unlawful objectives, as charged in Count Three of the

  16   indictment, then the illegal purpose element will be

  17   satisfied.  Although the finding of one unlawful objective is

  18   sufficient to satisfy the illegal purpose element, you, the

  19   jury, must unanimously agree on which, if any, were the

  20   specific unlawful objects of the alleged conspiracy.  Your

  21   unanimous finding must be indicated on the special verdict

  22   form.

  23            The second element of Count Three that the government

  24   must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant you

  25   are considering knowingly, willfully, and voluntarily became a




                                                                6118


   1   member of the conspiracy, with the intent to further its

   2   illegal purpose.

   3            You should rely on my previous instructions

   4   concerning how you are to determine whether a person was a

   5   member of a charged conspiracy, and also regarding the

   6   definitions of "knowingly" and "willfully."

   7       The third and final element of Count Three that the

   8   defendant must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the

   9   conspiracy charged in Count Three existed at some point on or

  10   after September 13, 1994, and that the defendant you are

  11   considering was a knowing and willful member of the conspiracy

  12   on or after that date.

  13            Now, this requirement is necessary because, although

  14   Count Three alleges that the conspiracy existed "from at least

  15   1991 until the date of the filing of this indictment [May 8,

  16   2000]" the statute under which Count Three is charged was not

  17   enacted until September 13, 1994.

  18            That's the first time you have heard that day and

  19   that's the reason for it.

  20            You may be wondering why I have not mentioned the

  21   overt act elements of conspiracy in connection with Count

  22   Three.  That's because, unlike the conspiracies charged in

  23   Count One and Count Two, which require you to find at least

  24   one overt act was committed by one of the conspirators in

  25   furtherance of the conspiracy, the conspiracy charged in Count




                                                                6119


   1   Three has no overt act requirement under the terms of the

   2   relevant statute.  Thus, you may find that the elements of

   3   Count Three are satisfied without finding that an overt act

   4   was committed.

   5            And when you reach a unanimous verdict as to each

   6   defendant charged in Count Three, you must enter that verdict

   7   on the special verdict form.  And let's look at the special

   8   verdict form for Count Three, which is on Count Three.

   9            And it says, Count Three charges the defendants Odeh,

  10   Al-'Owhali and Mohamed, with conspiring to use weapons of mass

  11   destruction -- to wit, bombs -- against the United States

  12   nationals while such nationals were outside the United States,

  13   and against property owned, leased, or used by the United

  14   States.

  15            And then it asks you to indicate your finding as to

  16   the guilt or not guilt.

  17            And then, because there are two objects of the

  18   conspiracy, we ask that if you find at least one defendant

  19   guilty of Count Three, answer part A below.  If you find all

  20   three defendants not guilty, skip part A.

  21       Part A says:  Did the conspiracy charged in Count Three

  22   include one or more of the following objectives?

  23       1.  To bomb the American embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, or

  24   Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, or employees of the American

  25   government stationed at those embassies?  Yes/No.




                                                                6120


   1            2.  To attack military facilities in the Gulf region

   2   or the Horn of Africa, or members of the American military

   3   stationed in Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Somalia, or elsewhere with

   4   bombs?  Yes/No.

   5            If you unanimously find both, then you check "yes"

   6   for both.  If you unanimously find "no" as to each, then you

   7   check "no" as to each, in which case you must find the

   8   defendants not guilty.  If you find "yes" as to one and "no"

   9   as to the other, so indicate.  And as long as you unanimously

  10   find one of the objectives to be satisfied, that requirement

  11   of the government's burden of proof will be satisfied.

  12            Then we turn to the last of the conspiracy Counts,

  13   Count Four.  Count Four of the indictment charges all four

  14   defendants with conspiring to maliciously damage or destroy

  15   United States property by means of an explosive.

  16   Specifically, Count Four charges, and I am now reading

  17   paragraphs 22 and 23 of the indictment, and then the beginning

  18   of that is the same as the previous one, and the allegation

  19   is:

  20       Unlawfully, willfully and knowingly, combined, conspired,

  21   confederated and agreed unlawfully to maliciously damage and

  22   destroy, by means of fire and explosives, buildings, vehicles

  23   and other personal and real property in whole or in part owned

  24   and possessed by, and leased to, the United States and

  25   departments and agencies thereof ...




                                                                6121


   1            It was a part and an objective of said conspiracy

   2   that the defendants would and did:  (i) bomb American

   3   facilities anywhere in the world, including the American

   4   embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania;

   5   [and] (ii) attack military installations and members of the

   6   American military stationed at such military installations in

   7   Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Somalia, and elsewhere with bombs ...

   8            The statute that the defendants are charged with

   9   violating in Count Four reads in pertinent part:

  10            [A] person who conspires to [maliciously damage or

  11   destroy ... by means of an explosive ... any building, vehicle

  12   or other personal or real property in whole or in part owned

  13   or possessed by, or leased to the, the United States, or any

  14   department or agency thereof] shall be [guilty of a crime].

  15            With respect to each of the four defendants charged,

  16   in order to satisfy its burden of proof as to Count Four, the

  17   government must establish each of the following three elements

  18   beyond a reasonable doubt:

  19       First, that two or more persons entered into an unlawful

  20   agreement with one another, the object of which was to

  21   maliciously damage or destroy United States property, by means

  22   of an explosive, as charged in Count Four;

  23            Second, that the defendant you are considering

  24   knowingly and willfully became a member of that conspiracy,

  25   with the intent to further its unlawful purpose of maliciously




                                                                6122


   1   damaging or destroying United States property by means of an

   2   explosive; and

   3            Third, that the conspiracy existed on or after April

   4   24, 1996, and that the defendant you are considering was a

   5   knowing and willful member of that conspiracy on or after that

   6   date.

   7            The first element that the government must prove

   8   beyond a reasonable doubt is that two or more persons entered

   9   into the unlawful agreement charged in Count Four of the

  10   indictment.  I have already instructed you as to what a

  11   conspiracy is, and how you should go about determining whether

  12   one existed.  And you should rely on those instructions in

  13   considering this element of Count Four.

