25 April 2001
Source: Digital file from the Court Reporters Office, Southern District of
New York; (212) 805-0300.
This is the transcript of Day 32 of the trial, April 23, 2001. Transcript delayed due to outage of e-mail of Court Reporters Office.
See other transcripts: http://cryptome.org/usa-v-ubl-dt.htm
                                                                4345
   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
                                               New York, N.Y.
   8                                           April 23, 2001
                                               9:30 a.m.
   9
  10
  11   Before:
  12                       HON. LEONARD B. SAND,
  13                                           District Judge
  14
  15
  16
  17
  18
  19
  20
  21
  22
  23
  24
  25
                                                                4346
   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        Assistant United States Attorneys
   6
       SAM A. SCHMIDT
   7   JOSHUA DRATEL
       KRISTIAN K. LARSEN
   8        Attorneys for defendant Wadih El Hage
   9   ANTHONY L. RICCO
       EDWARD D. WILFORD
  10   CARL J. HERMAN
       SANDRA A. BABCOCK
  11        Attorneys for defendant Mohamed Sadeek Odeh
  12   FREDRICK H. COHN
       DAVID P. BAUGH
  13        Attorneys for defendant Mohamed Rashed Daoud
       Al-'Owhali
  14
       DAVID STERN
  15   DAVID RUHNKE
            Attorneys for defendant Khalfan Khamis Mohamed
  16
  17
  18
  19
  20
  21
  22
  23
  24
  25
                                                                4347
   1            (In open court)
   2            THE COURT:  Good morning.  We have a very long agenda
   3   for today.  I note that the defendants have not yet arrived.
   4            Let me, I'm aware of the fact that the defendants are
   5   not here, but take up a matter which is very distressing, and
   6   that is the government's complaint with respect to defense
   7   counsels' relationship with the press.  I had hoped that it
   8   would not be necessary for me to address the issue, but I do
   9   have to address it.
  10            I was distressed, Mr. Ruhnke, the weekend before
  11   last, it didn't get my full attention because I was in a car
  12   with a lot of youngsters who were concerned that I had turned
  13   off the Lion King tape, to hear you predicting to Ms. LeBlanc,
  14   who broadcast the tape, broadcasting the interview, that your
  15   client was going to be found guilty in the liability phase.
  16   And what purpose did that serve other than to suggest that
  17   that outcome would not be a reflection on your legal skills?
  18   What utility is served by predicting that your client will be
  19   found guilty?
  20            The record will indicate the defendants are being
  21   brought in.
  22            There were also interviews given to a reporter from
  23   the New York Times which seemed to detail the theories of the
  24   defense counsel in the death penalty phase of the case.  At
  25   the same time, there is a request that the jury be be told
                                                                4348
   1   that they not see, read or listen to anything with respect to
   2   the McVeigh execution, a story which is going to be the lead
   3   news story in America for a significant period of time.  I
   4   find the juxtaposition between those two matters very strange.
   5            This is a death penalty case, and certain counsel
   6   here are death penalty experts and in many respects special
   7   rules apply, but the rules which deal with the
   8   appropriateness, that is, rather than non-appropriateness, of
   9   making statements intended to appear in the press with respect
  10   to an ongoing jury trial remain in effect whether it is a
  11   death penalty case or it is a petty misdemeanor case.  And I
  12   hope that it won't be necessary for me to address this matter
  13   again.
  14            The rules of this Court and the rules of professional
  15   conduct adequately deal with the matter, and unless counsel
  16   wishes to address the issue, I hope I will have no need to say
  17   anything further about it during the course of these
  18   proceedings.
  19            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, in my own defense --
  20   actually, I think I need to defend myself,
  21            THE COURT:  Go ahead.
  22            MR. RUHNKE:  For example, the New York Times article,
  23   I was repeatedly asked questions by the reporter about this
  24   case, the strategy in this case, and --
  25            THE COURT:  The words are "no comment."  Are you
                                                                4349
   1   familiar with that expression, "no comment"?
   2            MR. RUHNKE:  The client --
   3            THE COURT:  Can you imagine if the situation were
   4   reversed, if it were the government who was giving the
   5   interviews to the press?
   6            MR. RUHNKE:  It would depend on what they were
   7   saying.
   8            THE COURT:  Suppose, let us take the statement that,
   9   "I fully anticipate that the jury will find my client guilty
  10   during the liability phase," what was the purpose of that?
  11   Why did you say that?
  12            MR. RUHNKE:  I was just answering the question
  13   honestly, the question, "What's going on with your case?" and
  14   really in a very way generalized, since it's what lawyers do
  15   in death penalty cases all the time, which is to confront the
  16   question of "what's going to happen."
  17            THE COURT:  You can say what is going -- if my client
  18   is convicted, then there will be a separate proceeding.  What
  19   else do you want to tell me?
  20            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, I have avoided discussing
  21   the specifics of the case.  I have avoided it with the New
  22   York Times, and I obviously have incurred your Honor's anger.
  23   It was not my intention to transgress.
  24            THE COURT:  I have such high respect for you.  I have
  25   such high respect for the way in which you have conducted
                                                                4350
   1   yourself that I found it aberrational to hear a lawyer taping
   2   an interview, predicting the outcome of the liability phase.
   3            MR. RUHNKE:  Well, your Honor, let's rest on it being
   4   an aberration, and I understand your Honor's concerns.
   5            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, I have a concern.  The
   6   government has sent us a letter and our fax machine got jammed
   7   up.  It says, "The government respectfully submits this letter
   8   in response to Al-'Owhali's letter of April 22."  We didn't --
   9   concerning joinder and bifurcation, we didn't --
  10            MR. RUHNKE:  They're referring to my letter, I'm
  11   sure.
  12            MR. FITZGERALD:  Probably a typographical error
  13   referring to Mr. Ruhnke's letter which was marked for public
  14   filing.
  15            THE COURT:  All right.  I hope I don't have to
  16   address it again.  It's very difficult.  It's a very difficult
  17   issue for the Court to deal with because I understand, I think
  18   I understand some o the issues which are operative here.  And
  19   if I have to address it again, then I will do more than simply
  20   discuss the issue, I will take action and impose sanctions.
  21            All right, now in our long agenda I think the reason
  22   why we were meeting at 9:30 was because of an Al-'Owhali
  23   motion to bar the introduction by the government of certain
  24   Somali-related evidence, and I haven't received anything in
  25   writing on that.
                                                                4351
   1            MR. COHN:  You have not.  I haven't sent it, that's
   2   why you haven't received it.
   3            THE COURT:  Would you briefly tell me what the issue
   4   is?
   5            MR. COHN:  The reason I didn't is because there isn't
   6   a lot of case law.  The government is going to, and by their
   7   3500 material, I have confirmed this intent, to call a pilot
   8   of a -- or somebody from a helicopter that was shot down in
   9   Mogadishu and two of the people aboard were killed.
  10            THE COURT:  May I interrupt for a moment?  There has
  11   been previous testimony by one of the first two defendants
  12   with respect to an incident involving a helicopter in Somali.
  13   Is that the same pilot, the same incident?
  14            MR. FITZGERALD:  I think the first two witnesses
  15   talked generally about incidents in Somalia.  This witness,
  16   Jim Yacone was a U.S. Army helicopter pilot who was involved
  17   in the firefight on October 3, 1993 in which 18 U.S.
  18   servicemen were killed and he was flying the --
  19            THE COURT:  No, there's some testimony about I think
  20   it was being in Somalia in a building opposite one which was
  21   being attacked by an American helicopter.
  22            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes, that testimony was non-specific
  23   as to the day or event.  That was tied to the overt act listed
  24   in the indictment, the witness Yacone.
  25            THE COURT:  I see.  And the objection is what?
                                                                4352
   1            MR. COHN:  The objection is this, your Honor.  I
   2   realize this is a charged overt act.
   3            THE COURT:  Yes.
   4            MR. COHN:  There is testimony that somebody -- I
   5   think that al-Fadl testified that somebody bragged about that
   6   18 people were killed as a result of their actions.  That is
   7   the only nexus to Mogadishu that we have.  The government's
   8   theory on Mogadishu is that al Qaeda in the conspiracy
   9   provided training so that the American troops were ultimately
  10   killed and that was the cause of that --
  11            THE COURT:  And claiming credit for it.
  12            MR. COHN:  That's right.  And they have that
  13   evidence, that somebody claimed credit for it.
  14            THE COURT:  Yes.
  15            MR. COHN:  The fact that this person can put the
  16   blood and guts into this thing, through no connection to the
  17   fact that the people who did the training were really in any
  18   way responsible for it, it just proves up further the fact
  19   that there were 18 Americans soldiers killed.  It really
  20   doesn't connect to this conspiracy in any particular way.  Its
  21   probative value, in my view, is very low.
  22            Now, you hear 403 arguments all the time about this,
  23   but remember that these are the same -- none of these
  24   defendants are charged with, in any way, or at least let me
  25   limit it to Mr. al-'Owhali, he is not charged in any way in
                                                                4353
   1   being involved in the training or involved ever being in
   2   Mogadishu.
   3            The jury is going to see this evidence and, in all
   4   likelihood, they are going to be sitting in the penalty phase
   5   where they are going to recall this evidence, and there is no
   6   aggravator, none, towards Mr. al-'Owhali about Mogadishu, nor
   7   can there be.  So they are going to ask them to forget about
   8   lurid testimony, about 18 dead soldiers and the results of a
   9   firefighter, which was going to be very graphic and, I say,
  10   most provocative.
  11            The fact is that they have the connection that they
  12   already need, which is al-Fadl saying somebody bragged about
  13   it, we're responsible.  This brings nothing extra to it
  14   because they can't even prove the people that shot down the
  15   helicopter are the people who were trained or that it was in
  16   any way part of the plot.  They can do nothing with this.
  17            So its probative value is miniscule and, at least as
  18   to the death-certified defendants, its prejudicial value is
  19   extreme.  I will say, also, that Mr. Odeh's lawyers, who are
  20   upstairs in the Court of Appeals, told me to say that they
  21   join in this application.
  22            THE COURT:  Yes.  Mr. Herman is here on behalf of
  23   defendant Odeh.
  24            MR. COHN:  He wasn't aware we talked about it.  Mr.
  25   Ricco told me to say it.
                                                                4354
   1            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, on Mr. Mohamed's behalf, I
   2   also join in the argument.  I know we have a general rule that
   3   arguments are joined, but just to echo Mr. Cohn's remarks
   4   about this going to the penalty phase and the jury being asked
   5   to consider whether to impose a death sentence or not,
   6   assuming this goes to the penalty phase, let me put it this
   7   way, and a jury being asked to decide or not to send somebody
   8   to death, who will hear now evidence that, as framed in the
   9   indictment, trainers, people trained by al Qaeda or trained by
  10   trainers of al Qaeda were responsible for the deaths of 18
  11   American soldiers, something that is not charged as a murder
  12   count in the indictment but is alleged as an overt act and
  13   will now work its way to the penalty phase of this case, Mr.
  14   Cohn is correct, if the government wishes to argue this, it's
  15   there if it wishes to argue the overt act as the evidence
  16   before the jury, and I object to it as well.
  17            THE COURT:  Let me hear from you.
  18            The argument that it's charged in the indictment,
  19   it's an overt act but the government can't introduce evidence
  20   in support of it is a little strange, but I understand the
  21   argument is 403 because it's too much blood and gore.  I have
  22   to say, there has been relatively little blood and gore in
  23   this case compared to what I'm sure is --
  24            Let me hear from the government in response.
  25            MR. SCHMIDT:  May I briefly comment, your Honor,
                                                                4355
   1   before the government gets a turn?
   2            THE COURT:  Yes.
   3            MR. SCHMIDT:  I believe that the manner of proof of
   4   this overt act is different than the manner necessary to prove
   5   this overt act with even the parameter that the government has
   6   in proving the way they want to prove something.  I think this
   7   goes way beyond what is necessary and is actually under 403
   8   because it specifically --
   9            THE COURT:  You have an advantage over me because you
  10   have material which tells you more about the nature of the
  11   government's testimony than I have or, to be truthful, have
  12   read because it hasn't been furnished to me, has it?
  13            It's in my 3500 book?
  14            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, my next point is, as to the
  15   3500 material and the discovery material requested, I do not
  16   know if we have all the discovery material requested
  17   concerning this, we certainly don't have the videos that would
  18   reflect about it.  But what we do have is an incredibly
  19   redacted conversation in which this witness participated which
  20   makes the reading of the transcript impossible to follow, and
  21   it also appears that it's redacted in a manner to take out
  22   what will be normal cross-examination material.  It looks like
  23   the word "killed" or "shot at" seems to be crossed out and
  24   left out.
  25            The documents that I received from the government,
                                                                4356
   1   the 3500, your Honor, I believe are inadequate to provide the
   2   3500 under the obligation of the law.  So I would ask that
   3   they not be allowed to call this witness unless I can receive
   4   an unredacted transcript of his statements.
   5            THE COURT:  I'm looking at 35107-7, the pilot
   6   inquiry, is that the critical document?
   7            MR. FITZGERALD:  That's the pilot debriefing.  It's a
   8   joint debriefing, but we turned it over in any event.  That's
   9   a number of people, several people being interviewed.
  10            THE COURT:  Yes.
  11            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, if you would like a
  12   proffer, I can tell you what the testimony would be.
  13            THE COURT:  Yes, I would like a proffer.
  14            MR. FITZGERALD:  Mr. Yacone was a pilot in a
  15   helicopter.  He was the platoon commander for what were to be
  16   a squadron of eight helicopters going out on October 3, 1993
  17   to arrest Mr. Aideed in Mogadishu.  There were two helicopters
  18   that were not involved in the action, one of which was a
  19   command control helicopter, one of which was was a rescue
  20   helicopter.
  21            Mr. Yacone was flying one helicopter with a number of
  22   people in the back.  He and a second helicopter dropped the
  23   assault team that would run into the building to arrest Aideed
  24   pursuant to the United Nations warrant on the streets of
  25   Mogadishu.  Four of the helicopter which were in his
                                                                4357
   1   platoon --
   2            THE COURT:  A warrant issued in this case?
   3            MR. FITZGERALD:  A warrant issued by the United
   4   Nations.
   5            THE COURT:  By the United Nations.
   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  For Aideed.
   7            Four other helicopters dropped what we call blocking
   8   teams which were other teams of Army rangers to try to prevent
   9   anyone from attacking the team when they went into the
  10   building and also prevent people from escaping.
  11            After he dropped his team, when he was in orbit with
  12   another pilot trying to do security for the people down below,
  13   they came under heavy fire.  The other helicopter in the orbit
  14   was shot by a rocket-propelled grenade, which I note the
  15   witness testified was one of the techniques they trained in
  16   the al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan.  The other helicopter
  17   crashed near the scene where they made the arrest.  The ground
  18   troops went to rescue that other team.
  19            This pilot was then in orbit around that crash site
  20   under heavy fire.  A second helicopter was sent in to support
  21   him.  He saw that helicopter be struck by a rocket with a
  22   rocket-propelled grenade.  That one crashed three-quarters of
  23   a mile away.  He then went to the site where the crowds
  24   swarmed the crash site.  There was no support there.  As he
  25   circled over that site, his helicopter was hit by a
                                                                4358
   1   rocket-propelled grenade.
   2            He crashed back at the airport.  Before he was hit by
   3   the rocket-propelled grenade, the people on the ground at the
   4   crash site were being overrun and he dropped two snipers down
   5   below to help the people who were at the crash site.  His
   6   helicopter then crashed near the airport.
   7            He climbed into another helicopter and flew through
   8   the night above in a command control position.  Of the 18
   9   persons killed, he knew 17 personally, 5 were under his
  10   command and 2 more were in the back of his helicopter, the 2
  11   snipers that he dropped down to rescue.
  12            Through the course of the night, he saw for the first
  13   time rocket-propelled grenades being fired at an incredible
  14   rate.  As many as over 100 were fired at the helicopters
  15   through the night, and he establishes the overt act that there
  16   were 18 people killed, the U.S. Army servicemen; that they
  17   were going to apprehend Aideed; and that the majority of
  18   casualties of the helicopters were by RPGs being shot from the
  19   ground at the helicopters.
  20            THE COURT:  And the nexus to this case is?
  21            MR. FITZGERALD:  First, we had the testimony of
  22   al-Fadl indicating that there was a fatwah given by Bin Laden
  23   that the U.S. and U.N. involvement in Somalia was actually
  24   pretextual as to an invasion of Africa or invasion of the
  25   Sudan, that there was a fatwah given that we should fight
                                                                4359
   1   America in Somalia, and al-Fadl also testified that the
   2   military commander came back from a trip to Somalia and
   3   indicated that all the casualties in Somalia were al Qaeda's
   4   responsibility.
   5            Kherchtou, the second cooperating witness, testified
   6   that he was trained in al Qaeda in the technique of shooting
   7   at helicopters with RPGs, which is very unconventional.  He
   8   then testified that Nairobi was set up as a support station
   9   for al Qaeda people going to Somalia.  He indicated that he
  10   saw trainers that went up to Somalia to train the people and
  11   that they were going to help train people to fight the U.N.
  12   and the U.S.
  13            He indicated that he heard from conversations with
  14   Saleh, who turned out to be a principal participant in the
  15   Nairobi Embassy bombing plot and Haroun, and Saleh and Haroun
  16   were in Mogadishu for actions against the U.S. troops and, in
  17   fact, were there for, as your Honor recalled, a firefight in
  18   which helicopters were shooting at an adjacent building.
  19            In addition to that, Bin Laden in his public
  20   statements indicated that it was correct that he had in fact
  21   supported Aideed in the fight against U.S. troops, and then in
  22   Mr. El Hage's computer seized in August of 1997 was the
  23   security report, apparently written by Haroun, which indicated
  24   that they were concerned about the Nairobi cell of al Qaeda
  25   because America knows well that it was a youth of the Sheik,
                                                                4360
   1   Bin Laden, who attacked the Americans in Somalia and their
   2   base was in Kenya.
   3            It explains, in part, what the Nairobi cell was set
   4   up to do.  It was also very critical to establish that al
   5   Qaeda was against America as early as 1993, when the
   6   defendants are claiming that they were surprised in 1998 that
   7   Bin Laden would go against America, and that was set forth in
   8   the indictment since basically day one.
   9            THE COURT:  Mr. Cohn complains that there's going to
  10   be too much blood and gore.
  11            MR. FITZGERALD:  There are no pictures, no
  12   videotapes, no exhibits.  It will be the witness simply
  13   telling what happened.  There won't be --
  14            THE COURT:  And the significance of the fact, of the
  15   18 killed, he knew 17 personally?
  16            MR. FITZGERALD:  I just meant to show his foundation
  17   for his knowledge.  He is not going to describe any of their
  18   life histories.
  19            THE COURT:  Mr. Cohn?
  20            MR. COHN:  May I, your Honor?
  21            THE COURT:  Yes.
  22            MR. COHN:  I gather we finally have interpreters.
  23            The problem is, your Honor, that, although it's
  24   dramatic testimony, it adds nothing to what the government
  25   already has, except the physical fact that people were killed.
                                                                4361
   1            THE COURT:  Your objection is it's cumulative?
   2            MR. COHN:  It's not.  It is and it isn't, Judge.
   3            Look, if this wasn't a death case, there would be
   4   nothing that I could say that would -- but it has limited
   5   probative effect because you don't need it.
   6            THE COURT:  Overruled.  The motion to preclude the
   7   introduction of the proffered testimony under 403 is denied.
   8   It appears to the Court to be highly relevant and the fact
   9   that it makes concrete, gives a specific example of things
  10   which otherwise are presented to the jury in a more abstract
  11   form is not a basis for a 403 motion.  It is denied.
  12            MR. HERMAN:  Judge, with regard to Mr. Schmidt's
  13   application.
  14            THE COURT:  Yes.
  15            MR. HERMAN:  Particularly with regard to the 3500
  16   material, which I think your Honor has, it is severely
  17   redacted, Judge.  It presents confrontation problems for us,
  18   due process --
  19            THE COURT:  We've heard Mr. Fitzgerald's proffer.
  20   What is there that you think you lack to deal with that
  21   proffered testimony?
  22            MR. SCHMIDT:  May I give some examples, your Honor?
  23            THE COURT:  Let's have one at a time.
  24            MR. SCHMIDT:  I made notes, that's why I'm offering
  25   it.
                                                                4362
   1            THE COURT:  Yes.
   2            MR. SCHMIDT:  On page 3-15,
   3            THE COURT:  3-15 of what?
   4            MR. SCHMIDT:  Of 35107-4.
   5            THE COURT:  35107-4.
   6            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor?
   7            THE COURT:  Yes.
   8            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor?
   9            THE COURT:  I have three at a time now.
  10            No, I have it.  Thanks.
  11            MR. SCHMIDT:  At the bottom, it says, "When they
  12   launched" --
  13            THE COURT:  On what page?
  14            MR. SCHMIDT:  15.
  15            THE COURT:  Page 15.
  16            Are these pages numbered?
  17            MR. SCHMIDT:  Yes, at the bottom.  It's 3-15.
  18            THE COURT:  Yes.
  19            MR. SCHMIDT:  In the last one where Y apparently
  20   talks, Y being Mr. Yacone, "When they launched us, we at that
  21   point still didn't know which target we were going to," blank.
  22   Now, was it going to shoot?  I have no idea.  Assault?  "And
  23   then they decided they would," blank, blank, blank, blank,
  24   "and they went for the," blank.
  25            Then, in another example --
                                                                4363
   1            THE COURT:  Yes, and suppose specific targets were
   2   identified.  How does that change anything with respect to the
   3   nature of what was happening or the relevance in this case?
   4            MR. SCHMIDT:  As your Honor is aware, it is our
   5   position that this assault especially, as well as the July 12
   6   assault, were military operations.
   7            I am hamstrung by questioning this witness about the
   8   nature of the operation to show the jury that it was a
   9   terrible thing that Americans died, it was a terrible thing
  10   that Somalis died, but this is the nature of a wartime
  11   operation, an operation that it liked war.
  12            Now, with this, I am missing all -- not just this, I
  13   could go on for an hour, your Honor, and go on and point out
  14   each page.  I can show you page 18, page 24, page 25, page 26,
  15   I can go on every page.
  16            THE COURT:  Mr. Fitzgerald, can you generally tell us
  17   what has been redacted here and why?
  18            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, to be honest with you,
  19   this is how I received it.  It was classified and I believe
  20   that they blacked things out to get it down to a declassified
  21   level so it could be used.  If if it were classified, we would
  22   be stuck without the ability for counsel to use it.
  23            MR. SCHMIDT:  Not necessarily, your Honor.  We would
  24   be at a different stage and we would be arguing whether they
  25   could call a witness.
                                                                4364
   1            THE COURT:  I take it that what you are saying is
   2   that if the redacted material disclosed that there were
   3   non-military targets, that the shooting down of the
   4   helicopters would be, what?
   5            MR. SCHMIDT:  No, your honor.  Perhaps I haven't made
   6   myself clear.  Whether it was a military target or not a
   7   military target, the U.S. forces went on a military operation
   8   against this group of people, armed --
   9            THE COURT:  Is there any dispute as to that?
  10            MR. SCHMIDT:  Well, if the government is willing to
  11   consent -- will stipulate that this was a military operation,
  12   excuse me, an offensive military operation against the Aideed
  13   supporters, all right, we'll discuss it with counsel.
  14            THE COURT:  My understanding of the government's
  15   proffer is that the assignment here was to capture and bring
  16   back Aideed, who was under a United Nations warrant.  I don't
  17   know that to be in dispute.
  18            MR. SCHMIDT:  Just as the government wants to be able
  19   to fully show evidence as to this overt act, I want to be able
  20   to fully cross-examine as to the nature of the attack, and
  21   part of the nature of the attack is what he was thinking when
  22   he went in there, what he felt his -- the enemy was, the enemy
  23   was capable of, what he was told they were doing, all these
  24   things are left out.
  25            THE COURT:  I understand from the government's
                                                                4365
   1   proffer that the witness is going to testify that he's in the
   2   United States Army, that this was an operation being conducted
   3   by the military, that the object of it was to capture and
   4   arrest somebody who was subject to United Nations warrant, and
   5   I don't see any reason why you can't cross-examine with
   6   respect to that.  I don't think there is an ambiguity as to
   7   why they went there.
   8            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, this is the problem.  It's
   9   a simplistic answer by the government, and I want to show that
  10   the operation and operations were not a simplistic military
  11   operation, it was much more complicated.  There were political
  12   and military things involved here.
  13            I am being hamstrung.  I have never been in a
  14   situation where the government is putting on a very
  15   substantial, important witness and I can't see what the
  16   witness has said in prior statements.  And I got this on
  17   Friday and other material on Sunday, and I'm left with
  18   cross-examining this witness with -- perhaps there's other
  19   information about the operation that I even haven't received
  20   yet.
  21            THE COURT:  You know, the weakest argument is a
  22   timing argument, because I think the record must show at least
  23   20, at least 20 occasions in which the Court said, "I
  24   understand there are questions with respect to Somalia.  I am
  25   ready to address them," and the Court was told, "No, no, no,
                                                                4366
   1   your Honor, it's not ready for you to concern yourself with
   2   the issue because it's going to be stipulated."
   3            So with respect to the timing, I think I alerted
   4   counsel sufficiently to that.  The motion is denied.
   5            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, as to timing, the time has
   6   to do with the redactions of this material, not having any
   7   alternatives to the redactions, redacted material, not that I
   8   received 3500 material late.
   9            THE COURT:  Overruled.
  10            MR. HERMAN:  Two questions:  It's our understanding,
  11   Judge, that in addition to this being a military operation,
  12   women and children were on the ground and were killed by bombs
  13   or rocket fire that was taking place.
  14            THE COURT:  This witness is going to testify to what
  15   he saw was happening on the ground.
  16            MR. HERMAN:  Judge, we can't cross-examine him
  17   because what he saw happening on the ground has been blacked
  18   out.
  19            Secondly, Judge, with regard to RPGs, which seems to
  20   be an important part of the government's case, that the
  21   mujahadeen somehow were training people to use RPGs, it's also
  22   our understanding that RPGs were very common among many
  23   different groups, many different clans in Mogadishu and in
  24   Somalia at that time, and that may also be reflected in what
  25   has been blacked out here.
                                                                4367
   1            At this point, it's a cross-examination problem.
   2            THE COURT:  If at the end of his direct you believe
   3   that there is a need for a continuance before
   4   cross-examination, I will take up that issue at that time, not
   5   indicating what my ruling would be.  But as I look at this and
   6   I look at what has been blacked out, I really don't think
   7   counsel is significantly prejudiced.
   8            This issue is closed.  The motion is denied.  The
   9   jury is here.  The jury will be brought in.
  10            MR. COHN:  One question, your Honor.
  11            THE COURT:  Yes.
  12            MR. COHN:  Collaterally, in one of the 3500
  13   interviews, there's an affidavit by a proposed prospective
  14   witness.  He says that he saw a videotape of soldiers being
  15   dragged through the streets, their bodies, and also that the
  16   two people were given the Congressional Medal of Honor.  I'm
  17   wondering if the government is going to elicit that testimony,
  18   which I think neither one of which is particularly germane.
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, we'll see on redirect
  20   what the cross-examination is about civilian casualties and
  21   what happened there.
  22            MR. COHN:  So it's not going to be offered on direct
  23   testimony?
  24            MR. FITZGERALD:  I will lead around it on direct
  25   testimony and we'll see where we are after the
                                                                4368
   1   cross-examination.  Your Honor, I believe --
   2            MR. SCHMIDT:  If I may, your Honor, if I may, I know
   3   your Honor can't make a ruling now, but I see no connection
   4   between testimony about the civilian casualties and the
   5   information that the government intends to elicit on redirect.
   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, I think if they want to
   7   talk about 403, when we're not putting any pictures, if they
   8   want to talk about civilian casualties and keep out what
   9   happened to the American soldiers, I think it's plain.
  10            THE COURT:  I think we're trying to come to a level
  11   playing field.
  12            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, I believe that Mr. Ricco
  13   and Mr. Wilford wish to be here if Agent Yacone was
  14   testifying, so we can flip the order.  He's here, but I don't
  15   want to do something to which Mr. Ricco and Mr. Wilford wish
  16   to be present.
