Saturday, December 26, 2009

More fresh news on the touchy subject of NYC here - Can a terror trial in NYC be fair?

NYC

NEW YORK -- Since the government's announcement that Khalid Shaikh Mohammed would be tried with others in Manhattan in connection with the 9/11 attacks, some lawyers and others have expressed skepticism that such a trial will ever be held in the city. They are confident defense lawyers will ask the trial be moved, and believe a judge might even consent.

But a review of previous terrorism trials and interviews with lawyers and legal experts shows that such an outcome is hardly guaranteed.


Federal juries in Manhattan, for instance, have not imposed the death penalty against any of the six defendants who could have received it since the federal death penalty was reinstated some two decades ago.


As well, judges have been reluctant to order cases moved, ruling that careful pretrial questioning can weed out jurors who are not impartial. In a case in 2002, a lawyer in U.S. District Court in Manhattan sought a change of venue for a suspected aide to Osama bin Laden who had been charged with stabbing a jail guard. The lawyer, Richard B. Lind, said he was convinced his client could not get a fair trial in Manhattan so soon after 9/11.


Lind had surveys conducted in New York and five other jurisdictions in January 2002. The results showed that 58 percent of New Yorkers had been "personally affected" by the attacks, more than double the average of those in the other areas.


But the judge, Deborah A. Batts, rejected the request, citing other survey evidence showing that levels of bias were not much different elsewhere.


"While New York residents are particularly hard hit because of the destruction of the World Trade Center and considerable loss of loved ones," the judge wrote, "the tidal wave is of national, not just local, proportions."


Defense lawyers in a prominent terror trial in Manhattan nearly 15 years ago reached a similar conclusion when they ordered research on whether their clients would fare better in a city other than New York.


Back then, Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and a group of other men faced a 1995 federal trial on charges of plotting to blow up the United Nations, the George Washington Bridge, the Hudson River tunnels and other landmarks. The lawyers believed their clients could not get a fair trial in the city they were accused of targeting. But their surveys of potential jurors indicated that New York was not clearly worse than other places for the trial.


Much is unknown about the forthcoming cases against Mohammed and four others. No public indictment has been released; no judge has been picked. It is not clear Mohammed will even mount a defense. And he may want his trial to be a soapbox of sorts, blocks from where the World Trade Center once stood.


If he does seek to defend himself, some lawyers say a motion for change of venue would almost be mandatory because of 9/11's impact on the city.

7 comments:

  1. His arguments why they shouldn't have a trial in NYC is crazy... 1) why does it "go without saying" it would heighten the threat?"

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  2. Terrorist Ties to Al Qaeda? NYC Al Qaeda Terrorist Trial? NYC Bulls Eye? Obama's and Holder's judgement call: MIA

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  3. Yes i have been to NYC, but there are also Americans who have no problem with this trial.

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  4. I by the way have no problem with the terrorists standing trial in NYC, they will be convicted in anycase and thats the

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  5. Obama's treatment of Israel (one of our greatest allies) is treason. Holder's actions as AG are treason (KSM trial in NYC).

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  6. We got the mock trial case for New York! It parallels the Bernie Madoff trial. Awesome.

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  7. Watching csi new york with gabby glad i didnt do macbeth and barely did my law trial! Yey for procrastination

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