  14            In Count Four, the alleged unlawful purpose of the

  15   conspiracy was to maliciously damage or destroy United States

  16   property, by means of an explosive.  Specifically, Count Four

  17   charges that the illegal objectives of the conspiracy were to:

  18   (i) to bomb American facilities anywhere in the world,

  19   including the American embassies in Nairobi or Dar es Salaam;

  20   and (ii) attack military installations or members of the

  21   American military at such military installations in Saudi

  22   Arabia, Yemen, Somalia or elsewhere with bombs.

  23            I instruct you that to act "maliciously" means to act

  24   intentionally or with willful disregard of the likelihood that

  25   damage or injury would result from one's acts.




                                                                6123


   1            The statute defines "explosives" as "gunpowders,

   2   powders used for blasting, all forms of high explosives,

   3   blasting materials, fuses (other than electric circuit

   4   breakers), detonators, and other detonating agents, smokeless

   5   powders ... and any chemical compounds, mechanical mixture, or

   6   device that contains any oxidizing and combustible units, or

   7   other ingredients, in such proportions, quantities, or packing

   8   that ignition by fire, by friction, by concussion, by

   9   percussion, or by detonation of the compound, mixture, or

  10   device or any part thereof may cause an explosion."  The

  11   statute also includes within its definition of "explosives

  12   "dynamite and all other forms of high explosives, any

  13   explosive bomb, grenade, missile, or similar device, including

  14   any incendiary bomb or grenade, fire bomb, or similar device,

  15   including any device which consists of or includes a breakable

  16   container including a flammable liquid or compound, and a wick

  17   composed of any material which, when ignited, is capable of

  18   igniting such flammable liquid or compound, and can be carried

  19   or thrown by one individual acting alone."

  20            If you find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the

  21   conspirators agreed to accomplish one or both of these two

  22   unlawful objectives, as charged in Count Four of the

  23   indictment, then the illegal purpose will be satisfied.

  24   Although the finding of one unlawful objective is sufficient

  25   to satisfy the illegal purpose element, you, the jury, must




                                                                6124


   1   unanimously agree on which, if any, were the specific unlawful

   2   objects of the alleged conspiracy.  Your unanimous finding

   3   must be indicated on the special verdict form.

   4            The second element of Count Four that the government

   5   must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant you

   6   are considering knowingly, willfully, and voluntarily became a

   7   member of the conspiracy, with the intent to further its

   8   illegal purpose of maliciously damaging or destroying United

   9   States property by means of an explosive.

  10            I have previously explained to you how you determine

  11   whether a person was a member of a charged conspiracy, and you

  12   should rely on those instructions here.  I have also defined

  13   the terms "knowingly" and "willfully," and what sort of

  14   evidence may help you guide your assessment of a defendant's

  15   state of mind.  Please rely on those instructions as you

  16   consider this element of Count Four.

  17            The third and final element of Count Four that the

  18   government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the

  19   conspiracy charged in Count Four existed at some point on or

  20   after April 24, 1996, and that the defendant you are

  21   considering was a knowing and willful member of that

  22   conspiracy on or after that date.

  23            Here too, this element is needed because, although

  24   Count Four alleges that the conspiracy existed "from at least

  25   1991 until the date of the filing of this indictment [May 8,




                                                                6125


   1   2000]," the statute under which Count Four is charged was not

   2   enacted until April 24, 1996.

   3            As with the conspiracy charged in Count Three, the

   4   conspiracy charged in Count Four has no overt act element.

   5   Thus, you may find that the elements of Counts four are

   6   satisfied without finding that an overt act was committed.

   7            Now, if, but only if, you find that the government

   8   has proven, beyond a reasonable doubt, all of the elements of

   9   Count Four as to defendants Odeh, Al-'Owhali or K.K. Mohamed,

  10   then you must consider an additional question as to those

  11   three defendants.

  12            You must determine whether the unlawful conduct

  13   committed by the defendant you are considering in Count Four

  14   directly or proximately caused the death of at least one

  15   person other than a conspirator.

  16            "Directly caused" means that the conduct of the

  17   defendant you are considering directly resulted in the death

  18   in question.

  19            "Proximately caused" means that there was a

  20   sufficient causal connection between the act of the defendant

  21   under consideration and the death of any victim.  An act is a

  22   proximate cause if it was a substantial factor in bringing

  23   about or actually causing death, that is, if the death was a

  24   reasonably foreseeable consequence of that defendant's act.

  25   If a death was a direct result or a reasonably probable




                                                                6126


   1   consequence of that defendant's act, it was proximately caused

   2   by such act.  In other words, if that defendant's act had such

   3   an effect in producing the death that reasonable persons would

   4   regard it as being a cause of the death, then the act is a

   5   proximate cause.

   6            A proximate cause need not always be the nearest

   7   cause either in time or in space.  In addition, there may be

   8   more than one proximate cause of a death.  Many factors or the

   9   conduct of two or more people may operate at the same time,

  10   either independently or together, to cause a death.

  11            A defendant's act is not a proximate cause of a death

  12   if the death was caused by a new or independent source that

  13   intervened between the defendant's act and the death, and that

  14   produced a result that was not reasonably foreseeable by the

  15   defendant you are considering.

  16            For purposes of this narrow inquiry only, it is not

  17   relevant whether or not the defendant being considered

  18   intended for his unlawful conduct to cause death.  The simple

  19   question being asked of you here is, having already found

  20   beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant committed the

  21   offense alleged in Count Four of the indictment, do you

  22   additionally find that his unlawful conduct directly or

  23   proximately caused death to a person other than a conspirator?

  24   Your unanimous answer to this question, with respect to the

  25   particular defendant you are considering, must be marked in




                                                                6127


   1   the appropriate place on the special verdict form.

   2            When you reach an unanimous verdict as to each

   3   defendant charged in Count Four, you must enter that verdict

   4   on the special verdict form.