  17            THE COURT:  What will you do in lieu of it?
  18            MR. FITZGERALD:  That's it.  The next thing is
  19   Mr. Schmidt.
  20            THE COURT:  So I should not bring in the jury?
  21            MR. FITZGERALD:  Or, I think, I don't know if Mr. --
  22            MR. DRATEL:  I'm sorry.
  23            MR. FITZGERALD:  I know that the El Hage team was
  24   calling an expert on Somalia and I know he's going to testify
  25   about Somalia in the 90s, but --
                                                                4369
   1            THE COURT:  You have a witness?  Do you have a
   2   witness?
   3            MR. DRATEL:  Yes, your Honor.
   4            THE COURT:  Call your witness.
   5            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, this witness should not go
   6   on before the other witness.  This witness will have to
   7   testify about that.
   8            I had discussions with Mr. Fitzgerald, we've had
   9   discussions with Mr. Fitzgerald this weekend about what the
  10   parameters of the witness's testimony were going to be and
  11   whether the pilot was going to testify or not and the pilot's
  12   testimony puts the witness's testimony in a completely
  13   different context.  His testimony will have to be expanded.
  14   He should not have to go on before the government's witness
  15   goes on.
  16            If he were to go on before, if he were going to go
  17   and the pilot was not going to go on, it would be limited to
  18   issues that did not discuss anything to do with the American
  19   presence or that time period.  And we were trying to get
  20   there, but we didn't get there, and obviously we can still get
  21   there, but if they're intending to put on the pilot no matter
  22   what, then we're not going to get there.
  23            So I don't know what the government's position is in
  24   terms of, we had a discussion as to what the defense was going
  25   to put on about Somalia.
                                                                4370
   1            THE COURT:  Is this witness's sole area going to be
   2   related to matters being impacted by the government's case?
   3            MR. DRATEL:  No, your Honor, but it's a thread.
   4            THE COURT:  We'll interrupt the thread.  Call him.
   5   We will take so much up to this point.  When Mr. Wilford and
   6   Mr. Ricco arrive, we can interrupt and call the next witness.
   7            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, I don't know where we're
   8   going to be in the course of the testimony with respect,
   9   whether it going to be five minutes or twenty minutes.  Your
  10   Honor, I mean --
  11            THE COURT:  All right.  All right.  The jury is
  12   ready.  I think we'll wait.
  13            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, my only concern is I
  14   don't know what the foundation for this witness is going to be
  15   about what happened regarding the events of October 3, 1993.
  16   I do not believe he was in Somalia, so I think we're getting a
  17   history geographer to talk about events that I don't know what
  18   his foundation for his expert testimony is.
  19            THE COURT:  You have received nothing about him?
  20            MR. FITZGERALD:  I have received 3500 material
  21   indicating that he's written on Somalia generally.  He was
  22   there, I believe, in the early 90s and the late 90s, but was
  23   not there in 1993.  I don't know what it is he's going to say
  24   about it.
  25            THE COURT:  Why haven't they received the testimony
                                                                4371
   1   about him?
   2            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, because --
   3            THE COURT:  I'm going to accede to your request and
   4   we'll leave it at that.
   5            MR. DRATEL:  Thank you, your Honor.
   6            THE COURT:  So we'll be adjourned, then, until
   7   Mr. Wilford and Mr. Ricco return.
   8            (Pause)
   9            THE COURT:  While we're waiting, there are a few
  10   other matters.  There is a request that the jury be told --
  11   first asked whether they have read or seen anything with
  12   respect to McVeigh, which is a rather strange request to come
  13   at this stage of the trial and given the amount of media
  14   attention which has been given to McVeigh execution.
  15            I don't understand what purpose that would serve, and
  16   unless somebody wishes to be heard on it, I do not propose to
  17   ask jurors the extent to which they have previously been
  18   exposed to anything in the media concerning McVeigh's pending
  19   execution.
  20            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, my particular concern,
  21   specific concern has to do with interviews of victims and
  22   statements victims have made in the Oklahoma City bombing
  23   case, Timothy McVeigh's execution, whether it be comfort,
  24   whether it be --
  25            THE COURT:  We are going to ask them.  They are going
                                                                4372
   1   to say yes or no.  If they say yes, then what?
   2            MR. RUHNKE:  Then if they say yes, we ask them what
   3   they have read and we inquire.
   4            THE COURT:  And if they say "everything I can get my
   5   hands on with respect to it," and then what happens?
   6            MR. RUHNKE:  "And have you read any comments about
   7   victims?"
   8            THE COURT:  Yes.
   9            MR. RUHNKE:  "And what have you read?"
  10            THE COURT:  "I read the anguish, how people are
  11   looking forward to the execution and putting closure on this
  12   terrible incident in their lives."
  13            MR. RUHNKE:  "And how do you think that will impact
  14   on your service in this case?"
  15            THE COURT:  We're going to voir dire?  We voir dired
  16   for one month in this case.  Now we start a new voir dire?
  17            MR. RUHNKE:  We now have a sitting jury that could be
  18   exposed to prejudicial publicity, your Honor.  They have not
  19   been told not to read anything about this.
  20            THE COURT:  One is what they have previously read.
  21   Now there is a request that they not read anything with
  22   respect to McVeigh, and I am hesitant to do that on a number
  23   of grounds.  One is I don't think it serves any purpose to
  24   impose on the jury unreasonable restraints.
  25            To tell the jury not to read anything about this case
                                                                4373
   1   I think is reasonable because the embassy bombing in a
   2   terrorism trial, at least in the media that I regularly expose
   3   myself to, are sort of consumed, but the McVeigh matter is a
   4   matter of significant national debate with respect to capital
   5   punishment in general and I'm very reluctant.
   6            Does the government have any view on any of this?
   7            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, I would agree that it is
   8   not productive to ask the retrospective question, but I think
   9   it might be helpful, given that this jury may be sitting in
  10   judgment on a capital case, for them to try to avoid the
  11   coverage of McVeigh at least until their service is done.
  12            We're not asking them to do that forever, but I think
  13   it might be helpful not to have people commenting on the
  14   McVeigh decision who may well during these broadcasts turn
  15   around and, at the same time this is going on, there's a case
  16   pending in New York.  People could go back and forth, and I
  17   think it would be best if they avoided the coverage for the
  18   pendency of the trial.
  19            THE COURT:  Mr. Cohn?
  20            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, my take on it is a little
  21   different and I was thinking of a way before we try and broach
  22   this.  I frankly don't think it's possible to avoid McVeigh
  23   and I think we're almost in a situation like Shepard when we
  24   are in the middle of a trial, and I understand, I was trying
  25   to find some way so we can figure out whether or not we were
                                                                4374
   1   and I was trying to formulate some --
   2            THE COURT:  Shepard is different.  In Shepard the
   3   publicity was with respect to him and his trial.
   4            MR. COHN:  I understand.
   5            THE COURT:  There was a terrorist bombing in Israel
   6   yesterday, a suicide bombing, and it's a fact of life today
   7   that -- there's a rare day that goes by that the press doesn't
   8   have some reference to some terrorist threat or incident.
   9            MR. COHN:  And we haven't whined about that.  That is
  10   a fact of life and there's no way to do anything about it
  11   except to proceed.  But here the government has already said
  12   that they are going to bring more victim testimony during the
  13   aggravated and mitigation part of its case, and what you are
  14   essentially getting is generic victim testimony throughout the
  15   press about the effects of the execution on victims.
  16            THE COURT:  Does anybody object if I tell the jury
  17   that, to the extent possible, we request that they avoid in
  18   the future reading anything with respect to the McVeigh case?
  19   Anybody object to that?
  20            MR. FITZGERALD:  No, Judge.
  21            THE COURT:  I'll do that at the close of business
  22   today, and if I forget, please remind me.
  23            MR. RUHNKE:  I do press my request, your Honor, that
  24   you voir dire the jury on what they have read, if anything.
  25   I'm just thinking realistically if there are members of the
                                                                4375
   1   jury who have been moved, as anybody would be moved, by the
   2   plight of the victims in Oklahoma City and the plight of the
   3   victims in this case, who says --
   4            THE COURT:  All of that existed in January.  The
   5   McVeigh case was on the books in January.  I don't think it's
   6   appropriate to conduct a new voir dire on a new coverage at
   7   this stage of the case.
   8            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, the question does not come
   9   out of the clear blue sky, not for an unknown reason.  The
  10   reason -- and there's been a very significant change between
  11   January and today, and that is that McVeigh is going to be
  12   executed.  The newspaper publicity, the Internet, the media,
  13   the photo journalism, the T.V., as I said in my letter, it's
  14   prolific, and it's now moving to the front page of every
  15   newspaper, the lead story of every news book in this country.
  16   It's going to be for the next two or three weeks and it's been
  17   for the last couple of weeks.
  18            THE COURT:  I will advise the jury, to the extent
  19   possible, to avoid in the future reading anything with respect
  20   to the McVeigh case.  I will not interrogate the jury as to
  21   what it is that they have previously read since the jury was
  22   not at any time instructed not to read anything with respect
  23   to the McVeigh case, nor was the Court previously requested to
  24   address any inquiry to the jury with respect to the McVeigh
  25   case.
                                                                4376
   1            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, just so I can conclude my
   2   record.  I do make this application on Federal Constitution
   3   grounds, Fifth, Sixth and Eighth Amendments as well.
   4            THE COURT:  Yes.  And the Court's ruling has taken
   5   all of that into consideration.
   6            MR. RUHNKE:  Thank you, your Honor.
   7            THE COURT:  There has been a lot of give and take in
   8   the papers with respect to the bifurcation of the penalties
   9   phase, if it is reached, and the government opposes the
  10   bifurcation on the grounds that there has not been a
  11   sufficient delineation by defense counsel of what they will
  12   attempt to show in the respective phases of the death penalty
  13   case and the government requested the Court get more detail as
  14   to that issue.
  15            And for reasons I think I have previously stated, I
  16   am not inclined to do that for the reasons I have previously
  17   stated.  I don't believe the Court could reasonably enforce a
  18   limitation imposed by counsel as a quid pro quo for obtaining
  19   bifurcation.  And the government also takes the position that,
  20   depending upon the nature --
  21            Mr. Wilford and Mr. Ricco have arrived.
  22            -- that depending on the nature of the presentation
  23   made by the defendant, the government reserves the right to
  24   introduce evidence of the attack on the prison guard at the
  25   Al-'Owhali phase of the case.
                                                                4377
   1            The Court grants the application to bifurcate the
   2   penalty phase, recognizing that there is a risk that there may
   3   be some duplication, but balancing the risk of duplication to
   4   the strength of the defendants' position that they will be
   5   significantly disadvantaged by any joint trial, I find the
   6   balance is in favor of bifurcation and I think, even given the
   7   risk of some repetitiveness, this is something which should be
   8   done.
   9            There is also a request, which I don't fully
  10   understand, and I take it defense counsel don't fully
  11   understand, a request by the government that there be an
  12   allocution of Mr. Mohamed with respect to bifurcation.
  13            MR. FITZGERALD:  The issue had been, your Honor, with
  14   regard to if there were bifurcation and there were proof at
  15   the Al-'Owhali proceeding, if there was one, and the
  16   Al-'Owhali proceeding went first, that he understood that the
  17   attack in which he's alleged to have participated would have
  18   been proven up before the jury on an occasion where he would
  19   not be present in the courtroom to confront it at the first
  20   instance.
  21            THE COURT:  So the question is whether
  22   Mr. al-'Owhali -- but the assumption here is Al-'Owhali goes
  23   first, is that the --
  24            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes.
  25            THE COURT:  Yes.
                                                                4378
   1            MR. FITZGERALD:  And if the assaulting of Officer
   2   Pepe was proven at the proceeding, then obviously
   3   Mr. Mohamed's attorneys would not be participating at that
   4   time.  And he should be aware that although it would be proven
   5   again at his second proceeding, he would know that the jury
   6   may hear a preview of the evidence without his being present.
   7            THE COURT:  Mr. Ruhnke, do you understand that?
   8            MR. RUHNKE:  I understand it.
   9            THE COURT:  Do you have any objection to Mr. Mohamed
  10   being asked whether he understands that if your request for a
  11   bifurcation takes place, the jury in the first death penalty
  12   phase with respect to Mr. al-'Owhali may hear testimony with
  13   respect to the attack on the prison guard, and will hear that
  14   in a proceeding in which he will not be represented and will
  15   not have an opportunity to call witnesses or cross-examine
  16   witnesses?
  17            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, I don't understand the need
  18   to allocute Mr. Mohamed on it.
  19            THE COURT:  Do you have any objection?
  20            MR. RUHNKE:  I don't have any objection.
  21            THE COURT:  Mr. Mohamed, have you been following
  22   this?
  23            THE DEFENDANT:  (Shakes head back and forth.)
  24            THE COURT:  Mr. Mohamed is saying, no, he has not
  25   been following this.
                                                                4379
   1            MR. RUHNKE:  Why don't we do this, if your Honor
   2   doesn't mind, do it at lunch hour.
   3            THE COURT:  We'll do it after the lunch.  We'll do it
   4   today.
   5            MR. COHN:  May I just ask for some clarification.  By
   6   this discussion, is your Honor ruling that if conditions in
   7   jail are raised, that will allow in the Al-'Owhali part of the
   8   case the direct proof of the Pepe affair or, as we say, we
   9   take the position that you can't, you're allowed to have
  10   generalized safety of guards --
  11            THE COURT:  I am not ruling.  I am not ruling on it
  12   because I think there is merit in the government's position
  13   that its ability to introduce such testimony will depend on
  14   what it is that the defendants proffer, and so I am deferring
  15   on that.  But I am saying that even if the possibility exists
  16   that the Pepe incident will be in evidence in the Al-'Owhali
  17   case, bifurcation is still appropriate.
  18            MR. COHN:  I fine.  I just wanted to make sure that
  19   wasn't a concern.
  20            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, may I have one moment
  21   with the witness to make sure he doesn't volunteer anything
  22   about the videotape or the Medal of Honor?  I was not
  23   intending to elicit it.
  24            THE COURT:  Why don't you do that now.  And it takes
  25   a few moments to bring in the jury, but let's bring in the
                                                                4380
   1   jury.
   2            MR. FITZGERALD:  Just two items, Judge.  After this
   3   witness, I don't know if we get to the Somalia expert, but
   4   before Mr. Schmidt puts on exhibits, I think there are some
   5   pictures in my copies of ostriches, perhaps children riding
   6   ostriches.  So if we can have a brief moment to confer before
   7   the exhibits go to the jury when we got to the stage of today
   8   when he offers transcripts and exhibits -- we were served with
   9   three feet of paper late last night.  I just wanted to make
  10   sure we don't object to what goes in.
  11            THE COURT:  People riding ostriches?  I recall there
  12   has been some ostrich testimony in the case.
  13            MR. SCHMIDT:  There are going to be lots of
  14   ostriches.  Not lots.
  15            THE COURT:  There are going to be some ostriches, a
  16   little ostriches maybe, about burying their head in the sand.
  17            MR. SCHMIDT:  I apologize.  We're not going to
  18   present lots of any particular evidence but some of lots of
  19   evidence.
  20            MR. FITZGERALD:  Judge, will you tell the jury --
  21   it's going to be odd that the government is now calling a
  22   witness.
  23            THE COURT:  I'm going to remind them, when the
  24   government rested, it did so on the condition, and the
  25   condition was this witness would testify.
                                                                4381
   1            MR. FITZGERALD:  Thank you, Judge.
   2            (Jury present)
   3            THE COURT:  Good morning.  I hope everyone had a
   4   pleasant weekend.
   5            You will recall that when the government rested, it
   6   did so with a reservation, and that reservation was that as
   7   part of the government's case it would call another witness.
   8   I don't think we explained exactly what the reservation was,
   9   but that is in fact why the government's resting was somewhat
  10   equivocal.
  11            And the government is now going to call that witness,
  12   and you should understand that his testimony is part of the
  13   government's case.  It's as if this testimony was received in
  14   evidence before the government rested.
  15            And the witness is ready.  The government may call
  16   it's next witness.
  17            MR. FITZGERALD:  Thank you, Judge.  The government
  18   calls James Yacone.
  19    JAMES FRANCIS YACONE,
  20        called as a witness by the government,
  21        having been duly sworn, testified as follows:
  22            DEPUTY CLERK:  Please be seated, sir.  Please state
  23   your full name.
  24            THE WITNESS:  James Francis Yacone.
  25            DEPUTY CLERK:  Please spell your last name.
                                                                4382
   1            THE WITNESS:  Y-A-C-O-N-E.
   2   DIRECT EXAMINATION
   3   BY MR. FITZGERALD:
   4   Q.  Mr. Yacone, would you tell the jury who you currently are
   5   employed by?
   6   A.  The Federal Bureau of Investigation.
   7   Q.  And are you an FBI agent?
   8   A.  That's correct.
   9   Q.  For how long have you been an FBI agent?
  10   A.  A little more than six years.
  11   Q.  And prior to becoming an agent for the FBI, what did you
  12   do for a living?
  13   A.  I was a commissioned officer in the United States Army for
  14   about eight years.
  15   Q.  Did you have a special skill when you were in the Army as
  16   a commissioned officer?
  17   A.  Yes.  I was an aviator.
  18   Q.  What did you fly?
  19   A.  UH60 Blackhawks, which is a helicopter.
  20   Q.  Now let me direct your attention to 1993.  Did there come
  21   a time when you were deployed to Somalia as part of your
  22   duties with the U.S. military?
  23   A.  Yes, that's correct?  In August 23, 18993, we were
  24   deployed to Somalia as part of a U.N. force to arrest Mohamed
  25   Farahid Aideed and members of his clan.
                                                                4383
   1   Q.  Just for the record, we'll spell M-O-H-A-M-E-D,
   2   F-A-R-A-H-I-D, A-I-D-E-E-D.
   3            So is it fair to say you were working for the U.S.
   4   military when you were carrying out an arrest on behalf of the
   5   United Nations?
   6   A.  Correct.
   7   Q.  Now, what was your rank at the time you deployed Somalia
   8   in late August of 193?
   9   A.  I was a captain.
  10   Q.  And did you have what's called a platoon?
  11   A.  That's correct.  I was in command of a platoon.
  12   Q.  Can you explain to the jury how many people were in your
  13   platoon?
  14   A.  At the time deployed with me were about 30, 32 people in
  15   my platoon and five UH60 Blackhawk helicopters.
  16   Q.  Now let me direct your attention -- when you would fly a
  17   Blackhawk helicopter, how many people in your crew would be in
  18   a particular Blackhawk helicopter?
  19   A.  There would be four from my platoon, a pilot, a co-pilot
  20   and two crew chiefs or door gunners in the back sitting behind
  21   the pilot.
  22   Q.  And what role did the crew chiefs play when they were on
  23   the ground?
  24   A.  They were aircraft mechanics that maintained the aircraft.
  25   Q.  And what role did they play when they were in the air?
                                                                4384
   1   A.  They were door gunners and helped us clear the aircraft
   2   and fly it.
   3   Q.  And besides the two pilots and the two persons called crew
   4   chiefs, how many other people could fit in a Blackhawk
   5   helicopter?
   6   A.  We generally would carry 12, 12 ground force in the back.
   7   Q.  And what would you generally do with the ground force in
   8   the back?  What was your role?
   9   A.  To insert or infiltrate the ground force and put them
  10   where they needed to go.
  11   Q.  Let me direct your attention to October 3 of 1993.  Did
  12   there come a time that day when you set out on a mission?
  13   A.  Yes.
  14            (Continued on next page)
  15
  16
  17
  18
  19
  20
  21
  22
  23
  24
  25
                                                                4385
   1   Q.  What generally was the nature of the mission?
   2   A.  We had intelligence --
   3   Q.  Without telling us what you were told or your
   4   intelligence, just tell us what your goal was, what you were
   5   going to do?
   6   A.  The goal that day was to capture a bunch of these top
   7   lieutenants or important members of the organization that were
   8   gathering at a place across the street from the Olympic Hotel
   9   from the Bakara market.
  10   Q.  Is the Olympic Hotel a notable landmark in Mogadishu?
  11   A.  It was one of the tallest buildings in Mogadishu.  From
  12   the air in the helicopter you could see all around the city.
  13   Q.  Focusing on Black Hawk helicopters for the moment, how
  14   many Black Hawk helicopters were part of this mission on
  15   October 3, 1993?
  16   A.  There were eight that day.
  17   Q.  Tell us what the role of the eight different Black Hawk
  18   helicopters were?
  19   A.  There were two helicopters, the first two, were myself and
  20   my wing man, and we were going to insert twelve people each to
  21   a target building where we thought the meeting was taking
  22   place.  There were four Black Hawks behind us that were
  23   inserting twelve soldiers each as a blocking force, and
  24   setting up a perimeter around the objective, and then there
  25   was a combat ship and rescue aircraft full of medics, and that
                                                                4386
   1   was a contingency aircraft that stayed aloft and flew around,
   2   and there was also one command control Black Hawk which had
   3   the ground commander and the air commander, the overall
   4   commanders, in the back of the aircraft.
   5   Q.  And just so we're clear, the first two helicopters
   6   including yours, dropped a ground force that would actually go
   7   in and make the arrests in the building?
   8   A.  That's correct.
   9   Q.  And the other four Black Hawk helicopters dropped ground
  10   forces who you said were blocking forces?
  11   A.  Yes.
  12   Q.  What would they do?
  13   A.  They would establish a perimeter and basically contain any
  14   civilians from coming into the objective area coming towards
  15   the target building.  They would keep people away from the
  16   target building where the mission was going on.
  17   Q.  And did there come a time when you actually in your Black
  18   Hawk dropped a ground force team at the target building?
  19   A.  That's correct.
  20   Q.  Can you tell us roughly what time of day that was?
  21   A.  It was about 3:15 or, correction, 3:30:30 in the afternoon
  22   between 3:30 and 3:40 in the afternoon.
  23   Q.  How did you drop those forces into that location?
  24   A.  The streets are very narrow, and most of the streets were
  25   dirt and we couldn't land, so we hovered at about an altitude
                                                                4387
   1   of between you know forty and sixty feet, and the soldiers
   2   slid down fast ropes or big thick ropes to the ground.
   3   Q.  And when you did that, how many people in the back or how
   4   many soldiers in the back of your helicopter did you drop at
   5   that location?
   6   A.  My aircraft and the aircraft ahead of me, we dropped nine
   7   passengers off and we kept three of the soldiers on board to
   8   be aerial snipers.  They stayed on the aircraft and provided
   9   precision sniper fire from the Black Hawks.
  10   Q.  So at the time after you dropped off the nine, how many
  11   personnel were in your Black Hawk?
  12   A.  There were the three snipers and there were my two crew
  13   chiefs, myself and my co-pilot.
  14   Q.  And what number was your Black Hawk referred to by that
  15   day?
  16   A.  Call sign was Super 62.
  17   Q.  And the other Black Hawk that dropped off nine men and
  18   kept three snipers, what was that referred to?
  19   A.  Super 61.
  20   Q.  And after you dropped offer your two contingents of
  21   soldiers, what did the Black Hawks known as Super 61 and Super
  22   62 do after that?
  23   A.  Well, what we would do is after we inserted our troops we
  24   would then establish what we called and overhead cap, and
  25   essentially that was kind of a racetrack pattern around the
                                                                4388
   1   objective and again provide precision fire for the ground
   2   force that was on the objectives.  If they met resistance then
   3   they would call, they call for fire us to us and tell us where
   4   they were meeting resistance and we would assist them with
   5   arial gunnery and sniper fire from our aircraft.
   6   Q.  What happened to the other four Black Hawks that dropped
   7   off the ground forces that were part of the blocking force?
   8   Where did they go?
   9   A.  Blocking force aircraft departed the battlefield,
  10   essentially held about a mile north of the city out of harms
  11   way and waited for any contingencies that would have occurred.
  12   Q.  And were there other helicopters besides Black Hawks in
  13   the vicinity?
  14   A.  Yes, there were.  We had four Little Bird, they're NB-5
  15   McDonnel Douglas 500 aircraft.  They're much smaller and each
  16   of those carried and inserted four troops each.  They also
  17   held north of the city after making the insertion.  And there
  18   were two additional Little Bird gun ships which assisted
  19   myself and my wing man in providing close air support and
  20   arial gunnery fire for the ground force on the ground.
  21   Q.  And besides the ground force that was dropped into the
  22   locations by the various helicopters was there another set of
  23   ground troops being used at that time?
  24   A.  Repeat the question.
  25   Q.  Okay.  What was the plan on how to get the people, if they
                                                                4389
   1   were arrested, out of that location back to the base?
   2   A.  Because the streets were so narrow and the city was so
   3   congested, there was no way to pick them up with the
   4   helicopters.  We had no place to land, no clear areas.  So we
   5   had a vehicle convoy of Humvees, and 500 trucks, military
   6   vehicles, drive up and hold short of the objective area by
   7   about two or three blocks away, and they would be radioed.
   8   Once the mission was complete, and they had arrested and
   9   detained all the people we were looking for they would be
  10   called forward via radio with the vehicles and take all the
  11   people, the soldiers and the detainees out of the objective
  12   area and back to the forward support base which was Mogadishu
  13   International Airfield.
  14   Q.  And with regard to the other helicopters in and or with
  15   your helicopter Super 61, who were the pilots on that the
  16   helicopter?
  17   A.  Cliff Wolcott and Donovan Briely were the pilots of Super
  18   61.
  19   Q.  We'll spell W-O-L-C-O-T-T.  Cliff Wolcott, and Donovan
  20   B-R-I-E-L-Y.  And were they part of your platoon?
  21   A.  Yes.
  22   Q.  Now, can you tell us after you went into the orbit what
  23   happened next after you dropped offer the nine men on the
  24   ground?
  25   A.  Well, we started receiving enemy fire almost instantly
                                                                4390
   1   after the insertion, and the intensity of the enemy fire
   2   increased steadily, the longer we stayed on the objective.
   3   About 15 or 20 minutes after we inserted the ground force we
   4   got a radio call from the objective, from the ground force on
   5   the objective saying that they had secured all the people they
   6   needed to get, and they were ready to exfilitrate or be picked
   7   up and taken out of there by vehicle.  Shortly after that, I
   8   saw my wing man, Super 61 get hit with a rocket propelled
   9   grenade in the half section of the helicopter near the tail
  10   rotor, and he spun out of control, and crashed about two or
  11   three blocks away from the objective area.
  12   Q.  Can you explain to the jury what a rocket propelled
  13   grenade is?
  14   A.  It's a missile, a warhead probably a couple of feet long
  15   that has a grenade on the end of it, and there is no guiding
  16   system.  You simply aim it and shoot it, and once you press
  17   the trigger and it's gone, there is no way to control the
  18   missile.  It goes where you aimed it.
  19   Q.  In your training with the military when does an RPG
  20   ordinarily detonate?  When does it explode?
  21            THE COURT:  RPG is rocket propelled grenade.
  22   A.  That's correct.  Generally on impact.
  23   Q.  And did you notice anything about what was happening with
  24   RPGs or rocket propelled grenades on October 3, 1993 as to
  25   when they detonated?
                                                                4391
   1   A.  They would detonate in the air.  In other words, they
   2   would not hit anything and they would simply explode after
   3   about 500 meters or 500 yards.
   4   Q.  What effect would they have when they exploded in the air
   5   if they did not strike the helicopter?
   6   A.  They throw shrapnel everywhere and you know could severely
   7   damage a helicopter.
   8   Q.  Returning to Super 61, the helicopter piloted by Wolcott
   9   and Briely, did they go to the scene where Super 61 crashed?
  10   A.  Yes.  The mission, the focus of the mission shifted from
  11   obviously capturing lieutenants to the assistance of the
  12   downed helicopter crew, and I flew over and tried to identify
  13   any survivors, and also assisted some of the ground force
  14   moving through the streets from the objective area a few
  15   blocks away to the crash site.
  16   Q.  What did you see when you flew over the crash site where
  17   Super 61 had crashed?
  18   A.  Well I, it was on its side, and had been severely damaged
  19   and I didn't think there was any survivors, and I was very
  20   surprised when I saw two or three soldiers crawling out of the
  21   back cabin area of the aircraft, so I radioed the commander
  22   and let them know we had survivors.
  23   Q.  And during the time that you were over the crash site at
  24   Super 61, what was the state of were you still taking enemy
  25   fire?
