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 | | Posted by admin on Tuesday, March 21, 2006 - 07:52 AM |
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 |  | An FBI agent has told the sentencing trial of Zacarias Moussaoui
that his attempts to warn of a possible hijack plan were obstructed by
his superiors.
FBI agent Harry Samit (r) said he had warned of a possible hijack plot
Harry Samit, who arrested Moussaoui a month before the
9/11 attacks, warned bosses on 18 August 2001 he thought Moussaoui was
planning a terror act.
But, he told the court, FBI head office refused his pleas to obtain a search warrant for the detainee's belongings.
Prosecutors allege Moussaoui's lies on the 9/11 plot prevented the FBI acting.
But Moussaoui's defence argues that nothing he said
after his arrest would have made any difference because the FBI was too
bureaucratic to respond quickly to a threat.
A self-confessed member of al-Qaeda, Moussaoui has
denied being part of the 9/11 plot but says he was part of a broader
conspiracy to use airplanes to strike the White House.
He is the only person to face trial in the US in connection with the attacks on New York and Washington.
'Criminal negligence'
Giving evidence in Virginia, Mr Samit told the court his
warnings over Moussaoui had been dismissed by his superiors at FBI
headquarters in Washington.
He said he had alerted his bosses immediately after
questioning Moussaoui, because he believed the suspect was conspiring
to commit a terrorist act.
He said he had voiced concern over a possible hijack
plot, based on the fact Moussaoui had been learning how to fly a 747
airliner, owned a portable GPS navigation system and was an Islamic
fundamentalist.
But despite his entreaties, FBI headquarters refused to
open a criminal investigation and obtain a search warrant for
Moussaoui's possessions, Mr Samit said.
"You needed people in Washington to help you out?" asked defence lawyer Edward MacMahon. "They didn't do that did they?"
Mr Samit replied: "No."
He confirmed under questioning that in a report after
the 9/11 attacks he had blamed the FBI's inaction on "obstructionism,
criminal negligence and careerism".
'Tainted' witnesses
Moussaoui's trial resumed on Monday after a week-long
delay while Judge Leonie Brinkema considered whether to allow
prosecution testimony from aviation experts.
It followed revelations that a government lawyer had improperly coached four witnesses.
Moussaoui, a 37-year-old Frenchman of Moroccan origin, pleaded guilty last April to six charges of conspiracy.
The prosecution is seeking the death penalty on the
grounds his silence about the 9/11 plot after his arrest prevented the
FBI thwarting the attacks.
He was detained shortly before the 9/11 attacks after
arousing suspicion at a flying school. He initially told federal agents
he was training as a pilot only for personal enjoyment.
If Moussaoui is spared the death sentence, he will spend
the rest of his life in prison. The sentencing trial is expected to
last up to three months.
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