   5       And let's turn to page 4 in Count Four of the indictment.

   6   And it says there, Count Four charges that ther are four

   7   defendants charged with conspiring to maliciously damage or

   8   destroy United States property, by means of an explosive.  Do

   9   you find the defendant listed below is guilty or not guilty of

  10   this offense, and then the four defendants are listed.

  11            And then other questions follow.

  12       If you find at least one defendant guilty of Count Four,

  13   answer parts A through D below.  If you find all four

  14   defendants not guilty of Count Four, skip parts A through D

  15   below.

  16            And A asks, as was the case with Counts Two and

  17   Three, with respect to the objectives:  Do you unanimously

  18   find that objective one was considered or that objective two

  19   was considered.  If you find them both, you answer them both

  20   "yes."  If you find them both "no," then you have to find the

  21   defendants not guilty.  If you find one "yes" and one "no,"

  22   then the requirement of proving the object of the conspiracy

  23   will have been satisfied.

  24            Then it goes on, and it says:  If and only if you

  25   find defendant Mohamed Sadeek Odeh guilty as to Count Four,




                                                                6128


   1   answer the following question.  If you find Mohamed Sadeek not

   2   guilty as to Count Four, skip the following question and

   3   proceed to part C below.

   4            And question B is:  Do you find beyond a reasonable

   5   doubt that defendant Mohamed Sadeek Odeh's crime of conspiracy

   6   in Count Four directly or proximately caused the death of at

   7   least one person other than a conspirator?  Yes or no.

   8            And C asks the same question as to Al-'Owhali and D

   9   asks the same question as to K.K. Mohamed.

  10            So you see that all the things that you are called

  11   upon by my instructions to decide are indicated in the special

  12   verdict form, which is why I say it's a road map.

  13            That finishes the conspiracy counts and I come now,

  14   ladies and gentlemen, to the substantive counts of the

  15   indictment arising out of the bombings of the United States

  16   embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, and these are numbered as

  17   Counts Five through 284 in this indictment.

  18            All these substantive counts allege violations of

  19   United States law which are also alleged to have been some of

  20   the objects of the conspiracy charged in Counts One through

  21   Four of the indictment.

  22            Conspiracy, as you will recall, is a crime separate

  23   from the actual violations of the United States law that forms

  24   its objective.  Accordingly, because the government contends

  25   that the substantive violations I will now instruct you on




                                                                6129


   1   actually occurred, some of the defendants are charged in the

   2   indictment with committing the substantive offenses in

   3   addition to conspiring to commit them.

   4            Now, Counts Five and Six may be considered together.

   5   Count Five charges defendants Odeh and Al-'Owhali with

   6   explosive damage or destruction of federal property, that is,

   7   the American Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya.  Specifically, Count

   8   Five charges:

   9            On or about August 7, 1998, in Nairobi, Kenya, and

  10   outside the jurisdiction of any particular state or

  11   district, ... Mohamed Sadeek Odeh ... and Mohamed Rashid Daoud

  12   Al-'Owhali, the defendants, at least one whom was first

  13   brought to and arrested in the Southern District of New York,

  14   and others known and unknown, unlawfully, willfully and

  15   knowingly did maliciously damage and destroy, by means of fire

  16   and an explosive, buildings, vehicles and other personal and

  17   real property in whole and in part owned or possessed by, and

  18   leased to, the United States, to wit, the defendants, together

  19   with other members and associates of al Qaeda and the Egyptian

  20   Islamic Jihad, detonated an explosive device that damaged and

  21   destroyed the United States Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, and as

  22   a result of such conduct directly and proximately caused the

  23   deaths of at least 213 persons, including Kenyan and American

  24   citizens, as listed in Counts Nine to 221.

  25            Count Six of the indictment charges K.K. Mohamed with




                                                                6130


   1   explosive damage or destruction of the United States Embassy

   2   in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.  It follows the same language as

   3   Count Five, except that it says, "and as a result of such

   4   conduct, directly and proximately caused the deaths of at

   5   least 11 persons, including Tanzanian citizens, as listed in

   6   Counts 222 to 232."

   7            Both Counts Five and Six charge a violation of the

   8   statute which provides:  "Whoever maliciously damages or

   9   destroys, or attempts to damage or destroy, by means of fire

  10   or an explosive, any building, vehicle, or other personal or

  11   real property in whole or in part owned or possessed by, or

  12   leased to, the United States, or any department or agency

  13   thereof is guilty of a crime.

  14            Before I explain these elements of the offenses, let

  15   me pause to remind you of something I emphasized earlier.

  16   Although, to expedite matters, I may in these instructions

  17   occasionally refer to separate counts in pairs or in a group,

  18   you, the jury, are required, as a matter of law, to consider

  19   each count of the indictment and each defendant's involvement

  20   in that count separately.

  21            To satisfy its burden of proof as to Counts Five and

  22   Six, the government must prove each of the following elements

  23   beyond a reasonable doubt:

  24            First, that the defendant you are considering used an

  25   explosive to damage or destroy a building or other property;




                                                                6131


   1            Second, that the building or other property which was

   2   damaged or destroyed was federal property; and

   3            Third, that the defendant acted unlawfully,

   4   willfully, knowingly, and maliciously.

   5            The first element of Counts Five and Six that the

   6   government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the

   7   defendant you are considering, by means of fire or explosive,

   8   damaged or destroyed property.

   9            The terms "damage" and "destroy" have their ordinary

  10   meaning.

  11            When I explained the elements of the conspiracy

  12   alleged in Count Four, I provided you with the statutory

  13   definition of "explosives."  You should apply that definition

  14   here, as well.

  15            If you find the defendant you are considering did

  16   damage or destroy the United States Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya,

  17   (in the case of Count Five), or the United States Embassy in

  18   Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (in the case of Count Six), by means

  19   of an explosive device, the first element of the offense is

  20   satisfied for the count you are considering.

  21            To satisfy this element, it is also sufficient if you

  22   conclude that the defendant aided and abetted another person

  23   in placing the explosive.

  24       And interjecting:  That's a concept we have not dealt with

  25   before.