                                                                4392
   1   A.  Yeah.  As I said earlier, it just continued to build.  The
   2   amount of automatic weapons fire and rocket propelled grenade
   3   fire continued to increase the longer we stayed over the
   4   objective area.
   5   Q.  And had you been in an orbit or a rotating orbit with
   6   Super 61 did there come a time when Super 61 was replaced by
   7   another helicopter?
   8   A.  Yes, after he was shot down we made a request to the
   9   commander to send one of the four Black Hawks holding north of
  10   the city forward to join me in orbit, because there were so
  11   many targets that needed to be engaged and the ground force
  12   was in a very vulnerable area trying to run through the
  13   streets to get to the crash site.  So we made a request and
  14   the ground force commander eventually sent Super 64 to join me
  15   in orbit to provide aerial gunnery and close air support for
  16   the ground force at the crash site.
  17   Q.  Who was the pilot of Super 64?
  18   A.  Mike Durrant, and Ray Frank.
  19   Q.  D-U-R-R-A-N-T and Ray Frank, F-R-A-N-K.
  20            And what happened when Super 64 joined your
  21   helicopter in the orbit above the crash site where Super 61
  22   was down?
  23   A.  After probably only minutes, maybe two or three patterns
  24   in orbit around the crash site responding to calls for fire
  25   from the ground force, they too were hit by a rocket propelled
                                                                4393
   1   grenade in the tail boom section right by the tail rotor.
   2   They initially didn't lose control of the aircraft.  They knew
   3   they were hit.  They made a radio call and they tried to head
   4   directly back to the airfield or the forward support base
   5   where we were stationed, which is about four miles straight
   6   line.
   7            After about 15 to 20 seconds of heading in that
   8   direction back to the airfield, their tail rotor just came
   9   apart, they lost control of the aircraft and they crashed in
  10   and amongst a bunch of buildings and on top of a bunch of
  11   buildings on the periphery of where the battle was going on.
  12   Q.  And did you in your helicopter go by the crash site?
  13   We'll call it the second crash site where Super 64 was shot
  14   down.
  15   A.  Yes, I did.  We were directed by the commander to go down
  16   and obviously look for survivors of my other wing man, and we
  17   did so.  That aircraft was unlike the first aircraft that had
  18   crashed near the objective.  That aircraft was probably a half
  19   a mile, three quarters of a mile away from the objective area
  20   and consequently all the friendly ground enforcement, so they
  21   were very vulnerable.  They had no one near them.
  22            So we went and we were directed to go to crash site
  23   number two and provide close air support and provide them
  24   basically the only protection they had until they got a ground
  25   convoy, the plan to get a ground convoy over to the second
                                                                4394
   1   crash site to pick up survivors.
   2   Q.  Now, you mentioned earlier that there was a command or a
   3   search and rescue helicopter above flying in a pattern.
   4   During the time of the battle what happened to the search and
   5   rescue helicopter?
   6   A.  About the same time Super 64 the, second aircraft crashed,
   7   the command search and rescue aircraft with medics on board
   8   was making a fast rope and search to the first crash site,
   9   they got their troops inserted, were also hit with an RPG, a
  10   rocket propelled grenade.  The grenade glanced off the top
  11   cabin area of the aircraft between the rotor system and the
  12   top cabin of the aircraft, damaged i severely, but they were
  13   able to limp it back to the airfield and land safely back at
  14   the airfield.
  15   Q.  Now, did there come a time that you were waiting at crash
  16   site number two for a ground force to arrive?  And what
  17   happened?
  18   A.  Yes.  Again, we were in orbit over crash site number two
  19   for probably ten or 15 minutes, awaiting the arrival of
  20   another ground convoy being sent from the airfield at forward
  21   support base, and at that time we identified that there were
  22   in fact survivors on Super 64.  I saw that Durant was moving
  23   and Ray Frank was moving, and one of the two crew chiefs, both
  24   crew chiefs were Tommy Field and Bill Cleveland.  We
  25   thought -- the crew chiefs in back of my aircraft, me and my
                                                                4395
   1   co-pilot thought we saw Tommy Field at least waving an arm, so
   2   we saw three of the four crew members moving.  So we were
   3   overhead providing close air support for them and trying to
   4   keep away the unfriendly forces which were starting to mount
   5   and encroach upon the aircraft.
   6   Q.  And did there come a time when an alternative was
   7   suggested, instead of waiting for the ground force to arrive?
   8   A.  Yes.  Again, we had three snipers in the back of our
   9   aircraft and we decided at that time to insert two of the
  10   three snipers to the crash site as close as possible to the
  11   crash site.  We probably would have inserted a third, but my
  12   crew chief in the back of my aircraft had already been shot
  13   through the arm.  My aircraft had been hit by a barrage of
  14   automatic weapons fire a couple of different times during the
  15   battle, and he was bandaged up in the back of the aircraft.
  16            So the third sniper had taken his place as a door
  17   gunner of my aircraft.  So we had two snipers left.  We
  18   inserted both Randy Shughardt and Gary Gordon to the crash
  19   site number two.
  20   Q.  How far away from the crash site did you insert Randy
  21   Shughardt and Gary Gordon?
  22   A.  It was probably 60, fifty to sixty yards or meters away
  23   from that crash site.  There was a bunch of shacks and
  24   shanties and a collapsed building around the crash site and
  25   the closest area we could get to that we could land to was
                                                                4396
   1   about fifty or sixty yards away.
   2   Q.  And during this time in the battle can you tell us
   3   approximately how often you would see an RPG being shot at the
   4   helicopters?
   5   A.  Again, I wasn't able to see all the RPGs being shot, but
   6   you know every thirty seconds or so we'd see the streak of
   7   smoke and then the puff of where the thing would detonate in
   8   the air.
   9   Q.  And over the course of the entire evening do you recall
  10   approximately how many RPGs you saw being fired that day into
  11   the following morning?
  12   A.  Hundreds.  Well in excess of a hundred.
  13   Q.  After you dropped off Shughardt and Gordon at a location
  14   near the second crash site, what happened next?
  15   A.  They again they took them about five minutes to make their
  16   way through the maze and the labyrinth of shacks and shanties
  17   and crawling over collapsed buildings to get to the crash
  18   site, but they eventually made it.  And, again, we were
  19   overhead at this time providing them close air support and
  20   keeping away any of the enemy trying to get to the crash site
  21   or firing upon them.
  22            The last thing, I saw the last pass I made was one of
  23   the two snipers, either Shughardt or Gordon, I'm not sure
  24   which, was tending to Mike Durrant on the right-hand side of
  25   the aircraft in the pilot station.
                                                                4397
   1            The other sniper had already gotten Ray Frank out of
   2   the aircraft and Ray was propped up against the tree, just off
   3   the nose of the aircraft, and that was the last sight of that
   4   crash site that I had.
   5   Q.  What happened at that point to your chopper?
   6   A.  We got hit with a rocket propelled grenade in the crew
   7   chief station or the door gunner's station just behind my
   8   seat, and we then did a controlled crash to an area just along
   9   the coast line called Newport.
  10   Q.  Can you tell us what happened inside your helicopter when
  11   the RPG hit?
  12   A.  The explosion gravely wounded the sniper who had replaced
  13   my door gunner and was in that crew chief station.  It
  14   basically took off his leg, peppered him with shrapnel.  I had
  15   a Kevlar seat, and my seat was made of Kevlar, but I caught
  16   some shrapnel in my left arm, and my other crew chief had
  17   already been shot through the arm earlier.
  18            I had received some of the shrapnel from the rocket
  19   propelled grenade.  It took out one our engines.  The Black
  20   Hawk has two engines.  We had partial power and partial
  21   control of the aircraft.  The windshield was gone, and the
  22   window bubble, the plexiglas bubble below and above the pilot
  23   station was gone.  There was, you know, a bunch of smoke
  24   filling the cockpit.
  25   Q.  And where did you actually crash land the helicopter?
                                                                4398
   1   A.  Again, it was a place called Newport which is just on the
   2   coast line of Somalia, Mogadishu, and lucky for us there was a
   3   UN contingent receiving goods at the port that day that saw us
   4   come in there and crash land, and they came over and attempted
   5   to provide assistance after we got on the ground.
   6   Q.  And were you and the remaining members of your crew in the
   7   helicopter rescued at that location?
   8   A.  Yes.  The search and rescue aircraft which had been shot
   9   up earlier with rocket propelled grenades had gone, limped
  10   back to the airfield.  They got into a spare Black Hawk, came
  11   out and picked up, first the gravely wounded sniper who had
  12   lost his leg and abdomen was peppered with shrapnel, and my
  13   other crew chief who had been shot through the arm also was
  14   hit with shrapnel.
  15            They took them to the hospital and they came back
  16   about thirty minutes later and picked up myself, the other
  17   crew chief, and Mike Goffena, the guy I was flying with, the
  18   other pilot.
  19   Q.  Once you were brought back to your base in Somalia after
  20   having your helicopter shot down, what did you do next?
  21   A.  I went to the tactical operations center which is where
  22   the overall commander was sitting, and provided any
  23   information I could on crash sites one and two.  And then at
  24   about, I don't know, maybe six or seven p.m. I replaced the
  25   pilot of the flying the commander control aircraft flying the
                                                                4399
   1   overall air and ground commanders around, and flew throughout
   2   the night into the next morning until the mission was over.
   3   Q.  And during the night could you see what was happening
   4   below you as you flew above Mogadishu?
   5   A.  Yeah, there was a battle raging on throughout the night.
   6   Q.  How could you see at night?  Did you have any special
   7   equipment?
   8   A.  We had night vision goggles which essentially amplify the
   9   ambient illumination of the stars and the moon, and make it
  10   able, make you able to see at night.
  11   Q.  Did there come a time when a ground force actually reached
  12   crash site number one and was able to link up with the
  13   soldiers who were at that crash site?
  14   A.  Yes.  Earlier in the day when I was first shot down there
  15   were two convoys that were dispatched that were attempting to
  16   reach both crash sites.  They were both repelled and had to go
  17   back to the airfield.  At about seven or eight in the evening
  18   the UN or actually the US went to the UN contingent and asked
  19   the Pakistanis and the UAE the United Arab Emirates forces if
  20   we could borrow their armored vehicle to go back out and try
  21   to rescue the aviators from the downed crash site and pick up
  22   all the soldiers in the middle of the battlefield.
  23            It took them until about 11:30 or 12 midnight to
  24   actually launch out from the forward support base, and they
  25   didn't reach the crash site or crash site number one until
                                                                4400
   1   about 3 a.m.
   2   Q.  And what time had the crash happened when Super 61 was
   3   shot down at crash site number one?
   4   A.  That was probably 4 p.m., 4:10 p.m., something like that.
   5   Q.  And once the ground force reached that crash site at about
   6   3 a.m., how long did they spend in that location?
   7   A.  It took about two hours for them to effect a linkup of
   8   friendly forces.  It was in the dark.  They were in the middle
   9   of a battle.  They didn't know exactly all the friendly force
  10   locations because the friendly forces were hunkered down in
  11   different areas around the crash site.  So it took quite a
  12   while to deconflict fires and make sure that friendlies didn't
  13   shoot at friendlies.
  14            And also ongoing during that time they were trying to
  15   free the body of Cliff Wolcott.  He was the pilot who was of
  16   Super 61 and he was dead, but they wanted to get his body out
  17   of the crash site and leave the crash site with all the bodies
  18   of the dead soldiers.  So it took them a couple of hours to
  19   free Cliff.  It wasn't until about maybe 5 a.m., 5:30 a.m.
  20   that they finally had everybody on board this big long convoy
  21   of armored personnel carriers and tanks and Humvees, and drove
  22   out.
  23   Q.  And did they go to a separate location, a secure location
  24   in Mogadishu?
  25   A.  Yes, they went to a place that was closer than the forward
                                                                4401
   1   support base or our friendly location.  They went to a place
   2   called Pakistan Stadium which was about a mile away from the
   3   objective area which provided our forces some security to
   4   consolidate and regroup.
   5   Q.  And approximately what time did the people from crash site
   6   one make it to Pakistan Stadium?
   7   A.  It was about probably 6:30 in the morning.
   8   Q.  And, similarly, with respect to crash site number two, did
   9   a similar thing happen with regard to the ground force?
  10   A.  Yes.  A separate or another convoy of Tenth Division
  11   soldiers from United Nations force that was over there went
  12   and took a look at crash site number two and it was picked
  13   clean.  There were no soldiers.  There were no bodies at that
  14   crash site when they reached it.
  15   Q.  And as of the following morning, October 4, 1993, did you
  16   have an understanding of how much American casualties there
  17   were at that time?
  18   A.  We had six missing in action, and we had 13 I believe
  19   declared killed in action at that point.
  20   Q.  And did there later come a time when one of the missing in
  21   action was recovered?
  22   A.  Yes.  Later on that day or maybe the next day, we found
  23   out through the Red Cross that Mike Durrant, one of the
  24   lieutenants of Super 64, was actually taken captive and was
  25   not killed at the crash site.
                                                                4402
   1   Q.  Was he recovered two weeks later alive?
   2   A.  Yes.
   3   Q.  And what happened to the other five missing in action?
   4   A.  They were killed.  Total went up to 18 killed in action on
   5   that day.
   6   Q.  And of the 18 who were killed in action how many were in
   7   your platoon?
   8   A.  Five.
   9   Q.  And did that include Cliff Wolcott and Donovan Briely the
  10   pilots of Super 61?
  11   A.  Yes.
  12   Q.  And who were the others in your platoon?
  13   A.  We had Ray Frank, the pilot of Super 64, and Bill
  14   Cleveland, and Tommy Field who were his crew chiefs in the
  15   back of that aircraft.
  16   Q.  And in addition to the people in your platoon, what
  17   happened to the two snipers Mr. Shughardt and Mr. Gordon who
  18   were dropped to rescue Super 64 crash site two?
  19   A.  They were killed as well.  They were eventually overrun by
  20   the enemy after we got shot down and they lost, they ran out
  21   of ammunition and were overrun.
  22   Q.  Were there a substantial number of Somalis killed during
  23   the fire fight in October 3th and 4th?
  24   A.  Yes.  We received estimates from the Red Cross that there
  25   were in excess of 500 killed, and about a thousand wounded.
                                                                4403
   1   Q.  And during the night these RPGs that were shot at the
   2   helicopters, when you were trained in the military is that an
   3   ordinary technique to use RPGs against helicopters?
   4            MR. SCHMIDT:  Objection, your Honor.
   5            THE COURT:  Overruled.
   6   Q.  What is the ordinary purpose of an RPG when you're trained
   7   in the military?
   8   A.  Generally used against armored vehicles, but I mean it can
   9   be used against personnel as well.
  10   Q.  When you're talking about armored vehicles, you mean
  11   ground vehicles?
  12   A.  Yes.
  13            MR. FITZGERALD:  Thank you.  Nothing further.
  14            MR. SCHMIDT:  Mr. Schmidt.
  15   CROSS-EXAMINATION
  16   BY MR. SCHMIDT:
  17   Q.  Good morning.  Do you prefer being called Agent Yacone or
  18   Capt. Yacone.
  19   A.  Agent.
  20   Q.  Agent Yacone, was this the first time that you ever saw
  21   combat?
  22   A.  No.  We had executed six missions over in Somalia prior to
  23   3 October.  Is that what you're talking about?
  24   Q.  Well, that's the first start.  So prior to this --
  25   withdrawn.
                                                                4404
   1            You would consider this a military operation on
   2   October 3th and 4th, wouldn't you?
   3   A.  Correct.
   4   Q.  And prior to that military operation in Somalia you had
   5   participated in six other military operations?
   6   A.  Over in Somalia from August to October 3rd from the time
   7   we landed till that mission on October 3.
   8   Q.  Have you been involved in any other military operations
   9   other than the ones in Somalia?
  10   A.  I was in Haiti in 1994, but there was a diplomatic
  11   resolution to that conflict so, no.
  12   Q.  So other than the -- so the only two military operations
  13   that you were involved in were Somalia?
  14   A.  In combat, that's correct.
  15   Q.  Prior to going to Somalia were you trained for combat in
  16   the urban environment such as Mogadishu?
  17   A.  Yes.
  18   Q.  Where were you trained?
  19   A.  I was with my unit at that time which is the 160th Special
  20   Operations Aviation Regiment.
  21   Q.  Were you trained in Somalia or outside of Somalia?
  22   A.  We had both.  We had, you know, trained prior to that to
  23   operate in urban environment, and then once we got on ground
  24   in Somalia we had done rehearsals for the missions.
  25   Q.  If you -- the prior training for urban areas, was that
                                                                4405
   1   separate and distinct from -- withdrawn.
   2            How many years before you went to Somalia was that
   3   training?
   4   A.  It was fairly continuous.  It was part of kind of what we
   5   considered a mission essential task to be able to operate in
   6   an urban environment.  So you know at least annually or maybe
   7   twice, two times a year we try to get to an urban environment
   8   within the United States and operate.
   9   Q.  And then you had specific training in Somalia that was
  10   specifically related to military operations to be carried out
  11   in Mogadishu, is that right?
  12   A.  Correct.
  13   Q.  And so really basically dealing now with the countryside
  14   of Somalia, but not Mogadishu, is that correct?
  15   A.  We had conducted mission rehearsals away from Mogadishu
  16   proper, kind of on the outskirts, maybe five or ten miles
  17   south of the city at a area that we created as like a mockup
  18   objective area.  And then we had also done what we called
  19   signature flights during the numerous days that we were over
  20   there, because we were surrounded on three sides by the enemy
  21   and the enemy was continuously watching us from roof tops with
  22   radios.
  23            We would randomly take off organized for combat, fly
  24   around, you know, conduct a false insertion, do nothing and
  25   then come back and land at the airfield, because we had lost
                                                                4406
   1   the element of surprise, and they were simply there sitting
   2   there watching us or waiting for us to take off.
   3   Q.  Let me go back to the training.  Where you said you set up
   4   a special kind of training operation, is that geared towards
   5   the narrow streets of Mogadishu, how to work in that kind of
   6   situation?
   7   A.  We had talked about it, but we were not in actual urban
   8   area.  We were on the outskirts on like the beach.  So, no, we
   9   weren't really able to effectively simulate the narrow streets
  10   that were going to have to deal with in Mogadishu, no.
  11   Q.  But you were aware that you were going to be dealing in
  12   then urban area with narrow streets?
  13   A.  Yes.
  14   Q.  An area that included the enemy militia and civilians as
  15   well, is that right?
  16   A.  Correct.
  17   Q.  And it was a populated area, is that correct?
  18   A.  Yes.  It was like 1.5 million people in Mogadishu.
  19   Q.  Now, during your training was there any discussion or use
  20   or practice of using tow missiles?
  21   A.  Say that terminology.
  22   Q.  T-O-W missiles.  I'm sorry, Tow missiles?
  23   A.  We had no tow missiles with my military unit.
  24   Q.  Is that, is there a particular reason why you had no Tow
  25   missiles on that mission?
                                                                4407
   1            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection.
   2   Q.  I'll withdraw that question.  Are you familiar with tow
   3   missiles.
   4   A.  Yes, I am.
   5   Q.  Are Tow missiles generally used in urban environments
   6   where there are civilians?
   7   A.  Sure, I suppose they can be, absolutely.
   8   Q.  Tow missiles cause tremendous amount of damage, is that
   9   right?
  10   A.  Depending on the target, yes.
  11   Q.  Now, when you were in your base, what part of Mogadishu
  12   were you based in?
  13   A.  We were right at Mogadishu International Airport.
  14   Q.  In what part of Mogadishu is that?
  15   A.  That's the East Coast kind of in the southern portion of
  16   the city.
  17   Q.  Is that in the area where Gen. Aideed militia supporters
  18   and clansmen lived?
  19   A.  They had free reign of the entire city, but their
  20   stronghold, at least the intelligence that I was given, their
  21   stronghold was principally in the Bakara market, but they
  22   operated all over the city.
  23   Q.  What about did you receive any information about a person
  24   called Ali Magdi?
  25   A.  That name doesn't ring a bell.
                                                                4408
   1   Q.  Well, was there one operation, one of the six operations
   2   prior to October 3rd and 4th where a number of people were
   3   gathered up and taken away and imprisoned and learned that
   4   they were members of some other militia and not Aideed
   5   militia?
   6   A.  One of the missions, and I'm not sure which one you're
   7   referring to, we did have to release some of the people that
   8   we captured because they, we didn't have hard evidence that
   9   the people we captured were part of the clan.  They had a
  10   number of nongovernmental forms of identification.  Each of
  11   them had many, many forms of ID, so we couldn't be sure who
  12   they were, and we subsequently released them.
  13   Q.  Where were they released from?
  14   A.  I don't have any knowledge of that.  I assume that forward
  15   support base wherever they went to once they were brought back
  16   to the forward support base.
  17   Q.  Just so we understand the nature of these operations, when
  18   you went on an operation, the goal was to take custody of a
  19   number of people and obviously it depends on what information
  20   you have and the number of people are there, is that correct?
  21   A.  Correct.
  22   Q.  And I think you used the word arrest.
  23   A.  Detain is probably a better word.
  24   Q.  And the warrants that you mentioned, that was a UN
  25   declaration to capture Aideed; is that correct?
                                                                4409
   1   A.  Correct.
   2   Q.  And only the person that actually mentioned was Aideed,
   3   isn't that right?
   4   A.  I don't believe so.  I think they had a number of others
   5   supporters or his top lieutenants, the important people in his
   6   organization that we were also looking for, but I don't know
   7   if they were listed in the UN arrest warrants or equivalent.
   8   I have no idea.
   9   Q.  Agent, obviously you only can testify to as to what can
  10   you actually know.
  11   A.  Right.
  12   Q.  And it's obvious that based on your testimony that it was
  13   a number of people that you were seeking to quote detain
  14   unquote.  But were you specifically aware, because you used
  15   the word, arrest warrant, were you, have you, did you read the
  16   document that you call arrest warrant?
  17   A.  No.
  18   Q.  So you're acting as a soldier, a commanding soldier
  19   following the orders of those above you; is that right?
  20   A.  Correct.
  21   Q.  And you are given some understanding of why you're there
  22   because you're entitled to, you're risking your life, you're
  23   entitled to know or understand why you're there, isn't that
  24   right?
  25   A.  Correct.
                                                                4410
   1   Q.  But all of the specific legal documents or arguments none
   2   of your concern, isn't that right?
   3   A.  No.  I mean I was following orders, you know, lawful
   4   orders that given me by my chain of command.
   5   Q.  But lawful order came from your chain of command and
   6   generally they explained to you what the UN did, but no one
   7   provided with you a document saying, okay, here is the people,
   8   here are their pictures?
   9   A.  That's correct.  Well, actually, we did have pictures of
  10   many of the people we were going after.  I didn't see any
  11   arrest warrants or legal documentation.
  12   Q.  You're now an FBI agent, is that right?
  13   A.  Correct.
  14   Q.  Have you been involved in any arrests of people?
  15   A.  Yes.
  16   Q.  Have you been involved in arrests of people where a
  17   warrant was issued?
  18   A.  Absolutely.
  19   Q.  When you are going to arrest somebody with a warrant you
  20   actually have that warrant, right?
  21   A.  Correct.
  22   Q.  And you usually have the photograph of the person and lots
  23   of information, right?
  24   A.  Yes.
  25   Q.  And you go to arrest that particular person because you
                                                                4411
   1   now have before you a signed, generally a copy, a signed
   2   warrant of arrest issued by a Judge of the United States?
   3   A.  Correct.
   4   Q.  When you are a soldier you don't have all of that.  You
   5   have a chain of command that you follow?
   6   A.  Correct.
   7   Q.  Now, do you recall one of the missions where a police
   8   official who, where there was insufficient proof that he was a
   9   member of Aideed's clan was arrested with others?
  10   A.  Yes.
  11   Q.  He and others.  Okay, now in that operation did people
  12   from your team arrive in helicopters?
  13   A.  Yes.
  14   Q.  Members of the team then dropped down from the helicopter;
  15   is that right?
  16   A.  Correct.
  17   Q.  How were they armed?
  18   A.  With you know M-16 or Kar 15 rifles, various weapons.
  19   Most guys had handguns as a backup.  We had some machine guns
  20   as well.
  21   Q.  Grenades?
  22   A.  Yes.
  23   Q.  They were prepared all the people who went to detain,
  24   we'll call it detain, these individuals they were prepared,
  25   your team members, to defend themselves under the
                                                                4412
   1   circumstances that their lives were in danger?
   2   A.  Correct.
   3   Q.  As a soldier you could do nothing less than that?
   4   A.  Right.
   5   Q.  And you can't ask a soldier to do anything less than that,
   6   isn't that right?
   7   A.  We had pretty restrictive rules of engagement, yes.
   8   Q.  But you if you were attack, you certainly could --
   9   A.  That's right.
  10   Q.  And your goal was detaining, coming down from the sky,
  11   grabbing the people that you understood were supposed to be
  12   grabbed, taking them from their home, office or wherever they
  13   are and bringing them to a location where the UN would take
  14   control, is that right?
  15   A.  That is correct, but, again, just to make this clear I was
  16   an aviator.  I was in charge of getting them to the site.  I
  17   wasn't actually sliding down on the rope and putting the hands
  18   on people.
  19   Q.  But that was the operation's purpose?
  20   A.  Yes.
  21   Q.  You had a very important and difficult and dangerous job
  22   sitting up there in the bird in the sky?
  23   A.  Yes.
  24   Q.  Now, as to the operations that you were involved in up to
  25   October 3rd and 4th, there was fortunately very -- were there
                                                                4413
   1   any casualties for your teams at all on the first six?
   2   A.  I believe two Rangers were wounded in one of the missions
   3   of those six previous missions.
   4   Q.  And there were very few Somalia casualties as well?
   5   A.  That's correct.
   6   Q.  Everything worked fairly nicely?
   7   A.  Correct.
   8   Q.  Now, when you were there on and operation coming down to
   9   make -- withdrawn.
  10            There were a number of times during your operations
  11   where you came up empty handed, there was nobody that you
  12   thought you wanted was at the location, is that correct?
  13   A.  Yes.
  14   Q.  You called that a dry hole?
  15   A.  Yep, that was a common phrase used.
  16   Q.  Now, generally in these missions other than the October
  17   3rd, 4th, when, how many helicopters were used?
  18   A.  There was I believe 18 helicopters.
  19   Q.  So if you went on a mission give, for example, the mission
  20   that caused the detention of the non-Aideed militia police
  21   officer and others, you would come with 18 helicopters flying
  22   in some sort of pattern.  Is that right?
  23   A.  Right.
  24   Q.  And you would, the helicopters were dropping off the
  25   soldiers at some point lower themselves to a level where it
                                                                4414
   1   was safe, and the soldiers, and these are special commandos,
   2   right?
   3   A.  They were soldiers in the Army, yeah.
   4   Q.  But they were specially trained?
   5   A.  Correct.
   6   Q.  Urban commandos and other -- let's just use commandos, is
   7   that good?
   8   A.  I think special operations soldiers is probably a better
   9   term.
  10   Q.  And they would go down the ropes, hit the ground and go to
  11   the location, is that right?
  12   A.  Correct.
  13   Q.  And all that time the helicopters would all be in a pretty
  14   close location?
  15   A.  Again, after the insertion most of the helicopters would
  16   hold north of the city out of harms way and only the
  17   helicopters that were on standby and on call to provide, you
  18   know, close air support or ariel gunnery would remain over the
  19   objective.
  20   Q.  When your helicopters arrived, now, say in the operation
  21   where the police chief was or police officer was mistakenly
  22   detained, did you have special-ops soldiers going down from
  23   your helicopter?
  24   A.  I don't specifically remember, but more than likely yes.
  25   Q.  You're in an urban area, right?
                                                                4415
   1   A.  Yes.
   2   Q.  I think sometimes the operations were like in the middle
   3   of the night so it was quiet, right?
   4   A.  Correct.
   5   Q.  Sometimes it was not in the middle of the night and there
   6   was more activity on the street?
   7   A.  Right.
   8   Q.  Can you describe to us what the people on the street would
   9   do, the civilian people on the street, what would they do when
  10   they saw 18 helicopters coming and letting down these troops?
  11   A.  They would generally, you know, flee or leave that
  12   immediate area, and go the other way.
  13   Q.  Now, except for obviously the ones that started to engage
  14   the aircraft and they stayed around, some of them would stay
  15   around and fire?
  16   A.  Right.
  17   Q.  Now, you came in August of 1993, is that correct?
  18   A.  I think it was August 23rd, that's correct.
  19   Q.  And were you aware that there are other American troops at
  20   the location, in Somalia, Mogadishu prior to you arriving, is
  21   that right?
  22   A.  Yes.
  23   Q.  Now, you knew that you were to some extent vulnerable as a
  24   helicopter pilot the longer you stayed in one location either
  25   dropping off or picking up people; is that right?
                                                                4416
   1   A.  Yes, absolutely, I mean the longer you stayed in and
   2   around a battlefield chances are, you know, you're going to
   3   receive some fire.
   4   Q.  And the lower you go, the more chance you are getting hit?
   5   A.  Not necessarily true.  We tried to vary our altitude but
   6   if you remain low you actually present a quicker sight picture
   7   for somebody on the ground trying to engage you.  He has less
   8   time to track you or engage you if you're low, if you're in a
   9   densely urban area without a big field of view, because as he
  10   tracks you he may lose you to the next rooftop that becomes,
  11   or is between you the helicopter and if the guy is trying to
  12   shoot you, so it depended.
  13   Q.  But you talked a little bit about RPGs, the rocket
  14   propelled grenades?
  15   A.  Yes.
  16   Q.  Those are basically something like a rifle with a grenade
  17   at the end of it, is that right?
  18   A.  Yes, it's a big about a three four foot tube and the
  19   warhead sits on the front end of the tube and is fired out of
  20   the tube.
  21   Q.  And that's a man-held weapon, right?
  22   A.  Yep, held on the shoulder.
  23   Q.  And it doesn't take very much training to actually fire
  24   one of those things, does it?
  25   A.  I've never fired one myself, but I think to fire them
                                                                4417
   1   accurately, yeah, you definitely have to get some training.
   2   Q.  To fire them accurately is probably very difficult, isn't
   3   it?
   4   A.  Again, I've never fired them, so from what I've been told,
   5   yes.
   6   Q.  Now, you described the, that night the day and night of
   7   October 3rd and 4th as being hundreds of RPGs being fired, is
   8   that right?
   9   A.  Yeah, through the course of the battle, that's correct.
  10   Q.  And during the course of the battle there were three
  11   helicopters that were hit?
  12   A.  Four.
  13   Q.  So the percentages of the people there in firing them was
  14   not very low, which is not surprising for RPGs, is that right?
  15   A.  When you consider the amount of aircraft that were
  16   actually over the objective area, the percentages were pretty
  17   high.  Again, the other Black Hawks went and held north of the
  18   city, so the only Black Hawks that flew over the battlefield
  19   on that particular day were hit except for the command control
  20   aircraft which was at much much higher altitude kind out of
  21   harms way.
  22   Q.  But we're talking about hundreds of RPGs fired at the
  23   helicopter, is that right?
  24   A.  Yeah, at all the helicopters over the battlefield,
  25   correct.  And at soldiers on the ground, you know, in and
                                                                4418
   1   amongst the streets, and the vehicle convoys.
   2   Q.  Now, you were aware of previous attacks on Aideed's --
   3   withdrawn.  When you went into in August on your first
   4   operation, right, were you made aware that of the prior attack
   5   on Somalis that was called the Abdi House in July 12, 1993?
   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection, your Honor, beyond the
   7   scope.  403.
   8            MR. SCHMIDT:  This goes into how he's conducting
   9   himself, your Honor.
  10            THE COURT:  I'll permit it.  That's a yes or no.
  11   A.  Yes, I was aware of the Abdi House incident.
  12   Q.  And were you aware of the Somali reaction to their
  13   perceptions of the Abdi House attack?
  14            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection, your Honor, 403.
  15            THE COURT:  Yes or no.
  16   A.  Yes.
  17   Q.  Were you aware that helicopters, therefore, the people in
  18   the helicopters were in greater danger as a result of the
  19   Somali reaction to the Abdi House attack?
  20   A.  Say that again.  I'm not sure I understand the question.
  21   Q.  Were you aware that helicopters became more of a target of
  22   the anger of the Somalis as a result of the Abdi House attack?
  23   A.  No, not necessarily.  I just through the media -- I mean
  24   basically through the media I became aware that most of the
  25   Somalis became very irritated at perception of the attack, and
                                                                4419
   1   the population who had backed the majority of the population
   2   who was backing the UN mission over there at the time were
   3   starting to be swayed towards Aideed's clan and what Aideed
   4   was trying to carry out as a result of the Abdi House
   5   incident.  And, again, that was through the media that I
   6   became aware of most of what happened.
   7   Q.  And you became aware that the Abdi House attack was very,
   8   very different than the operations that you were conducting,
   9   isn't that right?
  10   A.  It was a different military unit that did it.  I mean it
  11   was a US Force Tenth Mounted Division.
  12   Q.  It was a different type of operation?
  13   A.  Correct.
  14   Q.  Your operation, and you were under very strict limitations
  15   not to fire into buildings or groups of people unless you
  16   absolutely had to protect yourselves; is that right?
  17   A.  Yes.
  18   Q.  And you were aware that in the Abdi House attack Tow
  19   missiles were fired in a building that was not firing at the
  20   helicopters, had not attacked anybody?
  21            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection, your Honor.
  22            THE COURT:  Sustained as to form.
  23   Q.  You were aware that the rules of engagement that caused
  24   the Abdi House attack -- withdrawn.
  25            Your rules of engagement changed as a result --
                                                                4420
   1   withdrawn.  The rules of engagement that you were under --
   2   withdrawn.  I'll try my best on this.  Were you aware that the
   3   rules of engagement that you were now under were different as
   4   a result of the Abdi House attack?
   5   A.  I'm not really sure what their rules of engagement were on
   6   that day, and I don't know what predicated the Abdi House
   7   attack.  In other words, I think there were four journalists
   8   killed by a Somali mob earlier that day.  I know there were
   9   twenty-four Pakistan UN soldiers that were killed prior to the
  10   Abdi House, but I have no idea what their rules of engagement
  11   were on that day or what precipitated the Abdi House attack.
  12   Q.  You raised, you raised the issue about the --
  13            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection, your Honor.
  14   Q.  -- journalists --
  15            THE COURT:  Yes, sustained.  Just ask a question.
  16   Q.  You were there and you saw the media.  Is that correct?
  17   You saw the media while you were there?
  18   A.  Yes.
  19   Q.  You were aware that the journalists were killed by a crowd
  20   of enraged Somalis as a result of the Abdi House attack,
  21   weren't you?
  22   A.  I'm not sure which occurred first to be quite honest,
  23   whether the journalists were killed and then the attack
  24   occurred, or the attack occurred and then the journalists were
  25   killed, I have no idea.
                                                                4421
   1            MR. RICCO:  Your Honor, I object.  I'd like to be
   2   heard.
   3            THE COURT:  We'll take our mid-morning recess.
   4            (Continued on next page)
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                                                                4422
   1            (Jury not present)
   2            MR. WILFORD:  Your Honor, may we state the reasons
   3   for the objection?
   4            THE COURT:  Please.
   5            MR. WILFORD:  I believe that everything after the
   6   witness answered yes with respect subsequent to saying yes to
   7   the question regarding his knowledge of the Abdi House
   8   incident should be stricken.
   9            We're talking about information that is leading up to
  10   I believe 24 other dead Americans.  We're talking about a
  11   situation that is not within the scope of this witness'
  12   personal knowledge.  He's talking about other information he
  13   received from some other source, and most respectfully we ask
  14   that everything after the Abdi House question with respect to
  15   the witness' knowledge of the existence of the Abdi House
  16   incident be stricken.
  17            THE COURT:  Mr. Schmidt.
  18            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, I think striking it doesn't
  19   accomplish the purpose.  The jury has heard it.  What would
  20   accomplish the purpose as to this witness would be perhaps a
  21   stipulation that the Abdi House attack occurred and then after
  22   the Abdi House attack occurred the correspondents were killed.
  23            MR. FITZGERALD:  Mr. Schmidt has gone into hearsay
  24   that he knows the witness wasn't in country for, and he walked
  25   into a door and when he gets an answer he doesn't like when
                                                                4423
   1   the witness is saying, you're asking me what I heard from the
   2   media, then he wants to turn around and straighten out and
   3   leave just those facts he wants.  If he doesn't want to get
   4   inaccurate hearsay, don't ask someone what happened in July of
   5   1993 in Somalia of a witness who was in America.  He keeps
   6   going down that road and he goes down that road and he gets
   7   the answer he doesn't like, he wants to fix it.
   8            MR. SCHMIDT:  Counsel previously indicated that
   9   additional response was not responsive to my question.  It was
  10   volunteered by this witness.
  11            THE COURT:  Your question was, did he know two
  12   journalists and four Pakistanis were killed earlier that day.
  13            MR. SCHMIDT:  I didn't say that.
  14            THE COURT:  Then you asked whether he was aware of
  15   the journalists who were killed before or after the attack.
  16            MR. SCHMIDT:  That was after he volunteered that.  My
  17   question to him did not require him stating about the
  18   journalists being killed.  I made very specific questions.
  19   I'm up there asking him specific questions to avoid that type
  20   of answer and he's volunteered that.
  21            Go back and you'll see it is his volunteering that
  22   information and for the government to get up here and say now
  23   say they want to lead --
  24            THE COURT:  The government has made no objection.
  25   The only objection has been raise has been raised on behalf of
                                                                4424
   1   Odeh.  So let's be clear how this issue has arisen.
   2            He was asked whether he was aware that the rules of
   3   engagement were different as a result of the Abdi House.
   4            MR. SCHMIDT:  That requires a yes or no.
   5            THE COURT:  What he responded was he doesn't know
   6   what precipitated the change but that he did know that two
   7   journalists and four Pakistanis were killed earlier that day
   8   and then he stated he was not aware whether the journalists
   9   were killed before or after the attack.
  10            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor.
  11            THE COURT:  Let me ask you this question.  Do you
  12   have further questioning along these lines?
  13            MR. SCHMIDT:  As to the Abdi House.
  14            THE COURT:  As to the Abdi House.
  15            MR. SCHMIDT:  I'm done.  The only thing that I want
  16   to elicit through this witness, whether I request the
  17   introduction of the helicopter pilot in the Abdi House who saw
  18   one of the journalists running away after the attack who was
  19   very alive and explained how that journalist died, I'll do
  20   that.  I don't want to do that.  I don't want to make this
  21   into a circus.  All I want is the jury now to know what is
  22   undisputed.  The death of the journalists came after the Abdi
  23   House period.
  24            THE COURT:  But this witness doesn't know that.  This
  25   witness has already said --
                                                                4425
   1            MR. SCHMIDT:  I'll do it another way if the
   2   government doesn't want to, but the jury is left that way, so
   3   I will do it, I will do it then another way, your Honor.
   4            THE COURT:  He can't answer that.
   5            MR. SCHMIDT:  If the government doesn't want to clear
   6   this issue now I will have produce another witness and I'm not
   7   sure where I'm going to get it.  I did not -- he left that
   8   question from that witness he put it in on his own.  It was
   9   not responsive to my answer.  I don't think that the
  10   government should try to protect them to allow misleading
  11   information in front of the jury.
  12            THE COURT:  Why do you keep attributing this to the
  13   government?  The objection was raised by codefendant.
  14            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, this is not simply a former
  15   Captain, your Honor.  This is an experienced FBI agent.
  16            MR. FITZGERALD:  Mr. Schmidt asked what happened on a
  17   different continent he was not present for and then is shocked
  18   when he doesn't get the answer he wants.
  19            THE COURT:  All right.  Let's cool it.  Let's cool
  20   it.  Mr. Wilford.
  21            MR. WILFORD:  Your Honor, we're simply seeking a
  22   ruling from the Court on my motion to strike.
  23            THE COURT:  Just very specifically what is it that
  24   you wanted?
  25            MR. WILFORD:  Everything after the witness said he
                                                                4426
   1   was aware of the Abdi House incident.  He answered yes.
   2   Everything after that should be stricken.
   3            THE COURT:  That includes was he aware that the rules
   4   of engagement differed as a result of that Abdi House.
   5            MR. WILFORD:  Yes.
   6            THE COURT:  You want that stricken.  Do you want to
   7   have everything after that stricken?
   8            MR. WILFORD:  Everything after it stricken.
   9            THE COURT:  Does the government object to that being
  10   stricken?
  11            MR. FITZGERALD:  No, Judge.  I don't object to
  12   striking all his Abdi House testimony as hearsay.  He's not
  13   competent to give it.
  14            THE COURT:  The question, were you aware of you know
  15   is technically not hearsay.  I know that Mr. Schmidt is
  16   utilizing that device to avoid --
  17            Do you object, Mr. Schmidt, to the striking of
  18   everything after the question relating to the change of rules
  19   of engagement as a result of Abdi House?  Do you object to
  20   that being stricken?
  21            MR. SCHMIDT:  I'm thinking, your Honor.
  22            THE COURT:  I understand.
  23            MR. SCHMIDT:  I would, I don't object to being
  24   stricken after he said, he does not know.
  25            MR. FITZGERALD:  Judge, he only said that.
                                                                4427
   1            THE COURT:  But that gets a question in.  There is
   2   really no evidentiary value in what he does not know about an
   3   incident that took place prior to his arrival.  Consensus.  We
   4   will strike everything after the question relating to rules of
   5   engagement and Abdi House.  We'll do that when the jury
   6   returns, and I understand you have no further questions on
   7   that subject.
   8            MR. SCHMIDT:  On that subject I have no further ones.
   9            THE COURT:  Very well.  We'll take a three-minute
  10   recession.
  11            (Recess)
  12            (In open court; jury not present.
  13            THE COURT:  Let's be seated.
  14            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, one point I want to make as
  15   a result of actually the last discussion.  On page 3500
  16   material, SLM slash 3-3 the question asked to, I'm not sure
  17   who was asking, was, when you were deployed over there what
  18   idea were you given of the degree of threat that was opposing
  19   US aircraft?
  20            THE COURT:  Yes.
  21            MR. SCHMIDT:  Those answers there would not only have
  22   allowed me to cross-examine this witness more intelligently,
  23   more limitedly, but also challenging him if he denies
  24   something that is indicated in his cross-examination.
  25            THE COURT:  You asked, were you aware of the previous
                                                                4428
   1   attack and some reference to Abdi House and aware of the
   2   Somali action and the answer is yes.  Were you aware of the
   3   helicopters were in grave danger as a result of the reaction
   4   to the Abdi House attack?  And he said it was more of a
   5   target, and then he went into his awareness of the media
   6   reaction. He made very clear.
   7            What is it that you think that you did not ask that
   8   you might have asked him which would not have prompted the
   9   objections similar to the one received with respect to the
  10   question which you did ask?
  11            MR. SCHMIDT:  Judge, I'm asking a question which to
  12   some extent defense attorneys should not do, because I don't
  13   know the answer.  This would have given me the answer of what
  14   he knew the threat was.  I don't know what's in there.  I
  15   don't know.
  16            THE COURT:  What he knew the threat was, you mean
  17   awareness of a threat other than being shot down by hostile
  18   Somalis?
  19            MR. SCHMIDT:  The basis of believing that the threat
  20   of being shot down.
  21            THE COURT:  You asked that question and you got the
  22   answer.
  23            MR. SCHMIDT:  I don't know I got the answer he gave
  24   in the 3500 material.
  25            MR. FITZGERALD:  For the record, your Honor, the
                                                                4429
   1   statement he's referring to that are redacted are not
   2   statements of Yacone.  This was a group interview.  There is
   3   no -- so whatever is redacted not a statement of the witness.
   4            THE COURT:  Let's bring in the jury.  The witness may
   5   resume the stand.
   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  My fear that Mr. Schmidt may be
   7   asking questions purportedly not for Mr. Yacone's state of
   8   mind but to try to get other information before the jury,
   9   other casualties.
  10            THE COURT:  I will not permit that.  I gave Mr.
  11   Schmidt greater latitude than I would normally do, because I'm
  12   aware of problems he has experienced with respect to witnesses
  13   that were disclosed to the Court ex-parte, but I think the
  14   objection that has been made on behalf of Odeh is well taken,
  15   and there is unanimity to striking this, and Mr. Schmidt
  16   advises he has no further questions along those lines.
  17            The witness may resume the stand.  Another matter.
  18   The interpreters are having great difficulty hearing defense
  19   attorneys except for Mr. Schmidt.  Probably the speaker in
  20   front of Mr. Wilford and Mr. Ricco, and Mr. Cohn and
  21   Mr. Ruhnke are not functioning well.
  22            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, this is a constant sort of
  23   balancing.  The problem is that speakers get to be very
  24   sensitive and then when we speak privately it gets overheard.
  25   So it is constantly either turning them off or moving them
                                                                4430
   1   away and I think it is important.  I don't know.  We've been
   2   trying to balance that.  I don't know how we do it.
   3            MR. RICCO:  We'll speak louder when we address the
   4   Court, your Honor.
   5            THE COURT:  Not too loud.
   6            (Continued on next page)
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                                                                4431
   1            (Jury present)
   2            THE COURT:  I am aware that it is quite cool, and we
   3   have asked the building to reduce the air conditioning while
   4   you're here, and to turn it up.  You want if off?
   5            JUROR NO. 2:  This is perfect.
   6            THE COURT:  Right now they have turned it down.
   7   People seem to be shivering I think not as a result of
   8   testimony but because it's actually cold.
   9            The Court strikes, which means put it out of your
  10   mind and disregard, the series of questions asked by Mr.
  11   Schmidt which began with a reference to rules of engagement,
  12   and what he knew of events that took place prior to his
  13   arrival in Somalia.
  14            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, that's not my
  15   understanding, your Honor, of the agreement.
  16            THE COURT:  I'm trying to instruct the jury without
  17   repeating all the testimony which there was unanimous
  18   understanding should be stricken, and it began with a
  19   question:  Were you aware that rules of engagement were
  20   different as a result of the Abdi House event?  That's from
  21   that point to the time prior to the recess is stricken.
  22            Mr. Schmidt you may continue.
  23            MR. SCHMIDT:  Thank you, your Honor.
  24   Q.  Agent Yacone, were you aware of any United States
  25   casualties during the period that you were there that occurred
                                                                4432
   1   outside the Mogadishu area?
   2   A.  No.
   3   Q.  When we talk about Aideed and militia, we're not talking
   4   about a full-fledged Army, are we?
   5   A.  I don't know how you would describe, I mean a militia.
   6   They were pretty well organized.  There were enemy clan, you
   7   know, was another way of describing them.  And they did have a
   8   rank structure, so, yeah, they were.
   9   Q.  They were a fairly well organized clan militia that
  10   approached being an Army?
  11   A.  I think that's a fair description.
  12   Q.  However, the communication during -- withdrawn.
  13            How did you communicate with your superiors and other
  14   people under you during battle?
  15   A.  We had radios in the aircraft and each member, I shouldn't
  16   say each member, most of the commanders and leaders on the
  17   ground had radios with them to communicate back and forth
  18   between the aircraft and each other.
  19   Q.  So the Somalis on the ground that you were fighting were
  20   communicating often by banging garbage cans, didn't they?
  21   A.  That was one method and means.  Again, we observed them
  22   using radios continuously while they had us under surveillance
  23   at the airfield.  So they definitely had radios.  They also
  24   burned tires as kind of a signal to rally the troops and bring
  25   everybody towards the battle.
                                                                4433
   1   Q.  So to contact other people to help in the battle a fire in
   2   a location would draw the people?
   3   A.  That was one method or means they used.
   4   Q.  When you said that you saw radios, you're talking now
   5   about the Somalis who were watching over the base and seeing
   6   what was going on at the base; is that right?
   7   A.  They were outside of the base on the perimeter of the
   8   airfield, up on rooftops.
   9   Q.  Those are the Somalis that you are talking about that at
  10   times you saw radios?
  11   A.  Yes.
  12   Q.  But on October 3rd and October 4th the means of
  13   communication were fires and garbage cans, right?
  14   A.  Those were two methods that I was aware of.  I'm sure they
  15   were using radios, but I don't recall ever seeing people with
  16   hand held radios on the ground.
  17   Q.  Did you ever learn of the number of rounds of ammunition
  18   that was fired by the Americans in Mogadishu on October 3rd
  19   and October 4th?
  20   A.  The total quantity or total number of rounds?  No.
  21   Q.  Who is the commanding officer?
  22   A.  General William Garrison.
  23   Q.  Did you ever hear General Garrison say that --
  24            THE COURT:  I am going to be sustain the objection
  25   that's about to be made.
                                                                4434
   1            MR. SCHMIDT:  I have no further questions with this
   2   witness.
   3            THE COURT:  Mr. Wilford.
   4            MR. WILFORD:  Yes, your Honor, thank you.
   5            THE COURT:  On behalf of defendant Odeh.
   6            (Continued on next page)
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                                                                4435
   1   CROSS-EXAMINATION
   2   BY MR. WILFORD:
   3   Q.  Good afternoon, Agent Yacone.
   4   A.  Good afternoon.
   5   Q.  Did I pronounce your name correctly?
   6   A.  Yes, you did.
   7   Q.  How are you doing today, sir?
   8   A.  Pretty good.
   9   Q.  Now, on August -- or, withdrawn.  In August of 1993, you
  10   went to Somalia; is that correct?
  11   A.  Correct.
  12   Q.  As a member of the United States Army?
  13   A.  Correct.
  14   Q.  As a captain in the United States Army; is that correct?
  15   A.  That is correct.
  16   Q.  And you went there with a -- not just you, but the United
  17   States Army went there with a specific purpose; isn't that
  18   correct?
  19   A.  Correct.
  20   Q.  As a matter of fact, during the time that you went to
  21   Somalia, there was a lot of chaos in Somalia, isn't that
  22   correct?
  23   A.  Yes.
  24   Q.  As a matter of fact, the forces of Aideed, this person
  25   that you wanted to arrest on October 3, was in fact preventing
                                                                4436
   1   other Somalians from receiving food, isn't that correct?
   2   A.  Members of his clan, they were intercepting U.N. convoys
   3   and, correct, and preventing the logistical movement of food
   4   and supplies to the starving Somalis.
   5   Q.  And it wasn't just members of his clan, they were doing it
   6   at his behest, correct?
   7   A.  That's what it appeared to be, but again, I have no
   8   knowledge, personal knowledge, of how his organization was
   9   run.  But, yes, that's what we were being told.
  10   Q.  You didn't speak to him directly and say, "Hey, Aideed,
  11   are you stealing the stuff or not," right?
  12   A.  Right.
  13   Q.  But it appeared that they were taking it and selling it or
  14   doing something other than allowing people who were starving
  15   to eat; isn't that correct?
  16   A.  That is correct.
  17   Q.  Now, you went into Somalia in your capacity as soldier; is
  18   that correct?
  19   A.  Yes.
  20   Q.  And you went in after having been trained as a soldier;
  21   isn't that correct?
  22   A.  Yes.
  23   Q.  You were trained, prior to your training in aviation, in
  24   other areas as a soldier; isn't that correct?
  25   A.  Yes.
                                                                4437
   1   Q.  And at some point you got trained as an aviator and you
   2   became a helicopter pilot; isn't that correct?
   3   A.  Correct.
   4   Q.  And you had training in flying helicopters prior to going
   5   to Somalia; isn't that correct?
   6   A.  Yes.
   7   Q.  And you were trained in using ammunition; isn't that
   8   correct?
   9   A.  Yes.
  10   Q.  You were trained in using ammunition on the ground; is
  11   that correct?
  12   A.  Yes.
  13   Q.  And also using ammunition from your helicopter; isn't that
  14   correct?
  15   A.  Correct.
  16   Q.  Now, you were also trained in how to defend yourself from
  17   attack; isn't that correct?
  18   A.  Correct.
  19   Q.  That's part of what you have called your ROE, or rules of
  20   engagement; isn't that correct?
  21   A.  Correct.
  22   Q.  Now, you also were trained in how to defend others; isn't
  23   that correct, sir?
  24   A.  Correct.
  25   Q.  As a matter of fact, that was your main purpose in being
                                                                4438
   1   in Somalia, was to defend other people; is that correct?
   2   A.  Are you talking about me as an aviator, what my mission
   3   was?
   4   Q.  Well, okay.
   5   A.  My mission as an aviator, again, on that particular day
   6   was to bring in the ground force, insert them, and then
   7   provide close air cover and fire support for the ground force
   8   so that they could achieve their objective, which was to
   9   detain or go after and grab people that we were interested in
  10   in Aideed's clan.
  11   Q.  Aideed and the upper echelon of his clan; isn't that
  12   correct?
  13   A.  That's correct.
  14   Q.  And that was in the belief that if you got Aideed and the
  15   upper echelon of his clan off the streets of Mogadishu, the
  16   rest of the people in Somalia would have an opportunity to
  17   eat?
  18   A.  Correct.
  19   Q.  They would get some of that food that the United Nations
  20   was bringing in?
  21   A.  Correct.
  22   Q.  That some of the chaos would be reduced?
  23   A.  Yes.
  24   Q.  You were also trained, sir, were you not, in urban
  25   warfare?
                                                                4439
   1   A.  Yes.
   2   Q.  Now, as a soldier when you are in training, you try to get
   3   prepared for whatever may come up; isn't that correct?
   4   A.  Yes.
   5   Q.  Now, you can't know what's going to come up, right?
   6   A.  Correct.
   7   Q.  For instance, when you got shot down, you didn't know
   8   whether or not you would be able to make it to where you
   9   landed or not; is that correct?
  10   A.  Correct.
  11   Q.  But your training kicked in, right?
  12   A.  Yes.
  13   Q.  Your training enabled you to think your way through that
  14   situation and make the landing at the coastline of Somalia;
  15   isn't that correct?
  16   A.  Training and a lot of luck.
  17   Q.  Well, without that, we would all be lost, right?
  18   A.  That's correct.
  19   Q.  Now, sir, you were trained for how long in urban warfare
  20   before you arrived in Mogadishu?
  21   A.  I think as a soldier, the urban environment, you know, you
  22   continuously train or at least talk about training in the
  23   urban environment.  Now, when I became of the 160th, we tried
  24   to again do it annually, at least a couple times a year try to
  25   get to an urban area and try in that environment.  So a couple
                                                                4440
   1   times a year for the preceding three years.
   2   Q.  And that urban warfare training had absolutely nothing to
   3   do with your mission in Mogadishu, did it?
   4   A.  Correct.
   5   Q.  Now, sir, I want to talk for a moment, if I might, about
   6   Somalia, just looking at the Country of Somalia, if we could.
   7            MR. WILFORD:  Mr. Keneally, I need to have the
   8   defense tuned in on the system, on the technology system.
   9   Q.  Would you take a look at your screen.
  10            MR. WILFORD:  Your Honor, there is an agreement
  11   between the government and Mr. Odeh that this can go into
  12   evidence as Odeh A, as in Adam, 5.
  13            MR. FITZGERALD:  That's correct, Judge.
  14            THE COURT:  A5.  And this is a map of Somalia?
  15            MR. WILFORD:  Yes.
  16            THE COURT:  It is received.
  17            (Defendant Odeh Exhibit A5 received in evidence)
  18   BY MR. WILFORD:
  19   Q.  Would you be kind enough, Captain -- I'm sorry, Agent
  20   Yacone, to look at the map of Somalia, and could you indicate
  21   where it was that you landed on the coastline when your
  22   helicopter was shot down?
  23   A.  The map's really too large of a scale, but where you see
  24   Mogadishu.
  25   Q.  In that general vicinity?
                                                                4441
   1   A.  Correct, right near the coast.
   2   Q.  And when you said that you were a little bit south of
   3   Mogadishu on some other occasions, it was basically in that
   4   general area; isn't that correct?
   5   A.  Yes.
   6   Q.  You weren't 600 kilometers away, were you?
   7   A.  No, we were maybe ten miles, fifteen miles.
   8   Q.  Maximum?
   9   A.  Yes, that's correct.
  10   Q.  And would that be in a ten-mile radius around Mogadishu?
  11   A.  Yes.
  12   Q.  So your whole time that you were in Somalia, you never
  13   went to the north or to the south?