                                                                6132


   1            And I will define this other type of criminal

   2   responsibility -- "aiding and abetting" the commission of an

   3   offense -- in a few moments and you should apply that

   4   definition here.  It is important for you to note that, with

   5   respect to Count Five and each of the following counts through

   6   Count 284 in which he is charged, defendant Odeh is only

   7   accused by the government of aiding and abetting the

   8   commission of the offenses charged.  The government does not

   9   contend that he physically committed the crimes charged in

  10   those counts.

  11            Let me say now that if you find that the government

  12   has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant you

  13   are considering aided and abetted the commission of the

  14   offense, only this first element of Counts Five and Six is

  15   established.  To satisfy its burden of proof as to Counts Five

  16   and Six, the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt

  17   each of the three of the elements that I listed a moment ago.

  18   And I will now describe the second and third required elements

  19   in greater detail.

  20       The second element of Counts Five and Six that the

  21   government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the

  22   property which was damaged or destroyed was federal property.

  23            Federal property is defined in the statute as any

  24   building, vehicle, or other real or personal property in whole

  25   or in part owned, possessed, or used by the United States




                                                                6133


   1   Government, or any institution or organization receiving

   2   federal financial assistance.

   3            The third and final element as to Counts Five and Six

   4   the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that

   5   the defendant you are considering acted unlawfully, knowingly,

   6   willfully, and maliciously.  Earlier, when discussing

   7   conspiracies in general and, in particular the elements of

   8   Count Four, I defined all of those terms for you, but now I

   9   will explain more about what it means to act "maliciously."

  10   To act with malicious intent means to act either intentionally

  11   or with willful disregard of the likelihood that damage will

  12   result, and not mistakenly or carelessly.  To find the

  13   defendant you are considering guilty, you must find that the

  14   defendant used the explosive, or aided and abetted the use of

  15   the explosive, with the intent to cause damage, or that he did

  16   so recklessly and without regard to the likelihood that damage

  17   would result.

  18            If, but only if, you find that the government has

  19   proven beyond a reasonable doubt each of the elements of

  20   Counts Five and Six as to the defendant you are considering,

  21   then, as with Count Four, you must consider an additional

  22   question as to that defendant.

  23            First, you must determine whether the conduct

  24   committed by the defendant you are considering in Count Five

  25   or Six directly or proximately caused the death of at least




                                                                6134


   1   one person other than a conspirator.  I defined "directly

   2   caused" and "proximately caused" for you earlier when I

   3   explained the elements of Count Four and you should apply

   4   those definitions here.

   5            The government is not required to prove that the

   6   defendant you are considering intended to kill any person.  It

   7   is enough that the crime directly or proximately caused a

   8   person's death, and the person would not have died except for

   9   the crime.

  10            With respect to each of the defendants that you are

  11   considering, you must indicate your unanimous finding as to

  12   this question on the special verdict form.

  13            With respect to Counts Five and Six and each of the

  14   following counts through Count 284, the indictment also

  15   charges the defendants named in those counts with violating 18

  16   U.S.C. Section 2, in addition to other sections.  Section

  17   2(a), which is the one we're dealing with here, is called the

  18   aiding and abetting statute, and it provides that "[w]hoever

  19   commits an offense against the United States or aides, abets,

  20   counsels, commands, induces or procures its commission, is

  21   punishable as a principal."  In other words, a defendant may

  22   be held criminally responsible for certain conduct or actions

  23   even if the evidence does not show the defendant personally

  24   committed these acts.

  25            Under this statute it is not necessary for the




                                                                6135


   1   government to show that the defendant himself committed the

   2   crime with which he is charged in order for you to find him

   3   guilty.  A person who aids and abets another to commit an

   4   offense is just as guilty of that offense as if he committed

   5   it himself.  Accordingly, you may find the defendant guilty if

   6   you find beyond a reasonable doubt that the government has

   7   proven that another person actually committed the offense and

   8   that the defendant aided and abetted that person in the

   9   commission of the offense.

  10            Please remember that this instruction applies only to

  11   Counts Five through 284, which is why we include it at this

  12   point in our instructions.  The legal principles outlined in

  13   this instruction are distinct from those described in Counts

  14   One through Four, all of which dealt with the crime of

  15   conspiracy.  You are not to consider this instruction when

  16   deliberating whether the government has proven the elements of

  17   conspiracy beyond a reasonable doubt with regard to a

  18   particular defendant.

  19            As you can see, the first requirement is that you

  20   find that another person has committed the crime charged.

  21   Obviously, no one can be convicted of aiding and abetting the

  22   criminal acts of another if no crime was committed by the

  23   other person in the first place.  But if you do find that a

  24   crime was committed, then you must consider whether the

  25   defendant you are considering aided and abetted the commission




                                                                6136


   1   of the crime.  On a related note, let me say here that if you

   2   are finding the defendant you are considering himself

   3   committed the crime charged, you need not consider whether he

   4   also aided and abetted another person's commission of the

   5   crime.  That is to say, if you find that the defendant you are

   6   considering acted as a principal -- interjecting:  by acting

   7   as a principal, we mean somebody who himself did it.  If you

   8   find the defendant you are considering acted as a principal

   9   and personally committed the offense, then you do not need to

  10   evaluate whether he might also have acted as an aider and

  11   abettor with another person.

  12            To aid and abet another to commit a crime, it is

  13   necessary that the defendant willfully and knowingly associate

  14   himself in some way with the crime, and that he willfully and

  15   knowingly seek by some act to help make the crime succeed.

  16   When I explained the elements of a conspiracy, I gave you the

  17   definitions of the terms "willfully" and "knowingly" which you

  18   should apply here.

  19            The mere presence of a defendant where a crime is

  20   being committed, even coupled with knowledge that a crime is

  21   occurring, or the mere acquiescence by the defendant in the

  22   criminal conduct of others, even with guilty knowledge, is not

  23   sufficient to establish aiding and abetting.  An aider and

  24   abettor must participate in the crime charged as something he

  25   wished to bring about.




                                                                6137


   1            In other words, you may not find the defendant you

   2   are considering guilty unless you find beyond a reasonable

   3   doubt that every element of the offense as defined in these

   4   instructions was committed by some person or persons, and that

   5   the defendant willfully and knowingly participated in the

   6   commission of the crime.

   7            To determine whether the defendant you are

   8   considering aided and abetted the commission of the crime with

   9   which he is charged, ask yourself these questions:

  10            Did he participate in the crime charged as something

  11   he wished to bring about?

  12            Did he associate himself with the criminal venture

  13   knowingly and willfully?

  14            Did he seek by his actions to make the criminal

  15   venture succeed?

  16            If he did, then the defendant is an aider and

  17   abettor, and therefore guilty of the offense.  If, on the

  18   other hand, your answers to these questions is "no," then the

  19   defendant is not an aider and abettor, and you must find him

  20   not guilty.

  21            Before I move on, let me explain that for each count

  22   where the government has alleged that defendants have aided

  23   and abetted the commission of an offense -- that is, Counts

  24   Five through 284 -- if you determine that the government has

  25   proven that the defendant you are considering is guilty of the




                                                                6138


   1   offense charged, you will be asked to indicate, on the special

   2   verdict form, whether the defendant personally committed the

   3   offense in question or whether he aided and abetted another

   4   person to commit the offense.  Only one of these options may

   5   be marked and your decision must be unanimous.

   6            However, as I have already mentioned to you, in those

   7   counts between Count Five and 284 in which he is named as a

   8   defendant -- that is, Counts Five, Seven, Nine through 221,

   9   233 through 273, 274, 278, 279, 280, 282 and 283 -- defendant

  10   Mohamed Sadeek Odeh is only charged by the government to have

  11   aided and abetted the commission of the crimes charged.  When

  12   you are evaluating defendant Odeh's culpability under each of

  13   those counts, you must assess whether he aided and abetted

  14   another to commit the offense; you do not need to consider

  15   whether he personally committed the crimes charged.

  16            And when you reach a unanimous verdict as to the

  17   defendant you are considering in Counts Five and Six, you must

  18   enter your unanimous verdict in the appropriate place on the

  19   special verdict form.

  20       And if you look at Count Five, Count Five charges

  21   defendants Mohamed Sadeek Odeh and Mohamed Rashed Daoud

  22   Al-'Owhali with explosive damage or destruction of the United

  23   States Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya.  You must answer parts A

  24   through C below.

  25            Do you find that the defendant listed below is guilty




                                                                6139


   1   or not guilty of explosive damage or destruction of the United

   2   States Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya?

   3       And it lists Odeh and it reminds you that Odeh is charged

   4   with aiding and abetting only.  And then Al-'Owhali.

   5            Then with respect to Odeh, if and only if you find

   6   Odeh guilty of aiding and abetting the explosive damage or

   7   destruction of the Nairobi Embassy under Count Five, consider

   8   the following question.  If you find him not guilty, then

   9   don't consider it.  Go on to C.

  10       And that asks:  Do you find beyond a reasonable doubt that

  11   defendant Mohamed Odeh's crime of aiding and abetting the

  12   explosive damage or destruction of the Nairobi Embassy in

  13   Count Five directly or proximately caused the death of at

  14   least one person other than a conspirator?  And it calls for a

  15   "yes" or a "no."

  16            Then with respect to Al-'Owhali, the questions are

  17   different because as to Al-'Owhali he may be found guilty

  18   either as a principal, as someone who did it himself, or as an

  19   aider and abettor.

  20       And so question C as to Al-'Owhali asks:  If you found him

  21   guilty:  1.  Please specify whether unanimously you find that

  22   defendant Al-'Owhali himself used an explosive to damage or

  23   destroy the Nairobi Embassy, or whether you find that he aided

  24   and abetted the use of an explosive to damage or destroy the

  25   embassy.  You are to put an "X" next to only one of the




                                                                6140


   1   following choices.

   2       And that's because, as we repeat in the footnote, if you

   3   unanimously find the defendant you are considering himself

   4   committed the offense charged, you need not consider whether

   5   he also aided and abetted in the commission of that same

   6   offense.

   7       And this principle applies everywhere in this verdict form

   8   in which you are required to indicate whether unanimously you

   9   find the defendant you are considering himself committed the

  10   offense or that he aided and abetted in the commission of the

  11   offense.  You only look to aiding and abetting if you have

  12   concluded that the defendant did not personally commit the

  13   offense.

  14

  15            (Continued on next page)

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25




                                                                6141


   1            THE COURT:  (Continuing) Then in 2 it asks:  Do you

   2   find beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant Mohamed Rasheed

   3   Al-'Owhali's crime of explosive damage or destruction of the

   4   Nairobi embassy in Count 5 directly or proximately caused the

   5   death of at least one person other than a coconspirator?  A

   6   yes or no.

   7            Count 6 is parallel to Count 5, relating to K.K.

   8   Mohammed and the Dar es Salaam embassy, and asks the same

   9   question with respect to K.K. Mohammed and Dar es Salaam.

  10            If we may, we will continue until 5:00.  You are such

  11   good sports, really.

  12            Count 7 charges defendants Odeh and Al-'Owhali with

  13   the use of a weapon of mass destruction for bombing the

  14   American Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, and alleges that on or

  15   about August 7, 1998, in Nairobi, Kenya, and outside the

  16   jurisdiction of any particular state or district, Odeh and

  17   Al-'Owhali -- and then the jurisdictional allegations which we

  18   have previously seen -- unlawfully, willfully and knowingly,

  19   and without lawful authority, did use a weapon of mass

  20   destruction against nationals of the United States while such

  21   nationals were outside the United States, and against property

  22   that was owned, leased and used by the United States and by an

  23   agency of the United States, to wit, the defendants attacked

  24   the American Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, and employees of the

  25   American government stationed at this embassy with a bomb,




                                                                6142


   1   which use of such weapon of mass destruction resulted in

   2   death.

   3            So you see what is happening is, the substantive

   4   counts are following the conspiracy counts, have the same

   5   pattern.  The conspiracy counts allege these were the unlawful

   6   objects of the conspiracy, the substantive counts allege that

   7   they in fact did what the conspiracy counts allege they

   8   conspired to do.