  14   A.  To the best of my recollection, no.  I mean, not more
  15   than, you know, ten, fifteen miles away from the city.
  16   Q.  The reason that you never went anywhere else is because
  17   that's where Aideed was and that was the person that you
  18   wanted to arrest, not you personally, but the United States
  19   and the United Nations?
  20   A.  And that's where I don't necessarily know that Aideed was,
  21   but that's where the majority of his clan was and the strong
  22   hold of his clan, the important members.
  23   Q.  Now, when you talked about, on your direct examination and
  24   in your prior cross-examination, I believe you mentioned that
  25   you had six prior operations?
                                                                4442
   1   A.  Yes.
   2   Q.  During those other operations did you in fact have an
   3   opportunity or need to discharge any of your weapons from the
   4   helicopter?
   5   A.  Yes.  Very limited, but yes.
   6   Q.  Do you know whether or not, as a result of the discharge
   7   of your weapons from the helicopter, any people on the ground
   8   died, any Somalians died?
   9   A.  I believe, I believe so.  Again, we were -- the one
  10   particular instance that I recall is we were essentially
  11   trying to break contact.  We were being fired upon, we fired
  12   back and continued on.  We were -- it was during the
  13   exfiltration or the carrying out of the ground force and the
  14   ground force and the ground convoy engaged where the enemy
  15   fire was coming from as well.  So I'm not sure the effects of
  16   our fires.
  17   Q.  But you do know that as a result of the engagement on
  18   October 3rd and October 4th, 500 Somalians died and at least
  19   1,000 were injured; is that correct?
  20   A.  That was a Red Cross number that was furnished to us after
  21   the battle.
  22   Q.  Now, you mentioned some terms that I'm really not familiar
  23   with.  I wanted to, just if you could clarify them.
  24            You said that during the course of your hovering over
  25   crash site number one, I believe, there was some targets that
                                                                4443
   1   needed to be engaged.  What does that mean, targets?
   2   A.  Essentially what would happen is we would observe somebody
   3   with a weapon shooting at our soldiers or shooting at the
   4   aircraft and we would -- the door gunners would engage them
   5   with the door guns.
   6   Q.  They would try to shoot them?
   7   A.  Yes.
   8   Q.  Now, sir, when you observed these people shooting at your
   9   soldiers, were they shooting light weapons?  Were they
  10   shooting RPGs only?  What were they shooting?
  11   A.  The majority, we saw AK-47s, RPGs, other more antiquated
  12   sub-machine guns, Soviet variants.  That's about it.
  13            THE COURT:  That's, the people you observed on the
  14   ground were using those weapons?
  15            THE WITNESS:  That's correct.
  16            THE COURT:  Was that your question?
  17            MR. WILFORD:  Yes.
  18   Q.  And they were shooting, the observation you made from the
  19   helicopter was people on the ground were shooting at other
  20   U.S. troops on the ground with those weapons; is that correct?
  21   A.  They were shooting at U.S. troops, they were shooting at
  22   my aircraft, my wing man.
  23   Q.  So the fire that was being presented towards your
  24   helicopter was both RPG and other weapons?
  25   A.  Yes.
                                                                4444
   1   Q.  Light weapons?
   2   A.  Yes.  There was, also, later on that evening with the use
   3   of night vision goggles we had seen heavy tracers from what
   4   appeared to be a much larger weapon, which was some sort of an
   5   anti-aircraft weapon that we didn't realize was operational
   6   during the day, but at night we could see the tracers and knew
   7   it was something a lot greater than a AK-47.
   8   Q.  By the way, is it correct that your operation on October 3
   9   started around 4:00, 3:00 or 4:00 in the afternoon?
  10   A.  About 3:30.
  11   Q.  And, sir, you mention that there was shrapnel that came
  12   out of these RPGs that were exploding near and around your
  13   helicopter; is that correct?
  14   A.  Correct.
  15   Q.  Do you have any idea, sir, how close you would have to be
  16   to the location of the RPG explosion for the shrapnel to hit?
  17   A.  I think that would depend on what it impacted upon.  If it
  18   was an air burst up in the sky, you know, you could be
  19   probably 50 meters away and still receive effects of the
  20   shrapnel being disbursed by the explosion.
  21   Q.  50 meters?
  22   A.  Well, it depends on where it explodes, but again, if it's
  23   hitting a wall and you're in a building, it would be a lot
  24   closer.  15 meters, 10 meters.
  25   Q.  And, sir, you also mentioned that you saw collapsed
                                                                4445
   1   buildings while you were hovering between crash site one and
   2   crash site two; is that correct?
   3   A.  The collapsed buildings I think you are referring to is
   4   the one where Supersix 4, the second aircraft, crashed on top
   5   of.
   6   Q.  So there weren't other buildings that had collapsed during
   7   the course of your time period in Mogadishu as a result of any
   8   kind of fire from helicopters or from people on the ground?
   9   A.  Not to my recollection, no.
  10   Q.  Now, would it be a fair statement that the number of RPGs
  11   on the ground at Mogadishu were about as common as dust mops?
  12   A.  I think I know the document you are referring to.  They
  13   were fairly common, yes, that is a true statement.
  14   Q.  Would it also be fair that it appeared as though every
  15   other person had an AK-47?
  16   A.  Correct.
  17   Q.  So basically this is a situation where a lot of people
  18   were walking around with some artillary?
  19   A.  With weapons, yes.
  20   Q.  I'm sorry, as a military -- some weapons?
  21   A.  Right.
  22   Q.  Not cannons, but weapons.
  23            Now, it's also fair to say, then, that in Mogadishu
  24   there was a high concentration of weapons that were readily
  25   available for purchase or acquisition?
                                                                4446
   1   A.  The intelligence that we had prior to 3 October didn't
   2   indicate that we would see the amount of weapons and certainly
   3   RPGs that we saw on 3 October.  In other words, we had no idea
   4   that we were going to see that volume of fire come from the
   5   enemy.  That was my understanding from the intelligence
   6   briefings that we received pretty much on a daily basis.
   7            So I think we were pretty much surprised at the
   8   volume of fire that they brought to bear on 3 October.
   9   Q.  And would it be fair to say, sir, that the intelligence
  10   that you were aware of was that the weapons had been provided
  11   by both the Russians and Americans during their support of the
  12   prior regime of Siyad Barre?
  13   A.  No.  I'm not aware of that.
  14   Q.  Sir, I just have a couple more questions.
  15            So on October 3rd, 1993, your specific mission was to
  16   arrest Aideed and/or members of his clan who were supposed to
  17   be present at a particular location; is that correct?
  18   A.  Correct.
  19   Q.  And that was in response not only to the U.N. warrant, but
  20   also in response to fatal ambushes that had been conducted by
  21   members of his clan against United Nations personnel; isn't
  22   that correct?
  23   A.  Correct.
  24   Q.  Now, sir, because of your efforts on October 3 and October
  25   4, 1996, you were decorated; isn't that correct?
                                                                4447
   1   A.  Correct.
   2   Q.  And, sir, do you know the date specific on or about when
   3   the United Nations and the United States troops pulled out of
   4   Somalia?
   5   A.  Not the exact date, but it was within months after we left
   6   in October.  They started the withdrawal and it took a period
   7   of time but they started the withdrawal within months of us
   8   leaving in October.
   9   Q.  So it would be fair to say, as far as you knew, in 1997
  10   there were no U.S. troops in Somalia; is that correct, as far
  11   as you know?
  12   A.  As far as I know, you're correct.  I have no knowledge of
  13   what troops were over there.  I was in the FBI in '95.
  14   Q.  In 1995 there were no U.S. troops in Somalia; is that
  15   correct?
  16   A.  I'm not --
  17   Q.  As far as you know.
  18   A.  I'm not sure.
  19   Q.  Unless you were involved in some sort of covert operation,
  20   you wouldn't know of any?
  21   A.  I didn't know of any.
  22            MR. WILFORD:  Thank you very much.  No further
  23   questions.
  24            THE COURT:  Mr. Cohn, on behalf of Defendant
  25   Al-'Owhali.
                                                                4448
   1   CROSS-EXAMINATION
   2   BY MR. COHN:
   3   Q.  Now, these Somali casualties that you referred to, 500
   4   dead and a thousand wounded which was the estimate or the
   5   number reported by the Red Cross, right?
   6   A.  Correct.
   7   Q.  Do you know whether or not any of the dead or wounded were
   8   noncombatants?
   9   A.  I have no knowledge.
  10   Q.  Well, Mogadishu is a city of about a million and a half
  11   people, right?
  12   A.  Correct.
  13   Q.  And fairly crowded conditions?
  14   A.  Yes.
  15   Q.  And in fact, at one time you referred to it as an armed
  16   city; is that right?
  17   A.  Say again.
  18   Q.  You have referred to it in your own words as an armed
  19   city, have you not?
  20   A.  Yes.
  21   Q.  And in fact, the words that Mr. Wilford used, "common as
  22   dust mops," were your words in a debriefing that you had,
  23   correct?
  24   A.  Not correct.
  25   Q.  Not correct?
                                                                4449
   1   A.  I think that was one of the crew member's that was being
   2   interviewed with me from my crew.
   3   Q.  Pardon?
   4   A.  That was one of the other crew members of my crew that was
   5   being interviewed during that time.
   6   Q.  I see.  It's not your interview?
   7   A.  That is correct.
   8   Q.  Were you present while he was being interviewed?
   9   A.  Yes, I was.
  10   Q.  You didn't object to his use of the terms, did you?
  11   A.  I don't know that I understood his analogy.
  12   Q.  Well, you knew "as common as dust mops" was sort of a
  13   derogatory kind of --
  14            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection.
  15            THE COURT:  Sustained.
  16   Q.  In any event, crowded city, armed city, and the weaponry
  17   that the -- your contingent, the U.S. Army contingent, was
  18   using could be characterized as weapons that were effective at
  19   reasonably long-range, is that not true?
  20   A.  Yes, but we traditionally used close ranges to engage the
  21   enemy.
  22   Q.  Well, I mean, and when the Blackhawks were up, were the
  23   lights of surveillance helicopters also up?
  24   A.  Yes, there were.  They were at a much higher altitude than
  25   we were.
                                                                4450
   1   Q.  And they are in fact equipped with something called a mini
   2   gun, aren't they?
   3   A.  Yes.
   4   Q.  And a mini gun fires 6,000 rounds per minute, does it not?
   5   A.  No.
   6   Q.  How many rounds per minute does it --
   7   A.  2,000 on low rate and 4,000 rounds a minute on high rate.
   8   Q.  Okay.  It's a lot of bullets, right?
   9   A.  Yes, it is.
  10   Q.  They're large bullets; they're rifle rounds, right?
  11   A.  Correct.
  12   Q.  And at that rate of fire, pinpoint accuracy is not a high
  13   priority, is it?
  14   A.  It's definitely a priority.
  15   Q.  I said a high priority.
  16   A.  Absolutely.  It's a high priority whenever you are
  17   engaging somebody.
  18   Q.  So these were accurate weapons that you would point at one
  19   person and shoot 2,000 rounds into what's left of that person
  20   after half a second?
  21   A.  Well, again, you're not shooting for a minute continuous,
  22   but that is an area suppression weapon, you are correct, but
  23   you can use it and minimize the effects of the fire with a
  24   short burst.
  25   Q.  And with an area suppression weapon sometimes it's not
                                                                4451
   1   easy to tell when you use it who are the friendlies and who
   2   are the not friendlies, is it?
   3   A.  No, that's not correct.
   4   Q.  You can always tell?
   5   A.  We were flying at altitudes that we could tell.
   6   Q.  Well, they were above you, right, the helicopters with the
   7   mini guns?  They were up higher?
   8   A.  The mini birds, no, not necessarily.  We tried to
   9   deconflict air space and they would stay in an orbit outside
  10   of the Blackhawks and a little bit above us.  But again, to
  11   make an engagement, they would do a gun run and they would,
  12   you know, maneuver the aircraft and dive it down and engage
  13   the enemy after a positive identification of what they were
  14   shooting at.
  15   Q.  You will agree with me, will you not, that in the heat of
  16   the moment, using the weaponry that was being used, that it
  17   was likely that noncombatants were killed or wounded, isn't
  18   that true?
  19   A.  I would say that, yes.  It was not likely, but I'm sure
  20   that there were a few noncombatants that were definitely --
  21   Q.  It's a risk that was assessed by command and deemed --
  22            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection, your Honor.
  23   Q.  -- acceptable?
  24            THE COURT:  Ask him whether he knows.
  25   Q.  Do you know if this was a risk that would normally be
                                                                4452
   1   assessed by command?
   2   A.  Absolutely.  Command --
   3   Q.  That's why you have rules of engagement, right?
   4   A.  Sure.
   5   Q.  Because you don't want innocent people hurt if it's not
   6   necessary, right?
   7   A.  That's absolutely correct.
   8   Q.  But sometimes one takes a look at the risks, sees what the
   9   mission is, and accepts the risk, right?
  10   A.  Civilian casualties are not acceptable, but unfortunately
  11   they sometimes happen.
  12   Q.  Sometimes?
  13   A.  Is that what you are saying?
  14   Q.  I'm asking.  I don't say anything, sir.  Asking.
  15   A.  To kind of summarize exactly what happened, after 30 or 40
  16   minutes or longer over the objective area, as battle is raging
  17   on, people coming towards the fight are obviously coming
  18   towards the fight for a reason.  People --
  19   Q.  Curiosity could be one of them, couldn't it?
  20            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection, your Honor.  Can he
  21   finish the answer?
  22            THE COURT:  Yes.  Sustained.
  23   A.  If you are asking me if I'm aware of any civilian
  24   casualties that were sustained, I'm not directly aware of -- I
  25   can assume that I'm sure there were.  Of that 500 that were
                                                                4453
   1   killed, were there some innocent civilians?  Possibly, but I
   2   don't have direct knowledge of it.
   3   Q.  Have you ever considered the question before this day?
   4   A.  Sure.
   5   Q.  Do you know whether any of the people who were killed were
   6   women or children?
   7   A.  I know in fact that, you know, we saw women as ammo
   8   bearers serve --
   9   Q.  Sir, can you just answer the question.
  10            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection.
  11   A.  I'm answering the question.
  12            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, would you instruct the witness
  13   to answer the question.
  14   A.  I'm about to.
  15            MR. COHN:  The question was phrased in a way --
  16            THE COURT:  You want to withdraw the question?
  17            MR. COHN:  No, I want an answer to it, which says, do
  18   you know whether or not there were women or children killed.
  19            THE COURT:  You may answer that question yes or no.
  20   Just yes or no.
  21   A.  Yes.
  22   Q.  And were there women and children killed?
  23   A.  Yes.
  24            MR. COHN:  Thank you.
  25            THE COURT:  Anything further from defendants?
                                                                4454
   1            Redirect.
   2            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes, Judge.
   3   REDIRECT EXAMINATION
   4   BY MR. FITZGERALD:
   5   Q.  On that last question, Agent Yacone.  Did you see any of
   6   the women engaging in hostile action at the U.S. troops?
   7   A.  Yes, absolutely, that was what I was alluding to was my
   8   aircraft, we engaged a couple women that were involved in
   9   resupplying rocket propeller grenades who were fed to a guy
  10   that was shooting RPGs.  So they were acting as ammo bearers.
  11   They were also carrying weapons and shooting and it was not
  12   uncommon to see a hostile, you know, male have a
  13   woman in front of him kind of as a human shield and,
  14   you know, engage the enemy or engage friendly troops
  15   or the aircraft.
  16   Q.  And do the women appear to be willing shields when they do
  17   this?
  18            MR. COHN:  Objection.
  19            I'm sorry, can I have the question again?
  20            THE COURT:  Excuse me?
  21            MR. COHN:  Did they?
  22            THE COURT:  Could you repeat the question?
  23   Q.  Did the women appear to be shields against their will,
  24   carrying ammo against their will?
  25            MR. COHN:  Objection.
                                                                4455
   1            THE COURT:  You can answer.
   2   A.  I can talk about my one engagement that I'm --
   3            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, there's an objection.
   4            MR. COHN:  We need --
   5            THE COURT:  The objection to the question, did the
   6   women appear to be --
   7            MR. COHN:  Willing shields, yes, I objected to that.
   8            THE COURT:  Well, were you able to see whether that
   9   was the occasion or not?
  10            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, that calls for the operation
  11   of somebody else's mind.
  12            THE COURT:  No.  No.
  13            Were you able to see?
  14            THE WITNESS:  The women that, or the one or -- the
  15   one instance that I'm specifically speaking of, your Honor?
  16            THE COURT:  Yes.
  17            THE WITNESS:  The woman was carrying rocket propeller
  18   warfare.  She was involved in resupplying warfare and she was
  19   participating, she looked like a wilful participant of what
  20   was going on.
  21            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, it was not responsive to the
  22   question.  It's about being a human shield.
  23            MR. FITZGERALD:  I object to Mr. Cohn's remarks.
  24            THE COURT:  Objection is overruled.
  25   Q.  Now, sir, do you know if any of the Somali participants
                                                                4456
   1   killed any innocent bystanders when they were shooting?
   2   A.  Again, I can only assume that happened, but I have no
   3   personal knowledge.  I didn't witness it.
   4   Q.  Now, you were asked questions by Mr. Wilford about whether
   5   or not there were attacks by Aideed involving ambushes
   6   separate and apart from October 3, 1993.  Do you recall those
   7   questions?
   8   A.  Yes.
   9            MR. SCHMIDT:  Objection.
  10   Q.  Were there also attacks on U.S. troops involving land
  11   mines?
  12            MR. SCHMIDT:  Objection, your Honor.  This was not
  13   covered in cross-examination, either one of those questions.
  14            THE COURT:  Overruled.
  15   Q.  Were there also attacks by mortars?
  16   A.  Yes.
  17   Q.  Would you explain to the jury what a mortar is?
  18            MR. SCHMIDT:  Objection, your Honor.  Let's get the
  19   source of his information before he can talk about what --
  20            THE COURT:  Establish the basis of the witness.
  21   Q.  Did you yourself witness a mortar attack on which U.S.
  22   personnel was killed?
  23   A.  Yes.
  24   Q.  Tell us what happened and when.
  25   A.  Again, we were -- the airfield we were sitting on was
                                                                4457
   1   surrounded on three sides by the City of Mogadishu where the
   2   clan operated, and commonly they would set up a mortar tube,
   3   which is maybe a three-foot tube with maybe a one-foot round.
   4   They would drop in the tube and launch a mortar tube, mortar
   5   round into the compound where they were staying, against the
   6   aircraft, against the personnel that were staying at the
   7   forward support base.  And that would generally happen after
   8   the hours of darkness where they could hide in the city.  They
   9   could drop a couple mortars, pick up the tube and move and get
  10   away from the area where they just shot from.
  11            On a few days after 3 October, we had sustained
  12   mortar attacks, probably every two or three days we would get
  13   mortared, and on 5 or 6 October we had our first casualty.  A
  14   guy named Matt Rierson was killed from a mortar round and 16
  15   other people in our contingents were injured.
  16   Q.  And how do you know this?
  17   A.  I was sitting maybe 50 to 100 feet away from where the
  18   round went off.
  19   Q.  Do you know the identities of the persons who carried out
  20   the ambushes, the land mine attacks or the mortar attacks?
  21   A.  No.
  22   Q.  And do you know of the identities or nationality of the
  23   people who carried out these attacks or trained people to
  24   carry out these attacks?
  25   A.  Well, I know from the intelligence --
                                                                4458
   1            MR. WILFORD:  Objection.
   2            THE COURT:  The answer is yes.  Now ask another
   3   question.
   4   A.  Yes.
   5   Q.  Mr. Wilford asked you whether or not Aideed's clan had
   6   carried out ambushes against the U.S. troops.  Do you know for
   7   a fact one way or the other who it was that was training these
   8   people how to do this?
   9            MR. WILFORD:  Objection.
  10            THE COURT:  Overruled.
  11   A.  Can you rephrase the question?
  12   Q.  My question to you, do you know if the people who trained
  13   the persons who carried out their attacks, do you know if they
  14   are from Aideed's clan or someone else, if you know?
  15   A.  We were not aware of, but we had received intelligence --
  16            MR. SCHMIDT:  Objection, your Honor.
  17   A.  -- reports --
  18            MR. SCHMIDT:  Objection.
  19            THE COURT:  Overruled.
  20   A.  We had received intelligence reports that they were
  21   intercepting -- to drop a mortar round on somebody, it
  22   requires a communication between the spotter, the guy talking
  23   to the guy firing the mortar of where he wants the round to
  24   land and then actually where it lands and he adjusts the
  25   mortar round, and we were -- the U.S. was picking off radio
                                                                4459
   1   transmissions in Arabic of the mortars being adjusted on the
   2   airfield.
   3            MR. FITZGERALD:  Nothing further, Judge.
   4            THE COURT:  Anything further of this witness?
   5            MR. SCHMIDT:  Yes.
   6   RECROSS-EXAMINATION
   7   BY MR. SCHMIDT:
   8   Q.  Do you have a copy of these intelligence reports for us to
   9   review, sir?
  10   A.  No.  We were given daily briefings while we were over
  11   there.
  12   Q.  You said that women and children were even
  13   participating --
  14            THE COURT:  I don't recall any testimony -- the
  15   jury's recollection will control.  I didn't recall anything,
  16   any reference being made to children participating.
  17            MR. SCHMIDT:  There was and it was interrupted.  I'll
  18   limit myself to women.
  19   Q.  You said that there were women involved in assisting in
  20   attacking -- or, withdrawn -- reacting to the attack by the
  21   Americans, isn't that right?
  22            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection to form.
  23            THE COURT:  Yes, sustained.
  24   Q.  You said that there were women who were involved in
  25   reacting to the American military operation, isn't that right?
                                                                4460
   1   A.  I was talking about the one particular engagement that my
   2   aircraft made when we spotted a woman carrying rocket
   3   propeller grenades.
   4   Q.  Now, based on your briefings, wasn't it a fact that women
   5   were not part of militias in this Muslim country?
   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection, your Honor.
   7            MR. SCHMIDT:  He's allowed to talk about what his
   8   briefings are.
   9            THE COURT:  Please don't argue.
  10            Overruled.  You may answer.
  11   A.  I'm not really sure.
  12   Q.  Isn't it a fact that by October 3, as a result of the Abdi
  13   House attack and other attacks by U.N. and U.S. armed
  14   forces --
  15            THE COURT:  You are asking a question which has a
  16   causal relationship to something that occurred before this
  17   witness was here.  You want to re-think your question?
  18            MR. SCHMIDT:  No, I don't, your Honor.
  19            THE COURT:  Very well.  You may ask the question.
  20   Q.  As a result of the attacks --
  21            MR. FITZGERALD:  I object, your Honor.
  22            MR. SCHMIDT:  I'll withdraw that question.
  23   Q.  As a result of the military operations that you were aware
  24   of that occurred during the time that you were there and
  25   previous to the time that you were there, the Aideed clan and
                                                                4461
   1   supporters were -- felt they had to defend themselves against
   2   further operations?
   3            MR. WILFORD:  Objection.
   4            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection.
   5            THE COURT:  Mr. Wilford's objection is sustained.
   6   Q.  As to the -- I think you answered that -- withdrawn.
   7            You previously testified that the militia that the
   8   American troops were fighting appeared to be well-organized;
   9   is that right?
  10   A.  As far as the enemy clan, yes, they had a rank structure.
  11   Q.  Were you made aware in your briefings to enable you to
  12   understand your enemy that the Somali people had been at war
  13   with each other for a number of years before the U.N. and the
  14   U.S. troops arrived?
  15   A.  Yes.
  16   Q.  And that they had been fighting and killing each other
  17   during the years before the Americans had arrived?
  18   A.  Yes.
  19   Q.  And that they were doing that with AK-47s, RPGs, and other
  20   weapons?
  21   A.  Yes.
  22   Q.  And that every militia group in the Mogadishu area had a
  23   very large amount of weapons?
  24   A.  No.
  25            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection to form.
                                                                4462
   1   Q.  You said that there was a mortar attack on the base
   2   October 5th and 6th; is that correct?
   3   A.  It was either the 5th or the 6th.
   4   Q.  Those were the last American casualties in Somalia, isn't
   5   that right?
   6   A.  I'm not sure of that.  From my Unit Task Force Ranger that
   7   was over there, yes.
   8   Q.  When did you leave?
   9   A.  Mid to late October.
  10   Q.  When did the rest of the U.S. -- withdrawn.  The rest of
  11   the U.S. troops you testified left within months after that
  12   attack; is that correct?
  13   A.  That was when they started the withdrawal, but I'm not
  14   sure when the final American troops were pulled out.
  15   Q.  And is it fair to say you know of no other American
  16   casualty in Somalia since October 6th of 1993, is that
  17   correct?
  18   A.  I have no idea, no.
  19   Q.  It's correct that you have no knowledge?
  20   A.  That is correct.
  21   Q.  Did you remain in service after you left Somalia?
  22   A.  Yes.
  23   Q.  For how long did you remain in service?
  24   A.  I left there, again, October '93 and I got out of the army
  25   in February '95 and right into the FBI.
                                                                4463
   1            MR. SCHMIDT:  I have no further questions of this
   2   witness.
   3            THE COURT:  Anything further of this witness?
   4            MR. WILFORD:  Yes, your Honor.
   5            THE COURT:  Mr. Wilford.
   6   RECROSS-EXAMINATION
   7   BY MR. WILFORD:
   8   Q.  Agent Yacone, while you were in Somalia, did you hear
   9   people speaking a variety of languages?
  10   A.  We really didn't interact much with the people outside the
  11   airport, so, no.  I mean, I wasn't really aware of any other
  12   languages other than, you know, the people speaking Somali.
  13   Q.  You were speaking English --
  14            I'm sorry, were you finished?
  15   A.  Again, I was going to say that I don't know that I would
  16   personally be able to differentiate between Somalian and
  17   another language.  I don't know the language that well.
  18   Q.  But you were speaking English; is that correct?
  19   A.  Correct.
  20   Q.  And you said that you had some intelligence about Arabic;
  21   is that correct?
  22   A.  That is correct.
  23   Q.  And there's also the native language of Somalia; isn't
  24   that correct?
  25   A.  Correct.
                                                                4464
   1   Q.  So they had at least three languages that were being
   2   spoken; is that correct?
   3   A.  Yes.
   4   Q.  At least three?
   5   A.  That I was aware of.
   6   Q.  Sir, do you know that the second language in Somalia is
   7   Arabic, do you know that?
   8   A.  I didn't know that, no.
   9   Q.  Sir, you mentioned -- or, withdrawn.  You were asked some
  10   questions about training.  Remember those questions by Mr.
  11   Fitzgerald?
  12   A.  Which ones that referred to training?
  13   Q.  About Aideed's group.
  14            Well, do you remember being asked the question about
  15   who was training Aideed's group, if you knew?
  16   A.  I'm not really sure.
  17   Q.  You're not really sure if you remember the question?
  18   A.  No, I'm not really sure who was training Aideed's group.
  19   Q.  And you weren't even sure that Aideed's group was being
  20   trained by someone else, isn't that fair?
  21   A.  The reason why I remember about the Arabic intercepts of
  22   Intel being given to us was because that was thought to be
  23   unique, the fact that we were picking up Arabic, adjusting
  24   mortar rounds on us, so that led the Intel briefing to say,
  25   hey, there may be other people here training Aideed's clan.
                                                                4465
   1   Q.  Okay.  Now, that's what Intel said, right?
   2   A.  That is correct.
   3   Q.  But you don't know for a fact and Intel didn't know for a
   4   fact whether or not the Arabic that was being spoken was being
   5   spoken by Somalians?
   6   A.  Correct.
   7   Q.  You don't know for a fact whether or not someone else, and
   8   Intel did not know for a fact whether someone else who was not
   9   Somalian was engaged in training Aideed's people; is that
  10   correct?
  11   A.  I have no knowledge of that.  I can't tell you the total
  12   extent -- I was not privy to all that the intelligence
  13   officers were aware of, but from what I was briefed, I was not
  14   aware.
  15   Q.  And there's nothing that you are aware of, sir, that is
  16   inherent in the fact of being Somalian that would prevent you
  17   from being able to speak another language, is there?