   9            Count 8 follows the language of Count 7 except that

  10   it relates to K.K. Mohammed and the American Embassy in Dar es

  11   Salaam.

  12            The statute that the defendants are charged with

  13   violating in Counts 7 and 8 provides:

  14       A person who, without lawful authority, uses... a weapon

  15   of mass destruction... against a national of the United States

  16   while such national is outside of the United States... or

  17   against any property that is owned, leased or used by the

  18   United States or by any department or agency of the United

  19   States, whether the property is within or outside the United

  20   States, is guilty of a crime.

  21            To satisfy its burden of proof as to Count Counts 7

  22   and 8, the government must establish each of the following

  23   elements beyond a reasonable doubt:

  24            First, that without lawful authority the defendant

  25   you are considering knowingly and willfully used, or aided and




                                                                6143


   1   abetted the use of, a weapon of mass destruction; and

   2            Second, that the weapon of mass destruction was used

   3   against a national of the United States while such national

   4   was outside of the United States, or against any property that

   5   was owned, leased, or used by the United States or by any

   6   department or agency of the United States.

   7            The first element of Counts 7 and 8 that the

   8   government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that,

   9   without lawful authority, the defendant you are considering

  10   knowingly and willfully used, or aided and abetted the use of,

  11   a weapon of mass destruction.  I have previously defined the

  12   terms "knowingly" and "willfully," and you should rely on

  13   those definitions here.  I instruct you that to act "without

  14   lawful authority" is to act illegally and with a criminal

  15   purpose.  Lastly, I remind you that, as I explained when

  16   reviewing the elements of Count 7, a "weapon of mass

  17   destruction" is defined to include an explosive or incendiary

  18   bomb.

  19            In discussing Counts 5 and 6 I explained the concept

  20   of "aiding and abetting," and you should rely on those

  21   instructions when considering this first element of these

  22   counts.  Recall that with respect to Count 7 and defendant

  23   Odeh, the government's theory is that he aided and abetted the

  24   commission of the offense.  The government does not allege

  25   that defendant Odeh physically carried out the crime charged




                                                                6144


   1   in Count 7.

   2            To find the defendant you are considering guilty of

   3   Counts 7 and 8, you must find that the government has

   4   established beyond a reasonable doubt both elements of the

   5   crime.

   6            The second element of Counts 7 and 8 that the

   7   government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the

   8   weapon of mass destruction was used against a national of the

   9   United States while such national was outside the United

  10   States and against any property that was owned, leased or used

  11   by the United States or by any department or agency of the

  12   United States.

  13            I defined the terms "national of the United States"

  14   and "United States" when I explained the elements of Count 3,

  15   and you should rely on those definitions in considering these

  16   counts.

  17            Keep in mind that the government may prove Counts 7

  18   and 8 by proving either that a weapon of mass destruction was

  19   used against a national of the United States while that

  20   national was outside the United States, or that a weapon of

  21   mass destruction was used against property owned, leased or

  22   used by the United States or by any department or agency of

  23   the United States.  The government is not required to prove

  24   both, although you may find that both have been proven.  All

  25   that is required is that the government prove either




                                                                6145


   1   allegation beyond a reasonable doubt with respect to the

   2   defendant and count you are considering and that you be

   3   unanimous as to the allegation proven.

   4            Please remember that you must indicate your unanimous

   5   verdict as to Counts 7 and 8 for each of the defendants you

   6   are considering on the special verdict form.

   7            If, but only if, you find the government has proven

   8   beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant you are

   9   considering committed the offense charged in Counts 7 and 8,

  10   you must then determine whether the conduct of that defendant

  11   resulted in the death of any person other than a conspirator.

  12            A death resulted from the defendant's conduct if the

  13   defendant's conduct was a direct or proximate cause of the

  14   death.  The definitions of "direct" and "proximate cause"

  15   provided in Counts 4, 5 and 6 apply here as well.  Recall that

  16   a defendant's conduct is a proximate cause of death if it is a

  17   "substantial factor" in causing the death.  In other words, to

  18   find that the defendant's conduct is a proximate cause of

  19   death, you must find that the person would not have died then,

  20   except for the defendant's conduct.  The defendant's conduct

  21   is a "substantial factor" in causing a death if it has such an

  22   effect in producing a death as to lead a reasonable person to

  23   regard such conduct as a cause of the death.  An event such as

  24   the death of a person may have more than one cause.  The

  25   government need not prove that the defendant's conduct was the




                                                                6146


   1   only cause of death; it need only prove that the defendant's

   2   conduct was a substantial factor in causing the death.

   3   Further, the government is not required to prove that the

   4   defendant in question intended to kill any person.  It is

   5   enough that the crime caused a person's death and the person

   6   would have died then except for the crime.

   7       You must indicate your unanimous finding as to this

   8   question and for each defendant you are considering on the

   9   special verdict form.

  10       (Pause)

  11            THE COURT:  I am told I left out a "not."  What I

  12   intended to say, page 35:  Further, the government is not

  13   required to prove that the defendant in question intended to

  14   kill any person.  It is enough that the crime caused a

  15   person's death and the person would not have died except for

  16   the crime.

  17            If you look then at Count 7, it asks whether you find

  18   the defendants Odeh and Al-'Owhali guilty or not guilty of the

  19   crime alleged in Count 7.  I remind you that as to Odeh you

  20   may find him guilty only on a theory of aiding and abetting.

  21   It asks you in B as to Odeh whether you find that the crime of

  22   aiding and abetting the use of a weapon of mass destruction

  23   for bombing the Nairobi embassy in Count 7 directly or

  24   proximately caused the death of at least one person other than

  25   a conspirator.




                                                                6147


   1            With respect to Al-'Owhali, it asks in C whether you

   2   find that Al-'Owhali himself used a weapon of destruction or

   3   whether he aided and abetted the use of a weapon of mass

   4   destruction.

   5       Bear in mind what I tell you earlier in a footnote, that

   6   if you find that somebody himself did it then you need not

   7   consider aiding and abetting.  So that you only answer one of

   8   those.  And 2 asks whether you find that Al-'Owhali's crime of

   9   the use of a weapon of mass destruction directly or

  10   proximately caused the death of at least one person other than

  11   a conspirator.

  12       Count 8 asks the same questions with respect to the

  13   defendant K.K. Mohammed and the use of a weapon of mass

  14   destruction in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

  15       Then we turn to Counts 9 to 232, so we will have gone

  16   through Count 232, rather than just through 8.

  17            Counts 9 through 221 of the indictment charge

  18   defendants Odeh and Al-'Owhali with the murders of 213 persons

  19   in the course of an attack with a dangerous weapon on the

  20   American Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya.  Each count corresponds to

  21   a person killed in the explosion at that embassy on August 7,

  22   1998.  Specifically, Counts 9 through 221 charge:

  23            On or about August 7, 1998, in Nairobi, Kenya, and

  24   outside the jurisdiction of any particular state or

  25   district... Mohamed Sadeek Odeh:  And Mohamed Rashed Daoud




                                                                6148


   1   Al-'Owhali ... the defendants, at least one of whom was first

   2   brought to and arrested in the Southern District of New York,

   3   and others known and unknown, unlawfully, willfully,

   4   deliberately and maliciously and with malice aforethought and

   5   with premeditation, did kill the persons listed below during

   6   the course of an attack on a federal facility involving the

   7   use of a dangerous weapon, to wit, the defendants detonated an

   8   explosive device that damaged and destroyed the United States

   9   Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, and as a result of such conduct

  10   directly and proximately caused the deaths of the persons

  11   listed in those counts.

  12            Counts 222 through 232 charge defendant Khalfan

  13   Khamis Mohamed with the murders of 11 persons in the course of

  14   an attack with a dangerous weapon on the American Embassy in

  15   Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.  Each count corresponds to a person

  16   killed in the explosion at that embassy on August 7, 1998.

  17   Specifically, Counts 222 through 232 charge:

  18            On or about August 7, 1998, in Dar es Salaam,

  19   Tanzania, and outside the jurisdiction of any particular state

  20   or district ... Khalfan Khamis Mohamed ... who was first

  21   brought to and arrested in the Southern District of New York,

  22   and others known and unknown, unlawfully, willfully,

  23   deliberately and maliciously, and with malice aforethought and

  24   with premeditation, did kill the persons listed below during

  25   the course of an attack on a federal facility involving the




                                                                6149


   1   use of a dangerous weapon, to wit, the defendant detonated an

   2   explosive device that damaged and destroyed the United States

   3   Embassy in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and as a result of such

   4   conduct directly and proximately caused the deaths of the

   5   persons listed in those counts.

   6            The statute the defendants are charged with violating

   7   in these Counts is section 930 of Title 18, and the statute

   8   provides in relevant part that a person who kills ... any

   9   person ... in the course of an attack on a federal facility

  10   involving the use of a firearm or other dangerous weapon is

  11   guilty of a crime.

  12            In these counts, the government further alleges that

  13   the defendants committed the killings with malice aforethought

  14   and with premeditation.

  15            To satisfy its burden of proof as to Counts 9 through

  16   232, the government must establish each of the following

  17   elements beyond a reasonable doubt:

  18            First, that the defendant you are considering killed,

  19   or aided and abetted the killing of, the victim as charged;

  20            Second, that the killing occurred in the course of an

  21   attack on a federal facility;

  22            Third, that the defendant knowingly used a firearm or

  23   other dangerous weapon in the attack;

  24            Fourth, that the defendant acted unlawfully;

  25            Fifth, that the defendant acted with malice




                                                                6150


   1   aforethought; and

   2            Sixth, that the defendant acted with premeditation.

   3            The first element the government must prove beyond a

   4   reasonable doubt is that the defendant you are considering

   5   killed, or aided and abetted the killing of the victim as

   6   charged in the indictment.

   7            In this regard, it is the government's burden to

   8   prove that the conduct of the defendant you are considering

   9   was the direct cause of the victim's death.  That means

  10   simply, the government must prove that the defendant inflicted

  11   an injury or injuries upon the victim from which the victim

  12   died, or that the defendant aided and abetted another person

  13   to do so.

  14            The definition of "aiding and abetting" that was

  15   provided to you earlier in Counts 5 and 6 is also applicable

  16   to the element of these counts.

  17       Recall with respect to Counts 9 through 221 and defendant

  18   Odeh, the government's theory is that he aided and abetted the

  19   commission of the offenses.  The government does not allege

  20   that defendant Odeh physically carried out the crimes charged

  21   in those counts.

  22            As I have already explained to you, to satisfy their

  23   burden as to these counts, the government must establish

  24   beyond a reasonable doubt each of the six elements that I am

  25   now explaining to you.




                                                                6151


   1            The second element that the government must prove

   2   beyond a reasonable doubt is that the killing occurred in the

   3   course of an attack on a federal facility.  The term "federal

   4   facility" means a building or part thereof owned or leased by

   5   the federal government, where federal employees are regularly

   6   present for the purpose of performing their official duties.

   7            The third element that the government must prove

   8   beyond a reasonable doubt is that in the course of an attack

   9   on a federal facility, if you should find that one occurred,

  10   the defendant you are considering knowingly used a firearm or

  11   other dangerous weapon.

  12            To use a firearm or other dangerous weapon in an

  13   attack means to use it in such a way that it was an integral

  14   part of the attack.

  15            The term "firearm" includes, among other things, any

  16   destructive device.  A "destructive device" is defined to

  17   include an explosive, incendiary or poison gas bomb; an

  18   explosive, incendiary or poison gas grenade; an explosive,

  19   incendiary or poison gas rocket; an explosive, incendiary or

  20   poison gas mine; or any similar device.

  21            The term "dangerous weapon" means a weapon, device,

  22   instrument, material or substance, animate or inanimate, that

  23   is used for or is readily capable of causing death or bodily

  24   injury.