  18   A.  No.
  19   Q.  And there's nothing inherent about being Somalian that
  20   would prevent you from being able to learn how to shoot a
  21   weapon or be trained by another Somalian; is that correct?
  22   A.  Correct.
  23   Q.  Particularly around Mogadishu, is that correct, when we
  24   talk about all these weapons being available?
  25   A.  Correct.
                                                                4466
   1            MR. WILFORD:  Thank you.  Nothing further.
   2            THE COURT:  Anything further of this witness?
   3            MR. FITZGERALD:  No, Judge.
   4            MR. COHN:  Not from me.
   5            THE COURT:  Very well, sir.  Thank you.  You may step
   6   down.
   7            (Witness excused)
   8            THE COURT:  Anything further from the government?
   9            MR. FITZGERALD:  No, Judge.
  10            THE COURT:  Government rests?
  11            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes, Judge.
  12            THE COURT:  Government rests.
  13            Mr. Schmidt.
  14            Mr. Dratel.
  15            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, there is an application
  16   that I would like to make at this point outside of the jury.
  17            MR. WILFORD:  I'm sorry, your Honor.  I didn't hear
  18   Mr. Schmidt.
  19            THE COURT:  He has an application he wishes to make
  20   outside the jury.
  21            Can we reserve on that until after 1:00 with the same
  22   force and effect as if made at this time?
  23            MR. SCHMIDT:  Then no problem, your Honor.  Thank
  24   you.  Yes.
  25            THE COURT:  El Hage may call its next witness.
                                                                4467
   1            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, I think we need a personal
   2   break.
   3            THE COURT:  Excuse me?
   4            MR. COHN:  We need a personal break at the defense
   5   table.
   6            THE COURT:  Personal break?
   7            MR. COHN:  I'm sorry.
   8            THE COURT:  We will take a recess at this time.
   9            (Jury not present)
  10            THE COURT:  Mr. Schmidt.
  11            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, at this time I'm moving for
  12   a mistrial.  This witness testified as to intelligence that he
  13   has given.  One, I do not believe that the door was open for
  14   him to testify as to intelligence that they heard Arabic
  15   speakers on the mortar attack.
  16            Secondly, we don't have access to intelligence
  17   reports and we don't know exactly what the intelligence
  18   reports say that would rebut the inference that the government
  19   wants to draw based on that testimony.
  20            THE COURT:  Wait.  It was defense counsel who sought
  21   to elicit this witness's understanding and his perception of
  22   these events.  There was no need for such questioning.  This
  23   witness's state of mind with respect to or knowledge with
  24   respect to such matters as who carried on the attacks, who
  25   trained the attackers --
                                                                4468
   1            I withdraw the previous comments.
   2            Your motion for a mistrial is based on the witness's
   3   testimony that he had received intelligence reports; that
   4   intelligence reports indicated that communications were
   5   overheard in Arabic, causing the adjustment of mortar fire.
   6   Is that the basis of your motion?
   7            MR. SCHMIDT:  That indeed is the basis, that
   8   testimony, and it's a twofold objection and application as a
   9   result of that testimony.
  10            THE COURT:  Yes.
  11            MR. SCHMIDT:  First was that it was improper to come
  12   out in that manner, being intelligence, and the lack of
  13   relevance to mortar fire and unrelated to not only the October
  14   3 and 4th incident but any other mission that they went on.
  15   It was not relevant at all and it was only done for the
  16   purpose of them eliciting the Arabic language.
  17            Secondly, the second basis is that it refers to
  18   material that we do not have access to, we cannot challenge,
  19   we have no way of testing, we don't know whether it as
  20   accurate.
  21            THE COURT:  I think it was rather effectively dealt
  22   with on the cross-examination by Mr. Wilford, but go ahead.
  23            MR. SCHMIDT:  Well, Mr. Wilford indeed effectively
  24   dealt with it as best as any defense attorney could do.
  25   However, that doesn't eliminate the fact that it is now out
                                                                4469
   1   there based on double, triple or quadruple hearsay, in a
   2   report that are known for not being terribly accurate, and
   3   that we have no access for that there were Arabic people
   4   speaking and helping place mortars.  That, I think, should not
   5   have been there.  There was no basis it being there.
   6            There are numerous conversations that I have had with
   7   personnel involved with Somalia, and they can say there was no
   8   intelligence report indicating anything to do with Bin Laden
   9   or Afghan Arabs or his group, and that would be totally
  10   hearsay; it would be useless and improper for me to bring that
  11   out.  If the government can bring that out, then I guess am I
  12   allowed to bring out a witness who can then say intelligence
  13   reports indicated no direction from Bin Laden, al Qaeda, or
  14   Afghan Arabs at all.
  15            THE COURT:  Why would you be precluded from doing it?
  16            MR. SCHMIDT:  I don't have access to intelligence
  17   reports.  That's double, triple, quadruple hearsay.  You don't
  18   know what the basis is of those reports and, as your Honor is
  19   well aware of and the media is well aware of, that
  20   intelligence reports give out information no matter what the
  21   source is and there is no way that that information can pass
  22   the reliability test unless we know the source of that
  23   information.  So there is no way that that should come in,
  24   especially when we don't even have access to it.
  25            THE COURT:  Mr. Fitzgerald, you you want to respond?
                                                                4470
   1            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes.  First of all, Judge, it was
   2   defense counsel who opened the door as to what this witness
   3   was briefed on, what he had been told about what the dangers
   4   were, what he expected.  This witness basically talked about
   5   the events of a single day, on October 3 to 4th, on direct.
   6            Then, on cross-examination, is what were you
   7   debriefed upon, what you might expect, what kind of danger was
   8   there, who was armed, what weapons are common, what kinds of
   9   weapons are they, where did they come from, where we were they
  10   supplied and what was the response to these attacks, and built
  11   into the questions was the implication all of the people
  12   involved in attacks on U.S. troops were Somali and Aideed and
  13   were trying to establish whether he does not know whether they
  14   were Somali or Aideed.
  15            But they opened the door and asked this witness.  No
  16   one objected when he said this is what I had heard from the
  17   media, this is what he was briefed on.  When they get an
  18   answer they don't like, suddenly the hearsay rule kicks in.  I
  19   think the motion for mistrial should be denied.
  20            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, there's a difference
  21   between --
  22            THE COURT:  I've heard sufficient argument.
  23            Mr. Cohn, briefly.
  24            MR. COHN:  We join the motion.
  25            THE COURT:  Yes, the motion is denied.  Let's bring
                                                                4471
   1   the jury back in.
   2            The jury's lunch is here.  We're adjourned until
   3   2:00.
   4            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, my second application is to
   5   obtain all the briefing reports received by or the
   6   intelligence reports received by this witness and I can
   7   cross-examine him about those reports.
   8            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, you don't get discovery
   9   by walking in on cross into, what's your intelligence, and
  10   then coming back and saying, now I don't like the answer, so
  11   hand it all over eight years after the fact.
  12            THE COURT:  Denied.
  13            We're adjourned.
  14            MR. SCHMIDT:  I did not walk into that.
  15            THE COURT:  We are adjourned until 2:00.
  16            Please don't argue with each other.
  17            We're adjourned until 2:00.
  18            (Luncheon recess)
  19
  20
  21
  22
  23
  24
  25
                                                                4472
   1                 A F T E R N O O N    S E S S I O N
   2                            2:00 p.m.
   3            (In open court; jury not present)
   4            THE COURT:  Have you had an opportunity to discuss
   5   with your client the proposed allocution?
   6            MR. RUHNKE:  Yes, your Honor, we discussed it with my
   7   co-counsel.  We do object to the allocution part.
   8            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, they can't hear.
   9            MR. RUHNKE:  The microphones here are not.
  10            THE INTERPRETER:  The system is not on right now.
  11            MR. RUHNKE:  Initially I had lodged no objection to
  12   your Honor having a colloquy with the client about this issue.
  13   This is basically an issue of trial strategy.
  14            THE COURT:  It may very well be during the first
  15   phase of this case the defendant Al-'Owhali may see fit to
  16   draw comparisons between himself and other defendants such as
  17   your client.  Material may be introduced at the first trial
  18   which inculpates Mr. Mohamed.  Mr. Mohamed by agreeing to two
  19   trials gives up the right to participate during such a
  20   proceeding, to raise objections, to be represented.  The
  21   decision whether or not to seek bifurcation, I agree is a
  22   lawyer's decision to make in the first instance, but unless
  23   your client is prepared to allocute to his conscious foregoing
  24   of the right to participate with respect to the Al-'Owhali
  25   death sentence proceeding, I won't grant it.
                                                                4473
   1            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, if that's the price to pay,
   2   obviously, we believe that separate penalty phases are very
   3   very much in my client's best interest, if your Honor is
   4   saying you will allocute the client over objection.
   5            THE COURT:  I don't understand your objection.  What
   6   is the objection?
   7            MR. RUHNKE:  The objection is that as a matter of
   8   trial strategy and the sort of practice where the Court simply
   9   allocutes a client after the government asks them to do so,
  10   that the Court allocute a client on decisions that lawyers are
  11   making, intrudes in the lawyer-client relationship.
  12            THE COURT:  I will allocute the standard procedure.
  13   I've already done it with respect to Mr. Odeh, and I will do
  14   it with respect to the other defendants, if they elect not to
  15   testify, and that's because they will be giving up a very
  16   fundamental right, and history and experience has told us that
  17   often there is an attempt to second guess that decision.  I
  18   can't distinguish that from foregoing the right to participate
  19   at the trial of a codefendant before the same jury where many
  20   of the same issues will be presented.
  21            MR. RUHNKE:  Your Honor, we've made our position
  22   clear.  If your Honor wishes to inquire of Mr. Mohamed, he is
  23   here.  We've discussed this matter with him thoroughly all
  24   along.  We certainly are not going to have an objection
  25   standing in the way of there not being separate penalty
                                                                4474
   1   phases.
   2            THE COURT:  Mr. Mohamed, your lawyer -- can you hear
   3   me?  Is it being translated?  Do you understand what I'm
   4   saying.  The defendant is nodding his head yes.
   5            Do you understand that if you are convicted of
   6   certain crime, and if Mr. Al-'Owhali is convicted of certain
   7   crime there will be a subsequent proceeding in which the jury
   8   will hear evidence and the arguments of counsel concerning
   9   whether the sentence to be imposed is a sentence of death or
  10   of life imprisonment without possibility of parole?  Do you
  11   understand that?
  12            DEFENDANT MOHAMED:  (Nods head)
  13            THE COURT:  The defendant is nodding his head yes.
  14   Your attorney has requested that there be two separate trials
  15   rather than a jury trial of yourself and Mr. Al-'Owhali, and
  16   that Mr. Al-'Owhali's death sentence trial go first.  You
  17   understand that?
  18            DEFENDANT MOHAMED:  (Nods head)
  19            THE COURT:  Do you understand that if I agree to
  20   separate the two trials that you will not be able to
  21   participate either directly or through your attorney in the
  22   Al-'Owhali death sentence trial?
  23            DEFENDANT MOHAMED:  Yes.
  24            THE COURT:  You understand that.  Do you understand
  25   that at that trial evidence may be introduced and arguments
                                                                4475
   1   may be made on behalf of Mr. Al-'Owhali which may be against
   2   your interests.  Do you understand that?
   3            DEFENDANT MOHAMED:  Yes.
   4            THE COURT:  And that will be made to the same jury as
   5   the jury that will later sit on the trial to determine whether
   6   or not you should receive the death sentence or life
   7   imprisonment.  Do you understand that?
   8            DEFENDANT MOHAMED:  Yes.
   9            THE COURT:  And you understand then that you will
  10   have no opportunity at that first, at the 'Owhali trial to
  11   bring out evidence or to argue to the jury on your behalf?
  12   You understand that?
  13            DEFENDANT MOHAMED:  Yes.
  14            THE COURT:  And is that agreeable to you?
  15            DEFENDANT MOHAMED:  Yes, it is.
  16            THE COURT:  You understand that you have the right to
  17   say no, if there is going to be evidence introduced before
  18   this jury with respect to me, or any of the issues that affect
  19   me I want to participate and I want my lawyer to participate.
  20   You understand that you have that right?
  21            (Pause)
  22            DEFENDANT MOHAMED:  Yes.
  23            THE COURT:  And what is your wish in this regard?
  24            DEFENDANT MOHAMED:  Separate this trial.
  25            THE COURT:  Anything further by way of allocution?
                                                                4476
   1            MR. FITZGERALD:  No, thank you.
   2            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, just before you address the
   3   jury on this issue, I'd like to be heard again sometime.  If
   4   you want to do it now.
   5            THE COURT:  I was going to do at the end of the day.
   6            MR. COHN:  That's why I'm alerting the Court now that
   7   at sometime convenient to the Court and jury.
   8            THE COURT:  How about now?
   9            MR. COHN:  That's fine.
  10            THE COURT:  Go ahead.  What is it you want to say?
  11            MR. COHN:  I have been thinking about the McVeigh
  12   issue and I am convinced that the Court in dismissing the
  13   Shepherd issue is being uncharacteristically short sighted;
  14   that the Court may think of this as a partisan issue, but in
  15   fact it's not.  I mean I can conceive of away of looking at
  16   the McVeigh execution that would repel any sane person as a
  17   circus and make them opposed to the death penalty.
  18            On the other hand, I think that is unlikely.  There
  19   is no way for us to tell, and were this another time in the
  20   trial I would ask the Court for funds to commission a study,
  21   something which I think the Court, given at this point, would
  22   not be happy with.  I suggest respectfully that the Court
  23   commission its own study as to the anticipated effect of the
  24   McVeigh execution and what, I short circuit a long
  25   dissertation by saying, the circus surrounding it as it
                                                                4477
   1   affects the jury.
   2            THE COURT:  Therefore, what would you have the Court
   3   do?
   4            MR. COHN:  Well, I think the Court should not
   5   immediately assume that a jury that is --
   6            THE COURT:  Don't tell me what I shouldn't do.  Tell
   7   me what it is that you want the Court do.
   8            MR. COHN:  I want the Court to hire an expert
   9   suggested by all sides to determine whether or not this jury
  10   can ignore the McVeigh execution and the impact that it may
  11   have with the ultimate view of delaying, of potentially
  12   delaying the penalty phase for some months.
  13            I think Shepherd is in fact terribly apt, not inapt
  14   and that there is no way --
  15            THE COURT:  Tell me how Shepherd relates to this
  16   case.
  17            MR. COHN:  Shepherd says that there was no way of
  18   circumventing publicity at that time and the case should have
  19   been postponed forever.
  20            THE COURT:  With respect to Shepherd.
  21            MR. COHN:  That's right.  And I'm telling the
  22   Court --
  23            THE COURT:  Denied.  Let's bring in the jury, please.
  24            MR. COHN:  Great.
  25            THE COURT:  Who is the next witness.
                                                                4478
   1            MR. DRATEL:  Dr. Samatar, your Honor.
   2            THE COURT:  He may take the stand.  Doctor, if you
   3   just have a seat over here for a moment.
   4            It's my intention to have a charging conference this
   5   afternoon, take as long as it takes and to go over the charge
   6   line by line and page by page dealing with the objections and
   7   other issues.
   8            (Continued on next page)
   9
  10
  11
  12
  13
  14
  15
  16
  17
  18
  19
  20
  21
  22
  23
  24
  25
                                                                4479
   1            (Jury present)
   2            THE COURT:  We're now back on the case on behalf of
   3   the defendant El Hage.  Mr. Dratel, you may call your next
   4   witness.
   5            MR. DRATEL:  Thank you, your Honor, Dr. Abdi Samatar.
   6    ABDI ISMAEL SAMATAR,
   7        called as a witness by the defendant,
   8        having been duly sworn, testified as follows:
   9   DIRECT EXAMINATION
  10   BY MR. DRATEL:
  11   Q.  Dr. Samatar, good afternoon.
  12   A.  Good afternoon.
  13   Q.  Where were you born?
  14   A.  I was born in a country called Dijbouti in East Africa.
  15            MR. DRATEL:  If we could display El Hage E3 to
  16   counsel and the witness, please.
  17            -- E2, I'm sorry.
  18            MR. FITZGERALD:  We won't object if he wants to offer
  19   it in evidence.
  20            MR. DRATEL:  I would move it into evidence.
  21            THE COURT:  Received.
  22            (Defendant's Exhibit E2 received in evidence)
  23            MR. DRATEL:  It's on its side.  Turn it around.
  24   Q.  Is that a map of Somalia and Dijbouti?
  25   A.  That's a map of Somalia, Kenya, Ethopia and Dijbouti.
                                                                4480
   1            MR. DRATEL:  I move it in evidence, your Honor.
   2            MR. FITZGERALD:  No objection.
   3            THE COURT:  Received.
   4            MR. DRATEL:  If we can publish it to the jury,
   5   please.
   6   Q.  Would you point out Dijbouti?
   7   A.  Dijbouti's in the northeast corner.
   8   Q.  Just turning to the coloring, the yellow part is Somalia,
   9   is that correct?
  10   A.  It seems like yellow color is Somalia.
  11            THE COURT:  It's the very, very top of the map.
  12            THE WITNESS:  That's correct.
  13   Q.  Right where the yellow part is in the top left that would
  14   be Dijbouti.  That's where you were born?
  15   A.  That's where I was born, right.
  16   Q.  And what citizenship do you hold?
  17   A.  I'm an American citizen.
  18   Q.  And what is the highest degree that you've received?
  19   A.  I have received a doctoral of philosophy from the
  20   University of California.
  21   Q.  In what specialized area?
  22   A.  I'm a geographer specializing in development studies and
  23   world development.
  24   Q.  What was the topic of your thesis, your doctoral thesis?
  25   A.  The topic of my doctoral thesis was on Somalia.
                                                                4481
   1   Q.  And you also hold a masters degree?
   2   A.  I have a master's degree in community and regional
   3   planning.
   4   Q.  And from what institution?
   5   A.  Iowa State University in Iowa.
   6   Q.  And you have a bachelors degree as well?
   7   A.  I have a bachelors degree in geography and economics from
   8   the University of Wisconsin.
   9   Q.  What is your current employment?
  10   A.  I was just promoted to a professor at the University of
  11   Minnesota.
  12   Q.  It's Professor of geography?
  13   A.  Geography.
  14   Q.  Have you written on Somalia?  Have you written about
  15   Somalia in academic journals?
  16   A.  I have a book published by the University of Wisconsin
  17   Press which was published in 1989, and then I have something
  18   in the order of about 17, 18 articles on international
  19   academic journals on Somalia.
  20   Q.  And have you, have you been to Somalia?
  21   A.  I go to Somalia every year and I was there in last August.
  22   Q.  And have you ever been consulted by the United States
  23   State Department with respect to Somalia?
  24   A.  I was brought as a member of a committee in 1992 before
  25   the American troops were sent to Somalia as part of the United
                                                                4482
   1   Nations.
   2   Q.  And the purpose of your being -- what was the purpose of
   3   your consultation with the State Department?
   4   A.  The purpose of the consultation was to inform and educate
   5   our officers in that place, in Washington, about the
   6   conditions in Somalia at the time.
   7   Q.  And have you previously been qualified as an expert on
   8   Somalia in court?
   9   A.  Yes.  I have numerous occasions maybe in the order of
  10   about ten times as an expert witness on asylum cases in the
  11   United States.
  12   Q.  That would be immigration cases?
  13   A.  Immigration cases.
  14   Q.  And what languages do you speak?
  15   A.  I speak English apparently, Somali, Arabic and a couple of
  16   other local languages in East Africa.
  17   Q.  And is Somalia included in your curriculum as a professor?
  18   A.  Yes.  I don't teach any course on Somalia, but in many of
  19   the courses I teach usually for or five a year, parts of the
  20   reading deal in Somalia.
  21   Q.  In addition, have you had grants or appointments that
  22   relate to Somalia and the area around Somalia whether it is
  23   Ethopia or Dijbouti?
  24   A.  Yes.  I had a grant in 1986 from something called the
  25   Social Science Research Council based here in New York to do
                                                                4483
   1   work in marketing in Somalia.  I had a grant from the World
   2   Bank in Washington to do studies in Somalia, Mogadishu upper
   3   and lower Somalia, and I have a few others over the years.
   4   Q.  Anything in Ethiopia?
   5   A.  I was in Ethiopia as a US government Fulbright scholar in
   6   1999.
   7            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, I would move to have
   8   Mr. Samatar qualified as an expert at this time.
   9            MR. FITZGERALD:  No objection.
  10            THE COURT:  He may so testify.
  11            MR. DRATEL:  Thank you, your Honor.
  12   Q.  Now, just getting back to language for a moment, is Arabic
  13   spoken in Somalia?
  14   A.  Arabic is spoken, not as sort of everyday language, but
  15   it's taught in schools.  Every child who goes to public
  16   schools from grade one on.
  17   Q.  And how about in Mogadishu itself, the capital city?
  18   A.  Mogadishu when Somalia became independent in 1960 three
  19   languages were used by the government of Somalia, Brit --
  20   English.  I almost said British.  But English, Italian,
  21   because one region of the country was a British colony and the
  22   other part of the country was an Italian colony, and then
  23   Arabic was the third language used by government in official
  24   circles.
  25   Q.  Was Somalia a written language at that time?
                                                                4484
   1   A.  No, it wasn't until 19770-71.
   2   Q.  And was there a particular language -- withdrawn.  Was
   3   Arabic a language that might be used in the Somali military?
   4   A.  Yes, quite a number of Somali officers were trained in
   5   places like Syria, Egypt, Libya, and I believe Iraq as well.
   6   So for them to be trained there they need to speak Arabic.
   7   Q.  Thank you.
   8            If we could go back to E2.  That's on the screen.
   9   Somalia is the area that yellow rather than green?
  10   A.  Correct.
  11   Q.  And can you tell us what it borders on in terms of body of
  12   water?  What Somalia borders in terms of bodies of water?
  13   A.  Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Aden.
  14   Q.  And the Indian Ocean would be to the east?
  15   A.  Indian Ocean be to the east.  The Gulf of Aden will be
  16   north.
  17   Q.  Thank you.
  18            If we could put E3 the small box of E3 if we could
  19   display that, please, publishing it to the witness and to
  20   counsel.
  21            Dr. Samatar, do you see the square in that frame?
  22   A.  Yes, I do.
  23   Q.  Is that the a representation of Somalia superimposed on
  24   the United States?
  25   A.  On the eastern part of the United States.
                                                                4485
   1   Q.  Is that a fair and accurate representation of the amount
   2   of territory that Somalia covers in comparison with the United
   3   States?
   4   A.  I have seen this map before and it seems like that.
   5            MR. DRATEL:  I move it in evidence your Honor.
   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  No objection.
   7            THE COURT:  Received.
   8            (Defendant's Exhibit E3 received in evidence)
   9   Q.  Just so the jury is aware, the red part is Somalia
  10   superimposed on to the eastern part of the United States,
  11   correct?
  12   A.  That's correct.
  13   Q.  And the southern part goes as far as Tallahassee, Florida?
  14   A.  That's correct.
  15   Q.  The northeastern part goes north of Albany into Vermont;
  16   is that correct?
  17   A.  That's correct.
  18   Q.  And the western part goes as far west as Kalamazoo,
  19   Michigan?
  20   A.  Yes.
  21   Q.  And also just in terms --
  22   A.  If I may just correct there.  It doesn't go to Kalamazoo.
  23   Dijbouti is where Kalamazoo is.  Somalia would be sort of
  24   eastern part of Michigan.
  25   Q.  Thank you.
                                                                4486
   1            With respect to just in terms of scale a country such
   2   as Sudan in Africa, compared to the United States, what is the
   3   land mass of the Sudan?
   4   A.  Area of the Sudan is about 980,00 square miles which is
   5   about the area of the United States east of the Mississippi
   6   River.
   7   Q.  That's the country of Sudan?
   8   A.  Sudan, correct.
   9   Q.  And if you could, Dr. Samatar, apparently you need to
  10   speak louder or to move the microphone closer to you if it's
  11   possible or move closer to the microphone.  Thank you.
  12            If we could get E2 back up, please.  Thank you.
  13            Actually, that's just, if you can move it up just up
  14   a little bit, and then a little bit to the right.  That's
  15   perfect.
  16            If we could just look at the map and can you tell us
  17   looking at the left border of Somalia, the western border of
  18   Somalia at the bottom there what country is to the left there?
  19   A.  Ethopia and Kenya.
  20   Q.  If you could identify for us the Gedo region of Somalia,
  21   G-E-D-O.  Is that listed on the map?
  22   A.  That's listed on the map and it's the northwest of that
  23   part of Somalia.
  24   Q.  But what part of Somalia would that be?
  25   A.  In terms of the totality of Somalia in terms of area you
                                                                4487
   1   mean?
   2   Q.  Yes.  What geographic region would Gedo be in Somalia?
   3   How would you describe it?
   4   A.  Gedo is the name of administrative province.
   5   Q.  What part of Somalia is it in?
   6   A.  Southern Somalia.
   7   Q.  And just so we can identify some towns that are in the
   8   Gedo area there is Luuq, is that correct?
   9   A.  That's correct.
  10   Q.  And on the border of Kenya is El Wak?
  11   A.  That's correct.
  12   Q.  And just over the border into Kenya is Mandera?
  13   A.  That's correct.
  14   Q.  And could you also point out to us where the town of
  15   Baidea is?
  16   A.  Baidea is in the region of bay, B-A-Y.  It's the central
  17   town spelled as D-A-I-D-O-A.
  18   Q.  That would be to the right of Gedo is that the area?
  19   A.  It would be to the right of Gedo to the southeast of Gedo.
  20   Q.  And the town of Belahowa, can you tell us where that would
  21   be located?
  22   A.  It's not shown on the map, but it will be sort of
  23   northwest of Garbahaarey, directly southwest of Luuq on the
  24   border.
  25   Q.  So Garbahaarey is right there in the middle of Gedo?
                                                                4488
   1   A.  Yes.
   2   Q.  Belahow will be west of that?
   3   A.  Belahow will be west on the Kenya border.
   4   Q.  The distance from Mogadishu if you know?
   5   A.  A little over six hundred kilometers.
   6   Q.  That would be four hundred miles?
   7   A.  About four hundred miles.
   8   Q.  Thank you.
   9            If we could also point out Kissmayo?
  10   A.  Yes, Kissmayo is on the Indian Ocean.  It's the last large
  11   major city in the south on the Jubbada Hoose.
  12   Q.  It's the last city on the map on the bottom on the coast?
  13   A.  That's correct.
  14   Q.  And up the coast is Mogadishu, correct?
  15   A.  Yes.
  16   Q.  And Mogadishu is the capital city?
  17   A.  The former capital of former Somalia.
  18   Q.  Now, in terms of Somalis as an ethnic group, is that
  19   confined just to the country of Somalia?
  20   A.  No, Somalis live in Kenya, in the northeast province of
  21   Kenya, in two areas of Ethopia called the Ogaden and the Haud,
  22   and in Dijbouti and then of course in Somalia proper south.
  23   Q.  And is Somalia the country a state that was created out of
  24   two colonial entities?
  25   A.  Somalia was created out of former British Somaliland and
                                                                4489
   1   former Italian Somaliland.
   2   Q.  So it doesn't necessarily encompass the entirety of the
   3   Somali people?
   4   A.  Not at all.
   5   Q.  If we could show the entire, actually, if we can just show
   6   a little bit north.  Good.  Thank you.
   7            If we can look at the map again, Doctor. the border
   8   between Somalia and Ethopia?
   9   A.  Yes.
  10   Q.  If you look at the part that's on an angle a straight line
  11   essentially on an angle southwest to northeast, if you can
  12   read what's written there along that broken line?
  13   A.  Provisional administrative line is what's written up
  14   there.
  15   Q.  The provisional administrative line means what?
  16   A.  That's a boundary that has not been fixed and recognized
  17   by both countries.
  18   Q.  Either Ethopia or the former Somalia?
  19   A.  Ethopia I think recognizes it.  Somalia did not.
  20   Q.  If we could show the entire map again, please.
  21            When we're talking about, the people talk about
  22   northern Somalia generally what part of the country are they
  23   referring to?
  24   A.  Conventional northern Somalia is that part which used to
  25   be a British colony.  That's to the south of the Gulf of Aden.
                                                                4490
   1   And there is the Ethopia sitting, if you may, or just sitting
   2   between southern Somalia and northern Somalia.