  25            To satisfy this element, you must find that the




                                                                6152


   1   defendant you are considering knowingly used the firearm or

   2   other dangerous weapon.  This means that the defendant used a

   3   firearm or other dangerous device purposely and voluntarily

   4   and not by accident or mistake.

   5       This element may also be satisfied if you find that the

   6   defendant you are considering aided and abetted another person

   7   to use the firearm or dangerous weapon.  You should apply the

   8   same definition of "aiding and abetting" that was provided

   9   previously.

  10            The fourth element that the government must prove

  11   beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant you are

  12   considering acted unlawfully.  An act is done unlawfully if it

  13   was done without valid justification or excuse.  While the

  14   taking of human life is a most serious matter, not all

  15   killing, even when intentional, is unlawful.  In the context

  16   of Counts 9 through 232, the law forbids killing done without

  17   valid justification or excuse.  If you find that the defendant

  18   you are considering committed a killing without valid

  19   justification or excuse, this element is satisfied.

  20            The fifth element that the government must prove

  21   beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant you are

  22   considering acted with malice aforethought.  Malice is a state

  23   of mind that would cause a person to act without regard to the

  24   life of another.  To satisfy this element, the defendant --

  25            Let me begin with "malice aforethought."  Apparently




                                                                6153


   1   I misspoke.

   2            The fifth element that the government must prove

   3   beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant you are

   4   considering acted with malice aforethought.  Malice is a state

   5   of mind that would cause a person to act without regard to the

   6   life of another.  To satisfy this element, the defendant must

   7   have acted consciously, with the intent to kill another

   8   person.

   9            In order to establish this element, the government

  10   must prove that the defendant acted willfully, with a bad or

  11   evil purpose to break the law.  However, the government need

  12   not prove spite, malevolence, hatred or ill will to the

  13   victim.

  14            The sixth and final element that the government must

  15   prove beyond a reasonable doubt is that the defendant you are

  16   considering acted with premeditation.  An act is done with

  17   premeditation if it is done upon deliberation.  To show

  18   premeditation, the government must prove the defendant killed

  19   the victim only after thinking the matter over, deliberating

  20   whether to act before committing the crime.  There is no

  21   requirement that the government prove that the defendant

  22   deliberated for any particular period of time.  It is

  23   sufficient to satisfy this element if you find that before he

  24   acted, the defendant had a period of time to become fully

  25   aware of what he intended to do and to think it over.




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   1            If you find the defendant killed a victim, or aided

   2   and abetted the killing of a victim, as a result of a

   3   premeditated design to effect the death of a different person,

   4   then the requirement of premeditation as to the victim you are

   5   considering is satisfied.

   6            With respect to each of the defendants you are

   7   considering, you must indicate your unanimous verdict as to

   8   each of Counts 9 through 232 on the special verdict form.

   9            Let's look at that special verdict form with respect

  10   to those counts, and then we will call it a night.  I am on

  11   page 12 of the special verdict form, and it says:

  12       Counts 9 through 221 charge defendants Odeh and Al-'Owhali

  13   with the murder of 213 persons in the course of an attack with

  14   a dangerous weapon on the United States Embassy in Nairobi,

  15   Kenya.  For each of the counts between 9 and 221, if you find

  16   the defendant listed below is guilty as to that count you are

  17   considering, put an X in the guilty box next to that count.

  18   If you find the defendant listed below is not guilty as to the

  19   count you are considering, put an X in the not guilty box next

  20   to that count.

  21            You may not find Odeh guilty as to any of Counts 9

  22   through 221 unless you unanimously find that he aided and

  23   abetted the commission of the offense.

  24            Additionally, and solely with respect to the

  25   defendant Al-'Owhali, if and only if you find that he is




                                                                6155


   1   guilty as to a count between Counts 9 and 221 that you are

   2   considering, please specify whether unanimously you find that

   3   he himself killed the victim in that count or whether you find

   4   that he aided and abetted the killing of the victim in that

   5   count.  You are to put an X in only one of the two boxes

   6   marked himself killed or aided and abetted next to the count

   7   you are considering as to Mohamed Rashed Al-'Owhali.

   8            Then you will see, if you look at Count 9, with

   9   respect to Odeh, the boxes are guilty or not guilty.  But

  10   since Odeh can be found guilty only if you unanimously find

  11   that he aided and abetted, the other choices are blacked out.

  12   You are not to complete that.  With respect to Al-'Owhali,

  13   however, if you find him guilty, you should also indicate

  14   whether he himself killed, or whether you find that he aided

  15   and abetted, and that is why with respect to Al-'Owhali there

  16   are four boxes of which you are to check two, guilty or not

  17   guilty, and himself killed or aided and abetted, whereas as to

  18   Odeh there are only two, and that applies to all of those

  19   counts, through this chart.

  20            We will call it a day, but I have some very important

  21   things to say to you.  I said earlier that my charge is to be

  22   regarded as a whole, and that you are not to take any

  23   particular part of it as alone stating the instructions but

  24   you are to consider it as a whole.  Therefore, understand that

  25   what I have said today is no more nor less important than what




                                                                6156


   1   I will tell you tomorrow.  It is just a happenstance that some

   2   things are today and some things are tomorrow.

   3            Please understand also that when you arrive tomorrow

   4   you will not have heard all the court's instruction, so I

   5   would ask that you please not start to discuss, not start to

   6   deliberate, until you have heard all the court's instructions.

   7            Thank you for your patience and cooperation.

   8   Tomorrow we start at 1:00.  Please have lunch before you come

   9   to the courthouse, and have a good evening.

  10            (Jury excused)

  11            THE COURT:  Anyone who is aware of any inadvertent

  12   errors, please call them to my attention.

  13            MR. DRATEL:  Yes, your Honor.  On page 21, the

  14   instruction about not considering the witness's guilty plea, I

  15   believe you said it benefits, the court said defendants.

  16            THE COURT:  Page 2, all right, I will correct that

  17   tomorrow.  Anything else?  All right, then we are adjourned

  18   until 1:00 tomorrow.

  19            (Proceedings adjourned until 1:00 p.m., Thursday, May

  20   10, 2001)

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