   3   Q.  So that everything below that would be considered southern
   4   Somalia?
   5   A.  Southern Somalia will be all the way from the extreme
   6   northeast of the horn to sort of south of Kissmayo.
   7   Q.  Thank you.  And is Somalia an Islamic country or Islamic
   8   land?
   9   A.  Most of the statistics that we know of suggest that
  10   anywhere up to 95 to 97 percent are Muslims.
  11   Q.  And how long has that been the case?  Not in terms of
  12   proportion, but when did Somalis become Muslim?
  13   A.  Almost seventh to eighty years under the Prophet's
  14   pilgrimage to Medina.
  15   Q.  What century would you put that in?
  16   A.  7th century.
  17   Q.  Thank you.
  18            Now, Somalia became a nation when?
  19   A.  1960, a nation state.
  20   Q.  An independent state?
  21   A.  That's correct.
  22   Q.  And what type of government did it have?
  23   A.  Once British and Italian Somaliland became the Somalia
  24   Republic in 1960 they had a parliamentary democracy.
  25   Q.  How long did that last?
                                                                4491
   1   A.  Between 1960 and 1969, for nine years.
   2   Q.  What happened in 1969?
   3   A.  The military took over and denounced the Constitution, and
   4   disbanded the parliament.
   5   Q.  Who was the military leader?
   6   A.  The military leader was General Muhamed Seyad Barre.
   7   Q.  Can you spell that for us, please?
   8   A.  Last name is B-A-R-R-E.
   9   Q.  And how long did his rule last?
  10   A.  From 1969 to 1990.
  11   Q.  And at the time that his rule ended what was the
  12   condition, the political condition in Somalia?
  13   A.  All political authority broke down, civil institutions
  14   collapsed, and public order was history.
  15   Q.  And what power, where was power vested at that time?
  16   A.  At that point power was vested in small groups of
  17   warlords, both in the north and in the south of the country.
  18   Q.  And describe what you mean by warlords?
  19   A.  Warlords are former military people who are able to access
  20   guns and ammunitions from government stores and then who claim
  21   to control territory without any elections, without the rule
  22   of law, and their only source of legitimacy was the power of
  23   their gun.
  24   Q.  When you say military people, they were former Somalia
  25   military?
                                                                4492
   1   A.  Somali military people.
   2   Q.  With respect to the Somali military during the Barre
   3   regime was Somalia aligned with any particular country or
   4   countries over that period of time?
   5   A.  Somalia had several allies over the years.  From 1964 to
   6   1978 it was allied with the former Soviet Union.  After 1978
   7   and the defeat of the Somali troops in Ethopia, Somalia leaned
   8   westwards and became an ally of the United States.
   9   Q.  So did Somalia, did the government of Somalia the former
  10   state of Somalia, and the military receive arms during that
  11   period from both the Soviet Union and then from the United
  12   States?
  13   A.  Correct.
  14   Q.  And was one of the warlords who commanded a militia during
  15   the period when the Barre regime was deposed was that Mohammed
  16   Fara Aideed?
  17   A.  That's correct.  Probably the strongest one of them all.
  18   Q.  And can you tell us a little bit about him?
  19   A.  Aideed was military man who wasn't in good friendship with
  20   Sayed Barre, the General who commanded the country.  He was
  21   removed from the military and posted as an ambassador overseas
  22   for a while and then he came back as things began to fall
  23   apart and created his own militia and then ultimately he was
  24   the General who chased Barre out of Mogadishu and out of the
  25   country.
                                                                4493
   1   Q.  And when did that occur?
   2   A.  Which one?
   3   Q.  The last part the chasing, well, actually first chasing
   4   Barre out of Mogadishu?
   5   A.  1991, early '91 January to be precise, and later on in
   6   1992.
   7   Q.  And Gen. Aideed would he be described as Islamist or an
   8   Islamic activist in any way?
   9   A.  I have never heard that before today.
  10   Q.  So it's yes or no?
  11   A.  No.
  12   Q.  Do you know if Aideed --
  13   A.  That doesn't mean he wasn't a Muslim person, but he was an
  14   Islamic political person, that he was a military man.
  15   Q.  And he was never identified as such?
  16   A.  No.
  17   Q.  Do you know if Gen. Aideed ever held a position in the
  18   government of either Barre or previous government?
  19   A.  He was an ambassador and a General in the Army of the
  20   Barre regime.
  21   Q.  Was he ambassador to Egypt, do you know?
  22   A.  I'm not sure whether he was an ambassador to Egypt or
  23   Pakistan.
  24   Q.  Thank you.
  25            And would Barre be classified politically as an
                                                                4494
   1   Islamist either?
   2   A.  In fact, he was, the public thought of him as a
   3   non-Islamic person because his government shot ten religious
   4   people in the early part of 1970's because they came against
   5   his sort of a stipulation of a new decree which said that
   6   woman could divorce men, which was a first in that country's
   7   history.  And these who opposed him which was led by Mullahs
   8   or Islamic men were beheaded or shot in Mogadishu.
   9   Q.  And when Gen. Aideed chased Barre from the capital from
  10   Mogadishu, where did Barre flee to?
  11   A.  If you look at the map he went to Baieda first, and then
  12   ultimately Gedo region.
  13   Q.  If we could focus on the Gedo region which is the
  14   southwest part of the map.
  15   A.  There is a paved road and there are aren't too many paved
  16   roads in Somalia that runs from Mogadishu to Baieda on a red
  17   line, and that's the road he took.  In part Baieda used to be
  18   a major military base of the Somali Army and the Air Force had
  19   a airport in Baieda.  That's where he went.
  20   Q.  What was the response of Gen. Aideed when Barre moved to
  21   Baidea?
  22   A.  Aideed wanted to pursue, but he first wanted to
  23   consolidate his power in Mogadishu, and there were a number of
  24   political deals that he attempted which didn't work, but he
  25   moved against Barre.  Barre tried to come back from Mogadishu
                                                                4495
   1   and he was almost captured in a town just outside Mogadishu
   2   called Afigoy, and then he fled back to Baieda and then to
   3   Gedo region.
   4   Q.  What was the effect on the populace in the Gedo region
   5   when Aideed and Barre were in conflict during this time
   6   period?
   7   A.  The general population was caught in the middle of that
   8   conflict or tussle, and large number of people began to get
   9   access to weapons, not only in Gedo but across the country.
  10   Once the civil and the political order and authority
  11   collapsed, people didn't have anybody to protect them, so
  12   people either bought or somehow got access to former military
  13   weaponry.
  14   Q.  Just again, the time period that this is occurring?
  15   A.  This is anywhere from late 1990 to 1992 and thereafter.
  16   Q.  And in terms of resources, other resources, not just
  17   weapons, but food and daily resources for sufficiency
  18   purposes, was there any impact of this fighting on that to the
  19   populace, particularly in the Gedo region?
  20   A.  Unlike the United States, for instance, if I may sort of
  21   use that comparison, there isn't a great deal of food in
  22   storage that you can have if the crops fail this year, nor
  23   people had a lot of money in which they can use to import and
  24   access foods.  So if cropping failed one season, and there was
  25   nothing in the next season you could almost invariably expect
                                                                4496
   1   famine and once farmers were terrorized by idea and other sort
   2   of warlords and marauding gangs, most of the people became
   3   vulnerable to famine and in the end thousands of them died
   4   because of that.
   5   Q.  Also did Aideed attack ultimately Baidea and Barre in
   6   Baieda?
   7   A.  He attack by Baieda, captured Bidaua and then went after
   8   Sayed Barre until Sayed Barre left the country for Kenya.
   9   Q.  The time period would be?
  10   A.  This was in 1992.
  11   Q.  And during this period of time or towards the end, at the
  12   time when the fighting is going on in Gedo, were there groups
  13   within Gedo that were looking to establish some sort of order?
  14   A.  Aideed's rule in Gedo was not firm and sort of a fighting
  15   militias ran back and forth.  Most people began to see that
  16   neither Sayed Barre groups nor Aideed really had the people's
  17   interest in mind or at heart as people began to starve in
  18   large numbers.  And so it wasn't only in Gedo at all, but in
  19   many parts of the country people began to look for other
  20   sources of normalcy, legitimacy and law, and Islam was the
  21   only source they could find as close reach, and that they can
  22   appreciate.
  23   Q.  Have you ever heard of a organization called Alika Had?
  24   A.  Yes, I did.
  25   Q.  Is the full name Alika had al Islam?
                                                                4497
   1   A.  Alika had al Islam.
   2   Q.  Can you tell us how that emerged during that time period
   3   in the Gedo region?
   4   A.  What you had, it's very difficult to establish the exact
   5   date when groups got together and talked about the creation
   6   and the establishment of Ali Kahad Al Islam, but somewhere in
   7   the 1992 period as these military movements ran back and forth
   8   between the two groups it was about that time it said that Ali
   9   Kahad people began to talk about Alkihad and the formation of
  10   Alkihad, but nobody in my mind can pin the date and the time
  11   and the place with any degree of precision.
  12   Q.  Did Ali Kahad during this period of time have any presence
  13   in Mogadishu?
  14   A.  No.
  15   Q.  And what was the role of Islam in Ali Kahad in during the
  16   chaos of that period?
  17   A.  Most people that's citizens of the country were looking
  18   for someone to take responsibility for public order, and since
  19   the warlords and the roaming militias were not able to do so
  20   and Barre has run away from the country that they began to see
  21   Ali Kahad as a group who were not secondary in the sense of
  22   one clan versus another, one warlord versus another, but they
  23   were ones who were public began to see them as a group who
  24   were looking after all Muslims as a community.
  25            And they saw that Alikahad and Islam may be the
                                                                4498
   1   closest thing that a civic organization that can insure the
   2   peace that they thought Al Islam al Kahad as that possible
   3   organization.
   4   Q.  And that would be in the Gedo region?
   5   A.  Gedo region, correct.
   6   Q.  Also, just have you heard of the Afar?
   7   A.  Yes.
   8   Q.  And what are the Afar?
   9   A.  Afar or Ganati people live in three countries in East
  10   Africa or in the horn of Africa, Ethopia, Dijbouti, and
  11   Eretria.
  12   Q.  And if we could show the entire map of E2 again, please.
  13   And again Dijbouti is just beyond Somalia in the northwest?
  14   A.  That's correct.
  15   Q.  And Eretria would be further north and west?
  16   A.  It doesn't show on this map in terms of the boundary but
  17   it will be further northwest of the Dijbouti.
  18   Q.  And Ethopia is that area that encompasses those three
  19   countries?
  20   A.  Right, where the Afar people, the people live is just a
  21   little bit sort of to the southwest of Dijbouti which means
  22   sort of north of Ethopia, and south east of Eretria.
  23   Q.  And did they have any connection or presence in the Gedo
  24   region?
  25   A.  Not at all.
                                                                4499
   1   Q.  Do they have any presence or connection to Mogadishu?
   2   A.  No.
   3   Q.  And could you also point out the Agaden region?
   4   A.  Yeah.  It's sort of if you look at that triangle of
   5   looking area into Somalia, if you look, even Ethopia, the
   6   southern part of that is what's called Ogagan region.
   7   Q.  Would that also be where that broken line is, would that
   8   be a fair statement?
   9   A.  That's correct.
  10   Q.  And the Afar have any connection or presence in that
  11   Ogaden area either?
  12   A.  No.
  13   Q.  Now, during the period of time when Barre is fleeing the
  14   country, Aideed is consolidating power, are there other
  15   competing warlords at the same time in other parts of Somalia?
  16   A.  Yes.  It's hard to enumerate them because they come and go
  17   in many ways, but the enduring ones will be Mohammed Hersi
  18   General Morgan, will be Ali Mahdi in Mogadishu in and Morgan
  19   was in the south in Kisomoy area.  There was at least further
  20   northeast, and others.
  21   Q.  And during this period of time what kind of weapons were
  22   available to these warlords, those foreign military men?
  23   A.  They had access and control basically what used to be the
  24   armory of the Somalia military.
  25   Q.  So everything that had been received from the United
                                                                4500
   1   States or the USSR?
   2   A.  And anybody else.
   3   Q.  Was available to the warlords?
   4   A.  That's correct.
   5   Q.  That includes rocket propelled grenades also known as
   6   RPGs?
   7   A.  That's correct.
   8   Q.  And heavier weapons, too?
   9   A.  Tanks and others, yes.
  10   Q.  And what was the number of men under arms in the Somali
  11   Army when it was constituted as a national army?
  12   A.  Nobody exactly knows that because they never used to
  13   publish it, but estimate, educated estimates are anywhere from
  14   70,000 to 90,000 and then militias on top of that.
  15   Q.  So there was a large available trained armed group
  16   available to these warlords to make combat against each other?
  17   A.  At some point in the 1970s persons in the United States
  18   and elsewhere suggested that the Somali Army was the strongest
  19   Army in Africa outside South Africa.
  20   Q.  And in addition to the militias and the warlords you had
  21   also mentioned that there was a widespread Army of the entire
  22   populace to a certain extent?
  23   A.  Yes.  This is one of the tragedies of that country as a
  24   citizen of the globe so to speak is a society unlike ours
  25   where nobody could get access to weapons, including small
                                                                4501
   1   pistols and what not prior to sort of early '80s.  Over the
   2   years since then I've been going to that country every year
   3   and I don't know of a single household which I visited
   4   anywhere in the country which doesn't have a gun and usually
   5   an AK-45.
   6   Q.  AK-47?
   7   A.  47, not 45.
   8   Q.  And, generally, what's the purpose that is explained to
   9   you in terms of these weapons in the house?
  10   A.  One, I asked, I actually remember asking that question to
  11   a gentleman who had a shop in a number of towns because I went
  12   to each store to fix up my glasses because he ran that kind of
  13   business, and as we were in the back of the shop I saw a
  14   couple of guns lying, and I said, what is that for?  And he
  15   said, this is his security because there is no state.
  16   Q.  And the fighting that was going on between the warlords
  17   the factions, was full-scale military battle at times?
  18   A.  At times, yes.
  19   Q.  And the warlords themselves were formally trained military
  20   personnel?
  21   A.  Most of them were captains, generals, colonels and what
  22   not in the Somali Army.
  23   Q.  And many of their militia were also former Somali Army,
  24   either officers or other personnel?
  25   A.  Significantly so.
                                                                4502
   1   Q.  And in your opinion would they require the training by
   2   outside forces to use any of the weaponry at their disposal?
   3   A.  They were well trained.
   4   Q.  In your opinion would they need the training by outside
   5   persons?
   6   A.  Not in my opinion.
   7   Q.  And in your studies and in your visits to Somalia have you
   8   ever heard of any outside training by others to any of the
   9   militia people in Somalia?
  10   A.  Before the government of the country collapsed there were
  11   Americans came to train before that the Soviets came to train.
  12   Somewhere in the middle Libyans, Iraqis, Syrians, Egyptians
  13   came to train, but I didn't hear of any thereafter.
  14   Q.  Now, was there an international response to civic and
  15   humanitarian crisis that existed in Somalia in 1992?
  16   A.  Yes, there were all kinds of NGOs.
  17   Q.  NGO being nongovernmental organizations?
  18   A.  Nongovernmental organizations that people who had the
  19   nonprofit business came to help because there was a great deal
  20   of shortage of all things from pencils for children in school
  21   to food, to medicine and what not and anything in between.
  22   Q.  Was there also a problem with respect to orphans due to
  23   the fatalities in the fighting?
  24   A.  Not only orphans, but children and elderly people
  25   generally.
                                                                4503
   1   Q.  And was that NGO response sufficient in and of itself that
   2   to create order or to end the crisis?
   3   A.  The NGOs were not armed.  Its people like OxfarmAmerica,
   4   OxfarmBrit and they were humanitarians in the sense they
   5   didn't bring their guns and their security so they couldn't
   6   create order.  Their purpose was to provide by and large
   7   sustenance for the general population, particularly children
   8   and older people.
   9   Q.  And at some point did the United Nations become involved?
  10   A.  It became involved in large measure because Aideed and
  11   others have denied significant population of southern Somalia
  12   in the Bay region.
  13   Q.  They denied them?
  14   A.  They denied them access to food that was brought in either
  15   by NGOs or private business people couldn't get through
  16   because of these road checks and road blocks and so people
  17   began to die in large numbers.  That's when the United Nations
  18   began to get intervene militarily.
  19   Q.  And were there estimates on how many people died as a
  20   result?
  21   A.  The figures are many, but a reasonable for one to me is
  22   anywhere between two hundred and 400,000 people.
  23            THE COURT:  Between when and when?
  24            THE WITNESS:  We're talking anywhere from sort of the
  25   middle of the 1992 to 1993.
                                                                4504
   1   Q.  So you're not talking about the people who died in the
   2   fighting in the early part of the Civil War.  You're really
   3   talking about from the humanitarian crisis that resulted as a
   4   result, that was the result of what you were just talking
   5   about?
   6   A.  That's correct.
   7   Q.  The food and other resources?
   8   A.  That's correct.
   9   Q.  Now, with respect to Baydo with and also Gedo, Barre had
  10   fled to that region.  Did he have a particular identification
  11   with that region?
  12   A.  I think Sayed Barre his regime not as an individual but
  13   his government introduced into Somali culture something that
  14   was not terribly important earlier on, and that was to divide
  15   the community into smaller groups in a sense what Africans
  16   used to call divide and rule mentality.
  17            For him to stay in power he has to set one group
  18   against the other and arm one group and disarm another and
  19   create all kind of vulnerabilities and so people began in the
  20   absence of a government that protects all its citizens, people
  21   began to see the Gedo region as the base of Sayed Barre's
  22   regime.
  23   Q.  Was it also base of the Maraha clan?
  24   A.  That's what's assumed.
  25   Q.  Now, did the international relief effort included in late
                                                                4505
   1   1992 United States troops, is that correct?
   2   A.  That's correct.
   3   Q.  And what was the initial response first of the populace
   4   and then of the warlords, first, we'll do the populace, to the
   5   international relief efforts by the UN in conjunction --
   6   withdrawn?
   7            Did the United States send its troops in conjunction
   8   with the United Nations effort?
   9   A.  No.  First the United Nations sent troops and many of them
  10   Pakastanis and Indians, few Africans and elsewhere, and when
  11   it proved that that wasn't effective in terms of opening up
  12   the road so that food can get to victims of strangulation,
  13   then the UN and other people appealed to the United States to
  14   sort of help the UN to sort of deliver on it's humanitarian
  15   agenda, and it's at that point that the US intervened.
  16   Q.  But in conjunction with the United --
  17   A.  In conjunction under the umbrella of the United Nations.
  18   Q.  What was the initial response to the international effort
  19   including the United States involvement provided by the
  20   populace of Somalia?
  21   A.  I remember I was asked the question at NBC Today Show, and
  22   I think I suggested to my host that if President Bush, then
  23   President Bush, the senior, that is, ran for president in
  24   Somalia, the public would have voted him in hands down.
  25   Q.  And what was the warlords' reaction to the introduction of
                                                                4506
   1   the UN and the US?
   2   A.  I think the warlords were ambivalent.  They were not
   3   certain.  There were risks and there were advantage to the
   4   intervention.
   5   Q.  What would the risks be?
   6   A.  The risks will be that they will be neutralized since they
   7   were the principal course of the famine and the mayhem in the
   8   country, what brought the United Nations and the United States
   9   to Somalia in the first place.
  10            (Continued on next page)
  11
  12
  13
  14
  15
  16
  17
  18
  19
  20
  21
  22
  23
  24
  25
                                                                4507
   1   Q.  And the advantages might be?
   2   A.  The advantages was that if indeed and we are talking
   3   primarily of two warlords, Sayid Barre and General Aideed, and
   4   that if they convinced the United States and the United
   5   Nations that they were the authority that could deliver some
   6   of the things that the United Nations and the U.S. were
   7   interested in, then they could piggyback on the U.S. and the
   8   U.N. and become the de facto rulers of the country.
   9   Q.  Did that opinion change by the fall of 1993?  Was there a
  10   shift in opinion either among the warlords and the populous?
  11   First of all, we'll talk about the warlords at this time, by
  12   the sort of latter part of 1993.
  13   A.  From the general public's vantage point and since one
  14   treads on a tricky ground here because there were no public
  15   service or you couldn't say and according to A, B, C, blah,
  16   blah, this survey, 70 percent of the public supports this or
  17   that, but the general feeling in the country was that the U.N.
  18   and the United States were not delivering on what the Somalis
  19   hoped they would deliver, that's peace and liberation from the
  20   warlords.
  21   Q.  And by the way, were you in Somalia during periods of
  22   1993?
  23   A.  I was there in the spring of 1993.
  24   Q.  And the fall of 1993?
  25   A.  And late summer in 1993.
                                                                4508
   1   Q.  Do you recall what the reaction was amongst Somalis to an
   2   incident that occurred at something called Abdi House in July
   3   of 1993?
   4   A.  I heard about the Abdi House affair through the British
   5   Broadcast Corporation in Somali service news in the evening.
   6   Q.  And did you speak to Somalis about it when you were in
   7   Somali subsequently?
   8   A.  I did speak to them and it was -- many of them were quite
   9   taken aback and surprised because they were saying that too
  10   many civilians were getting caught in the middle of this what
  11   became the conflict between the warlords and the United
  12   Nations.
  13   Q.  Just for one second, the principal target of the United
  14   Nations was which warlord?
  15   A.  General Mohamed Farahid Aideed.
  16   Q.  And so, if you continue with respect to the Somali
  17   response.
  18   A.  And I'm sure people were beginning to wonder if they have
  19   asked for something, although their asking wasn't what
  20   initiated the U.N. and the U.S. to intervene, something they
  21   did back and forth, and that's many of civilians who were now
  22   getting killed in this crossfire and that this wasn't what
  23   they thought the U.N. and the United States will do.
  24   Q.  And what was the warlords' response to this?  Would it be
  25   fair to say there was an escalation of conflict, armed
                                                                4509
   1   conflict between the U.N. and Aideed during this period of
   2   1993?
   3   A.  Right.  I think what you have is if you -- in their
   4   initial assessment, which was that the warlords, and Aideed in
   5   particular, thought there's a chance that he can piggyback on
   6   the U.N. and the U.S. and become the new law of Somalia, but
   7   once the process of disarmament began --
   8   Q.  Do you recall when that was, the process of disarmament,
   9   do you recall when that occurred?
  10   A.  I can't remember the exact date, but it was sometime in
  11   1993.
  12   Q.  So, go ahead.
  13   A.  So certainly before --
  14   Q.  What was Aideed's response?
  15   A.  Certainly it was before late summer 1993, and Aideed was
  16   one of the first warlords to be told to sort of identify where
  17   he kept weapons and whatnot.
  18   Q.  And his response?
  19   A.  The response was that if this was not taking place
  20   uniformly across the warlord terrain, that's all warlords who
  21   were being disarmed simultaneously, that in fact he might be
  22   disadvantaged if there is sort of an explosion of conflict
  23   between him and others, and that is the assumption that he
  24   could possibly piggyback on the United States and the U.N. was
  25   in danger.
                                                                4510
   1   Q.  And what areas did he control -- withdrawn.
   2            Did Aideed control a significant portion of
   3   Mogadishu?
   4   A.  Mostly Southern Mogadishu, including what used to be
   5   Radio, Mogadishu.
   6   Q.  And the seaport?
   7   A.  The seaport and the airport.
   8   Q.  How was the -- withdrawn.  Did the warlords attempt to use
   9   the shifting opinion of the Somali populous with respect to
  10   the U.S. and the U.N. to their advantage, to the advantage of
  11   the warlords?
  12   A.  I think particularly Aideed was more successful than the
  13   other warlords.  I was, I remember, in Hurat in Zimbabwe and I
  14   ran into a professor of public policy and political science in
  15   Syracuse University who was going to attend a Pan-Africanist
  16   conference in Kampala, Uganda late that fall and the professor
  17   told me that one of the key speakers in that conference was
  18   expected to be General Aideed himself.
  19            So I asked him the question, what is General Aideed,
  20   a warlord, doing in a Pan-Africanist conference in Kampala,
  21   and apparently what Aideed has been very successful is to
  22   convince a few Africans across the continent that he was one
  23   of the key leaders of the new Pan-Africanist movement to unite
  24   all of Africa together and that his struggle with,
  25   quote/unquote, the Americans in Somalia was precisely
                                                                4511
   1   anti-imperialist, as they put it.  And so he certainly was
   2   able to convince some elements in Africa, broadly speaking,
   3   that way and then --
   4   Q.  What about the population in Somalia in particular?
   5   A.  And the population in particular with Aideed and few
   6   others, but Aideed in particular, said what the Americans in a
   7   sense are doing in Somalia is, one, to redominate Somalia --
   8   this was the language that he used -- and that their
   9   involvement was not only about providing services to rebuild
  10   the country but they had a larger agenda, and he wired this
  11   into sort of a conflict in the Middle East and elsewhere.
  12   Q.  After the U.S. and U.N. forces left Somalia, do you recall
  13   when that was, not exactly but generally?
  14   A.  1994.
  15   Q.  And did the anarchy in Somalia continue?
  16   A.  The anarchy continued, but strangely enough, many people,
  17   including myself, many observers thought that Somalia was even
  18   going to implode more so than it was before if the U.N. and
  19   the United States troops left.  But all chaos continued.
  20   There was no sort of a major explosion other than what was
  21   already taking place in the country.
  22   Q.  To sort of jump ahead, then, to the time period 1996 in
  23   Somalia, were conditions effectively the same in the sense,
  24   was there a central government yet?
  25   A.  No, there was no central government yet.
                                                                4512
   1   Q.  Were there effective regional governments of any size or
   2   authority?
   3   A.  Probably the one that comes closest in that sense is what
   4   is currently called Somali Land.
   5   Q.  And on the map that would be all the way to the north?
   6   A.  All the way to the north, just south of the Gulf of Aden.
   7   Q.  So not in Southern Somalia?
   8   A.  Not in Southern Somalia.
   9   Q.  Not in Gedo?
  10   A.  Not in Gedo.
  11   Q.  And what was, at that time period, 1996, what was the
  12   presence of Ali Ittihad in Gedo at that point?
  13   A.  Ali Ittihad, from what we know and the evidence by all
  14   sources put together will suggest that they were, as I said
  15   earlier on, that their primary role from the vantage of the
  16   public was to create an antisectarian community in Gedo and
  17   fill the vacuum between Siyad Barre and Aideed.  But as that
  18   time progressed, as Europeans began to send encouragement into
  19   Somalia, it's at that point I think where the popularity
  20   validly begins to become a factor in the region on certain
  21   incidents in Somalia.
  22   Q.  Just to back up a second, in the Ogaden region, in the
  23   region itself, were there conflicts between Ethiopia and armed
  24   groups in the Ogaden region?
  25   A.  When the new Ethiopian government came to power in 1991,
                                                                4513
   1   this was a government dominated by a group called Tigre people
   2   from the north of the country, south of Eritrea, and the
   3   military that they brought to bear was not the European army,
   4   all the European army, but their militias became the national
   5   army immediately.
   6            And so the army began, the new army began to fan out
   7   into the country, and I remember hearing an interview in the
   8   BBC with Somali Services in London where one group called
   9   Ogaden National Liberation Front, a Somali group who live in
  10   Ethiopia, announced over the radio a message to the Ethiopian
  11   government not to send its troops to that part of the country
  12   of Ethiopia which was accommodated and populated by Somalis,
  13   or to be prepared for war if they do so.
  14            So that was the first signal that there was conflict
  15   in Ethiopia in the era after the revolution, so to speak, in
  16   1991.
  17   Q.  And that continued through the mid 90s?
  18   A.  Continued to the present.
  19   Q.  And just to situate us in the 1996 time period, also with
  20   respect to just in terms of the map, the way it is on the
  21   screen right now, also, the Gedo region essentially sits -- it
  22   borders on not only Ethiopia, but Kenya, as well, correct?
  23   A.  That's correct.  That's correct.
  24   Q.  And in fact, all of Kenya's Northeastern border there, I
  25   mean after Ethiopia, is Somalia all the way to the coast?
                                                                4514
   1   A.  That's correct.
   2   Q.  And did the government of Kenya have concerns about the
   3   border activity with respect to Somalia because there was not
   4   any central government in Somalia during this period of the
   5   1990s?
   6   A.  I think the principal concern -- I mean, one has to think
   7   of the Kenyan government at its multiple levels.  At the
   8   central level in Nairobi, the concern was that the absence of
   9   government in Somalia may mean a lot of weapons coming from
  10   Somalia into Kenya itself.  That was the only concern that the
  11   Kenya government expressed.
  12            Lower level officials who are into corruption and
  13   bribes were concerned about money moving back and forth and
  14   commercial goods moving back and forth, but the key security
  15   issue for the Kenyan government was the shipment of arms
  16   across Somalia, from Somalia to Kenya.
  17   Q.  And did something occur in the summer of 1996 that sort of
  18   changed the conditions in the Gedo and the Gedo region with
  19   respect to Ethiopia and Somalia?
  20   A.  Yes, I think it's -- actually, I was in a place called
  21   Jijiga in Ethiopia.  At that time was the time I was beginning
  22   to do my current research, and over the radio, both on the
  23   Ethiopian radio initially did an announcement, but it was
  24   announced in the British Broadcasting Corporation local Somali
  25   Service, that Somalis in the region are claiming that
                                                                4515
   1   Ethiopian troops have come across the border and have created
   2   mayhem in the region, Gedo in particular.
   3   Q.  And what did they use as part of this assault, the
   4   Ethiopia troops?
   5   A.  The reports suggested that they used helicopter gunships,
   6   heavy weaponry, artillery and the like.
   7   Q.  And this is in the summer of 1996?
   8   A.  About that time, yes.
   9   Q.  Did this involve the United States in any way in terms of
  10   troops or anything like that?
  11   A.  Absolutely not.
  12   Q.  And what was the impact of this Ethiopia invasion in the
  13   Gedo region of Somalia?
  14   A.  I think the impact was many, but the key ones were
  15   destruction of a lot of property, the death of many civilians
  16   and armed men and -- mostly men, not women, and the gradual
  17   creation of -- what's the word in English?  I speak English,
  18   but sometimes I run out of steam -- local support, the local
  19   militia supporters.  The Ethiopian government, reports
  20   suggested, were laying the groundwork for creating armed
  21   groups in Somalia that will support its own agenda in that
  22   country.
  23   Q.  And --
  24            THE COURT:  That would support?
  25            THE WITNESS:  An Ethiopian agenda in Somalia.
                                                                4516
   1   Q.  And the Ethiopian envision, what was the reason given by
   2   the Ethiopian government for the invasion?
   3   A.  Formerly they suggested that they were in hot pursuit of
   4   Ittihad Islam, among others, but the key one was that.  But
   5   Ethiopia had other interests in Somalia, also, which were not
   6   spoken of, and that was there's the largest community, ethic
   7   community, in Ethiopia is a group called Oromos which
   8   constitutes anywhere up to 45, maybe even 50 percent of the
   9   population of the country who claim not to be part of the
  10   government as they would like, the democratic government, and
  11   that many of them or their organizations are said to be based
  12   in Somalia and to move into Ethiopia back and forth.  So I
  13   think one of the agendas of the Ethiopian intervention into
  14   Somalia was also to ensure that Oromos who were armed did not
  15   come across Ethiopia into Somalia.
  16   Q.  And what was the impact on Ali Ittihad of the Ethiopian
  17   envision in 1996?
  18   A.  I think it had two impacts.  One was they certainly were
  19   not a match for the Ethiopian troops, so they were sort of not
  20   completely destroyed but deeply maimed, but it also had the
  21   effect of creating a basis of legitimacy even more so for Ali
  22   Ittihad in the minds of Somali public, particularly in that
  23   region, for being one of the few forces who can carry, sort of
  24   a protect Somalis from the Ethiopian army.
  25   Q.  Did the Ethiopian influence and presence in the Gedo
                                                                4517
   1   region of Somalia cease once the envision stopped, or was it
   2   something that continued for a considerable period of time?
   3   A.  The reports we have suggest that the Ethiopian invasion
   4   and presence declined shortly thereafter that immediate
   5   intervention, but has persisted and have been -- has escalated
   6   in more recent times.
   7   Q.  But it continued throughout '96 and '97?
   8   A.  To 19 -- to 2001.
   9   Q.  Did you review before you testified Government Exhibit
  10   310, Dr. Samatar?
  11   A.  Yes, I did.
  12   Q.  And this is something that's called "Report on the Latest
  13   News in Somalia"?
  14   A.  That's correct.
  15   Q.  Can you read the first line?  It's already in evidence.
  16   "Abdel Sabbur brings to light the new policy.  When Abdel
  17   Sabbur arrived on February 22, 1997, he contacted Khalid
  18   directly and asked him to come to Nairobi."
  19            And so that sets a time frame in February of '97,
  20   correct?
  21   A.  Correct.
  22   Q.  And having read this document, would you say that it, in
  23   many ways it describes some of the events that you have been
  24   talking about in terms of 1996, 1997?
  25   A.  Yes, it does.
                                                                4518
   1            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection to competence, your Honor.
   2            THE COURT:  Yes, sustained.
   3   Q.  Well, just looking at the bottom of page 1 --
   4            THE COURT:  That question and answer is stricken.
   5            MR. DRATEL:  Excuse me?
   6            THE COURT:  I'm saying the last question and answer
   7   is stricken.
   8            MR. DRATEL:  Thank you.
   9   Q.  With respect to the bottom of page 1, and that paragraph
  10   that starts, "Before Khalid's move to the interior," and it
  11   goes on to talk about Islamic courts in Kismayo, and was that
  12   something that Ali Ittihad been working on, the institution of
  13   Islamic courts?
  14            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection to leading.
  15            THE COURT:  I'll allow it, but then refrain from
  16   leading.
  17   A.  No, Ittihad was not active and strong.
  18   Q.  And with respect to, moving down the page, at the very
  19   bottom, the last line, "Khalid met with the director of
  20   foreign affairs (for the Federation of Ogaden in Western
  21   somalia)," is that a reference to the liberation movement of
  22   Ogaden that was present that you discussed before?
  23   A.  It seems to.  I haven't, I never heard about the
  24   federation, but I heard of the Ogaden National Liberation
  25   Front, which is a Somali group in Ethiopia.
                                                                4519
   1   Q.  And on page 2, there's a reference to a Sheikh Hassan, and
   2   are you familiar with the name Sheikh Hassan in the context of
   3   the Ogaden region?
   4   A.  I heard his name in a place called Jijiga in Eastern
   5   Ethiopia.
   6   Q.  In what context?
   7   A.  A passing context, as a major religious figure.
   8   Q.  In the area?
   9   A.  In the area, in the Ogaden region.
  10   Q.  And if we move to page 5, right underneath the second
  11   asterisk where it says, it talks about security situations in
  12   the region, Somalia-Ethiopia.  You see that?
  13   A.  On page 5?
  14   Q.  Yes, I think it's 5.
  15   A.  The next, second asterisk is "Haroun's meeting with the
  16   director."
  17   Q.  Right.  And the sentence under that says --
  18   A.  Okay, I see it.
  19   Q.  "On the security situations in the region," and it says
  20   Somalia-Ethiopia?
  21   A.  Correct.
  22   Q.  At this time period, February 1997, there were serious
  23   security issues with respect to the Somalia-Ethiopia border?
  24   A.  That's correct.
  25            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection, leading.
                                                                4520
   1            THE COURT:  Yes, refrain from leading.  Restate your
   2   question.
   3   Q.  Just read it and then say whether or not it reflects what
   4   was going on at the time in terms of the Somali-Ethiopia
   5   border.
   6   A.  The Somali-Ethiopia region?
   7   Q.  Yes.
   8   A.  Is an unstable region and that Ogaden National Liberation
   9   Front and Ali Ittihad move in and out of that region and sort
  10   of put bombs on roads, harass the Ethiopian military from time
  11   to time.  That has been the case since 1992.
  12   Q.  And during this period of February '97, it was relatively
  13   close -- was it particularly an issue in February 1997?
  14            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection to leading.
  15            THE COURT:  It's a valid objection, but what was the
  16   condition in February 1997.
  17   Q.  What was the condition in February 1997?
  18   A.  The condition --
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  Thank you.
  20   A.  In Ogaden, so to speak, was one in which the Ethiopian
  21   military was not formally on the alert but looking for Ali
  22   Ittihad, as they said, and the Ogaden National Liberation
  23   Front inside Ethiopia in the Ogaden itself.  So it was a
  24   condition in which there was literally security and some
  25   degree of political instability in the country.
                                                                4521
   1   Q.  Were they also, was the Ethiopian army also active inside
   2   Somalia during that period, looking for --
   3            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, objection to repeatedly
   4   leading.
   5            THE COURT:  Yes.
   6            MR. DRATEL:  What?
   7            THE COURT:  When you state the fact and ask whether
   8   it's so, it's a classic leading question.
   9   Q.  Were they in Somalia?
  10            THE COURT:  What was the question?
  11   Q.  Was the Ethiopian army in Somalia?
  12   A.  The reports tell us yes.
  13   Q.  And the reasons stated by the Ethiopians for being there?
  14   A.  They were in hot pursuit of Ali Ittihad and Islam.
  15   Q.  And also if we look on the next page, page 6, on the
  16   bottom, the portion in bold, it says, "The Front of the
  17   Liberation of the Oromos," and if you tell us again about the
  18   Oromos at that time period and the area that we're talking
  19   about, Somalia, Ethiopia, Ogaden, early 1997.
  20   A.  The Oromo -- it's actually not called the Front of the
  21   Liberation of the Oromos, it's called the Oromo Liberation
  22   Front, and I know for sure because one of my former students
  23   dropped out of my department and disappeared and then I found
  24   out that he was in Mogadishu working with the Oromo Liberation
  25   Front.  So the Oromo movement was using Somalia as a base to
                                                                4522
   1   go into Ethiopia during this period.
   2   Q.  Are the Oromos originally from Somalia?
   3   A.  No.
   4   Q.  But are they originally from Ethiopia?
   5   A.  They are the majority ethnic group in Ethiopia and there
   6   are Oromos in Kenya.
   7   Q.  Did the government of Ethiopia have concerns about --
   8   withdrawn.
   9            What was the Ethiopian government's position with
  10   respect to Islamic groups and Islamic charities as opposed to
  11   any other types of charity work?
  12            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection, competence.
  13            THE COURT:  Yes.
  14            Do you know?  Is that something within your area of
  15   expertise?
  16            THE WITNESS:  Yes, sir.
  17            THE COURT:  You may answer.
  18   A.  What I have heard in Ethiopia is that the Ethiopian
  19   government allows Christian missionaries and NG organizations
  20   to register and do business in Ethiopia.  That's since the new
  21   regime came to power.  That is what the reports say, that is
  22   not only my opinion, that they have not allowed Islamic groups
  23   of the same kind to come to Ethiopia, register and
  24   proselytize.
  25   Q.  This is the same Ethiopian government that was in power in
                                                                4523
   1   1996 and 1997?
   2   A.  Yes, this is the government that has been in power since
   3   1991 to the present.
   4            MR. DRATEL:  Thank you.  Nothing further, your Honor.
   5            THE COURT:  Any defense counsel have questions of
   6   this witness?
   7            Cross-examination.
   8            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes, Judge.
   9   CROSS-EXAMINATION
  10   BY MR. FITZGERALD:
  11   Q.  Sir, if you could look at that document in front of you,
  12   Government Exhibit 310.
  13   A.  That's correct.
  14   Q.  If you could look at that first paragraph that was cited
  15   to you by Mr. Dratel.
  16   A.  Is that the one which says, "Abdel Sabbur brings to light
  17   a new policy"?
  18   Q.  Exactly.  Thank you.
  19            Do you know who Abdel Sabbur is?
  20   A.  No.
  21   Q.  Do you know who the person Khalid is that Abu Sabbur
  22   brought that new policy to?
  23   A.  No.
  24   Q.  Do you know who the person El Hajj, H-A-J-J, is that they
  25   brought the policy from?
                                                                4524
   1   A.  There are plenty of El Hajjs in Eastern Africa, but no
   2   particular one.
   3   Q.  Do you know who it is?
   4            And if we could focus in on that first paragraph on
   5   the screen, as you sit here today, do you know if the person
   6   Abdel Sabbur had recently visited a person named El Hajj prior
   7   to the date on this document?
   8   A.  That's not what my research is about, sir.
   9   Q.  So you don't know who these people are, who they met with,
  10   and where they came from, correct?
  11   A.  My testimony here is not about individuals.
  12   Q.  And so you don't know what this first paragraph refers to
  13   in terms of who was meeting with whom, correct?
  14   A.  No, I don't know that, but what I know is, when I read
  15   this, of the context that's being talked about.
  16   Q.  Do you have any idea whether Usama Bin Laden was involved
  17   in these activities?
  18   A.  No.
  19   Q.  Let me ask you this:  You mentioned that the group was
  20   setting off explosions on the roadways since 1992, correct?
  21   A.  That's correct.
  22            MR. DRATEL:  Objection.
  23            THE COURT:  Overruled.
  24            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, just identify when he says
  25   "the group" right after the last question.
                                                                4525
   1   Q.  You mentioned -- which group did you say set off
   2   explosions in the roadways?
   3   A.  I said the reports of the Ethiopian government, not my
   4   reports, say that there are people called Ittihad Islam.  They
   5   don't actually use the word "Islam," they use the word Ali
   6   Ittihad, they're called fundamental Islams, who have done this
   7   in Ethiopia.  Others suggest that the Ogaden National
   8   Liberation Front has done this.
   9   Q.  Did you hear about reports of them setting off explosions
  10   in the cities?
  11   A.  I have heard that, yes.
  12   Q.  Did you see it in this report that's sitting before you,
  13   Government Exhibit 310?
  14   A.  There was reference to that.
  15   Q.  So there were references to the explosions being in the
  16   cities, not on the roads, correct?
  17   A.  In this report?
  18   Q.  Yes.
  19   A.  There was reference to the cities, but they also have
  20   reference to the rural areas.
  21   Q.  Do you know a person by the name of Haroun?
  22   A.  No, I don't know.
  23   Q.  Do you know a person by the name of Saleh the Egyptian?
  24   A.  No, I don't.
  25   Q.  No one you interviewed in connection with your research?
                                                                4526
   1   A.  Repeat.
   2   Q.  You never interviewed anybody by the name of Haroun and
   3   Saleh in connection with your research about Somalia, correct?
   4   A.  I interviewed neither.  I worked with a person called
   5   Haroun in Somalia during 1986.  He worked for me as research
   6   assistant in a place called Berber when I was doing research
   7   on livestock experts.  Also, Haroun is a relatively common
   8   name, so which Haroun, I don't know.
   9   Q.  Do you know any Haroun from the Comoros Islands?
  10   A.  No, I don't.
  11            MR. FITZGERALD:  Thank you.  Nothing further.
  12            THE COURT:  Any redirect?
  13            MR. DRATEL:  Just briefly, your Honor.
  14   REDIRECT EXAMINATION
  15   BY MR. DRATEL:
  16   Q.  Dr. Samatar, on cross-examination Mr. Fitzgerald asked you
  17   about explosions or reports of explosions in the road
  18   attributed to Ali Ittihad by the Ethiopian government.
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  Objection to form.
  20   Q.  He asked you about explosions in the road, correct?
  21   A.  He did.
  22   Q.  Would it serve the Ethiopian government's purpose
  23   politically to justify its invasion of Somalia to blame
  24   Islamic organizations such as Ali Ittihad for any such
  25   explosions?
                                                                4527
   1   A.  That's actually the official position of the Ethiopian
   2   government.
   3   Q.  But would it serve their political, their political
   4   purpose?
   5   A.  Yes, it would.
   6            MR. DRATEL:  Nothing further, your Honor.
   7            MR. RICCO:  Your Honor, may I have cross based on Mr.
   8   Fitzgerald?
   9            THE COURT:  I'm just a little concerned about the
  10   sequence here.
  11            MR. RICCO:  I just have a couple questions, your
  12   Honor.
  13            THE COURT:  Very well.
  14   RECROSS-EXAMINATION
  15   BY MR. RICCO:
  16   Q.  Doctor?
  17   A.  Yes, sir.
  18   Q.  Mr. Fitzgerald asked you questions about particular
  19   individuals?
  20   A.  That's correct.
  21   Q.  Is it fair to say that you don't know any of the men who
  22   are charged in connection with this case?
  23   A.  I wouldn't know.  That may be you, sir.
  24   Q.  Okay.  And you were called as an expert witness, I take
  25   it?
                                                                4528
   1   A.  I think so.
   2   Q.  And your opinion was based on your scholarship; isn't that
   3   correct?
   4   A.  It's based on my scholarship and observations on the
   5   ground.
   6            MR. RICCO:  Thank you very much, sir.
   7            THE COURT:  All right.  Thank you.
   8            Thank you, Doctor.  You may step down.
   9            We'll take our mid-afternoon recess.
  10            (Witness excused)
  11            (Jury not present)
  12            THE COURT:  What is the next order of business?
  13            MR. SCHMIDT:  The next order of business, we're going
  14   to be playing a series of tape recordings of conversations
  15   between agents named Joseph and/or William with Mr. El Hage
  16   and his wife April Ray.
  17            THE COURT:  Very well.  How long will that take?
  18            MR. SCHMIDT:  It certainly will take, my guess, with
  19   everything working correctly, approximately an hour or so.
  20            THE COURT:  Is this ostrich pictures, is that
  21   relevant?
  22            MR. SCHMIDT:  They're not the ostrich pictures.
  23            THE COURT:  All right.  We'll take a five-minute
  24   recess.
  25            MR. FITZGERALD:  Two items, your Honor.  I will go
                                                                4529
   1   through with Mr. Schmidt, I think he has identified the topic,
   2   whether the calls are of the 403 objection on some of them at
   3   the break.
   4            The other comment I just wish to make on the record
   5   is you requested the government, if they were caught off guard
   6   by expert testimony, to put it on the record.  On this witness
   7   we didn't get any expert disclosure that he was going to talk
   8   about Ethiopian military capability or the Ethiopia government
   9   and we get put in a position where, in front of jury, we are
  10   asking rank hearsay and in leading form about what someone
  11   heard on BBC and we either have to sit here and let in hearsay
  12   and eat up time or object in front of the jury, which I think
  13   is unfortunate.
  14            THE COURT:  The criterion for an expert hearsay is
  15   whether the reliance is on those things which experts in that
  16   particular field traditionally rely upon, and an expert or an
  17   observer even in Somalia might very well rely on BBC accounts
  18   of what is going on because there's probably very little else.
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  I agree with that, Judge, but in
  20   this case we weren't given any expert disclosure that he was
  21   going to speak to the military capability of the militia,
  22   whether they need training or not.  We get a geographer
  23   allocution for expert testimony.  Since we don't know what's
  24   coming, we don't object to his qualifications, and then we're
  25   off to him telling us who needs training, who doesn't, what
                                                                4530
   1   the Kenyan view of --
   2            THE COURT:  If there had been an objection to the
   3   question as to whether, in his opinion, there was a need for
   4   outside training, I would have sustained the objection.  There
   5   was no objection to it.
   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  I don't think we should be put in
   7   the position where we're not given adequate disclosure.
   8            THE COURT:  I can't quarrel with that.
   9            We'll take a five-minute recess.
  10            (Recess)
  11            THE COURT:  Mr. Submit, is there going to be a
  12   witness on the stand?
  13            MR. SCHMIDT:  No, there's not.
  14            THE COURT:  No witness on the stand.
  15            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, I have some issues with
  16   regard to the transcripts.
  17            THE COURT:  Yes.
  18            MR. FITZGERALD:  First, these transcripts are
  19   conversations largely between Wadih El Hage and a U.S.
  20   government person, or his wife and a U.S. government person.
  21   There are actually two U.S. government persons they speak to
  22   named Joseph and named William recorded on the wiretap.
  23            First of all, they are obviously hearsay
  24   conversations to the extent that Mr. El Hage is speaking.  I
  25   don't know if they are offered for the truth or the fact that
                                                                4531
   1   words were said, but the entire set of conversations is Mr. El
   2   Hage and his wife speaking to government agents and, in
   3   particular, in two particular calls, Mr. El Hage in one,
   4   indicates that the warrant used to search his residence was a
   5   phony piece of paper, and on another occasion, Mrs. El Hage,
   6   his wife, is talking about bugs and whether there are lawfully
   7   used in the case.
   8            And I think it's both hearsay and also, under 403,
   9   greatly prejudicial to put in conversations where El Hage is
  10   spouting his view that the warrant is phony.  If they are
  11   trying to establish that Wadih El Hage was in touch with the
  12   government and told the government that he had traveled, then
  13   we can stipulate to that.  We certainly don't need to have
  14   Mr. El Hage express his view of the Kenyan warrant or have
  15   Mrs. El Hage ask questions about American law on tape.  I
  16   don't know how they will get it in as non-hearsay.
  17            THE COURT:  Mr. Schmidt.
  18            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, the purpose of the
  19   conversations were not for the truth of the matter, which we
  20   will not allege, it's for him complaining to the government
  21   agents about these things, to show --
  22            THE COURT:  That is for the truth.  It's not for the
  23   truth, but to show that he was complaining.
  24            MR. SCHMIDT:  I'm not -- no, I'm not claiming that
  25   the warrant was in fact invalid.  I'm putting it in for the
                                                                4532
   1   fact that Mr. El Hage is complaining to the agent that he
   2   believed it's invalid.  He is basically talk to the American
   3   agents because he views the American agents as being on his
   4   side and not the Kenyan authority's side.  That's the only
   5   reason.  Not for the fact that -- if your Honor wants to give
   6   a charge saying that's not evidence as to whether the --
   7   whether it was valid or invalid, that's perfectly okay as
   8   well.
   9            THE COURT:  Tell me again.  Tell me affirmatively
  10   what is the argument that you make to the jury based on these
  11   transcripts.
  12            MR. SCHMIDT:  The ones that the government mentioned?
  13            THE COURT:  Yes.
  14            MR. SCHMIDT:  That Mr. El Hage had been in contact
  15   with the government agents to obtain return of his property,
  16   and he is complaining that he is having -- to the American
  17   agents, he is seeking their assistance to get his property
  18   back.
  19            THE COURT:  What date is this?  What period of time
  20   are we talking about?
  21            MR. SCHMIDT:  This is August and September of 1997.
  22            THE COURT:  And where is Mr. El Hage?
  23            MR. SCHMIDT:  In Nairobi.  This is after he returns
  24   to Nairobi.  He's questioned by the agents.  His home is
  25   searched.  They give them a copy of the -- Wadih gets a copy
                                                                4533
   1   of the inventory, and there is, for the period of time from
   2   then until he leaves, he is in regular contact with the
   3   government agents.
   4            THE COURT:  And the significance of that is Mr. El
   5   Hage's perception that this was an American operation?
   6            MR. SCHMIDT:  No.
   7            THE COURT:  The American rather than Kenyan
   8   government?
   9            MR. SCHMIDT:  His perception that the people who can
  10   help him are the Americans, not the Kenyans, and that he is --
  11            THE COURT:  And what follows from that?
  12            MR. SCHMIDT:  His perception of the Americans and him
  13   being an American and the Americans on his side and is
  14   consistent with innocent conduct, consciousness of innocence.
  15   And he's maintaining contact with the agents on a regular
  16   basis.  He's not running from them, he's not using code, he's
  17   not hiding from them, being open, available.
  18            In a normal case, I would call the agents, your
  19   Honor.
  20            THE COURT:  It would be the same issue whether you
  21   call the agent.  It is what would be the relevance, what the
  22   basis for admission would be.  And, what about it?
  23            MR. SCHMIDT:  Mr. El Hage is charged with being a
  24   member in a nine-year worldwide conspiracy against the United
  25   States.
                                                                4534
   1            THE COURT:  Yes.
   2            MR. SCHMIDT:  His first regular contact with
   3   officials of the United States is in September of -- excuse
   4   me, August of 1997.  After his contact with the Americans, he
   5   maintains close, personal and informational ties with them.  I
   6   think that's relevant.  The government may not think it's
   7   particularly relevant.
   8            THE COURT:  The question right now is whether I think
   9   it's relevant, not what the government thinks or not what you
  10   think.
  11            And its relevance is to show that Mr. El Hage thought
  12   that he had a relationship with the United States Government
  13   which caused him to initiate calls with them and that that's
  14   inconsistent with somebody who was in fact a hostage in the
  15   United States?
  16            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, the government has brought
  17   out in their testimony, both --
  18            THE COURT:  Is what I said wrong?
  19            MR. SCHMIDT:  In a general sense, in a general sense,
  20   the government has brought out perjury in the Grand Jury, the
  21   use of --
  22            THE COURT:  These are all arguments.
  23            To contrast this with perjury in the Grand Jury, you
  24   have to be asserting the truth of what he said to the agent,
  25   but you are disclaiming that.
                                                                4535
   1            MR. SCHMIDT:  It's showing his willingness to deal
   2   with the Americans, to inform them when he is traveling to the
   3   United States, the difficulties he's having shows a
   4   consciousness of innocence as opposed to a consciousness of
   5   guilt.  That, I think, is part of -- it also shows the
   6   opposite side of the government's version of hostility to the
   7   United States.  Not the specific words that he is using, it is
   8   the tone, the repeated contact with them, the regular contact
   9   with them, his willingness to call them back, he's asking for
  10   help.
  11            THE COURT:  Would it be fair to say that they are
  12   being offered not for the truth but to evidence the fact that,
  13   while in Nairobi, Mr. El Hage engaged in communications with
  14   the American authorities, period?  Would that be a fair --
  15            MR. SCHMIDT:  No, that's not near what --
  16            THE COURT:  You tell me, then.
  17            MR. SCHMIDT:  He communicated with American
  18   authorities in a manner of cooperativeness, without fear,
  19   asking for help.
  20            THE COURT:  I'm not going to summarize all that.  In
  21   the manner demonstrated --
  22            MR. SCHMIDT:  In the demonstrated by the tapes, yes.
  23            THE COURT:  All right, I'll allow it and tell the
  24   jury it's for that limited purpose.
  25            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, under 403 we're now
                                                                4536
   1   going to have, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight,
   2   nine, I believe ten transcripts read to the jury.
   3            THE COURT:  Let me see them.
   4            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, that's just simply not
   5   true.  I just went over with the government that we have pared
   6   them down to at least now to seven, at the most, because six
   7   is leading into another issue.
   8            THE COURT:  Tell me which is the first one you are
   9   going to play.
  10            MR. SCHMIDT:  The first one is August 23, 1997.
  11            THE COURT:  August 23, 11:46?
  12            MR. SCHMIDT:  That's correct.  It expresses--
  13            THE COURT:  I'm reading it.
  14            (Pause)
  15            THE COURT:  And this shows, I'm now looking at W68-E,
  16   August 23, this shows what was Mr. El Hage initiating this
  17   meeting?
  18            MR. SCHMIDT:  It appears that it is Joseph asking if
  19   he wants to speak with them, then making arrangements to meet.
  20   I think that's the following day after he was initially
  21   detained at the airport.
  22            THE COURT:  But do we know -- this doesn't tell us.
  23   Do we know who initiated this?
  24            MR. SCHMIDT:  It's an incoming call from Joseph to
  25   Wadih El Hage.
                                                                4537
   1            THE COURT:  Joseph says, "Okay, I wanted to know if
   2   you wanted to talk today."  Is there a request, do we know
   3   whether the request to talk originated with El Hage or with
   4   Joseph?
   5            MR. SCHMIDT:  I think the conversation basically
   6   speaks for itself.  It's actually a conversation from the day
   7   before that I think put in that indicates a conversation
   8   between one of the agents and Ms. Ray, which indicated that
   9   they were going to try to talk the next day, but I have
  10   selected this out of about 15 to 20 conversations between the
  11   parties.
  12            THE COURT:  I'm just looking at the second one of
  13   these tapes, August 26, and I think the government's objection
  14   is well-taken.  Discussion about the dog and so on.
  15            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, it's impossible to take
  16   every little thing that really is important in a conversation
  17   and take it out.  The United States Government goes to Mr. El
  18   Hage, all right?  He's questioned at the airport.  His home is
  19   searched.  He's told that they think he's working with
  20   terrorists, and the reaction of Mr. El Hage is not running
  21   from them, it's having conversations of this nature with the
  22   government agents.
  23            As is important that his conduct and conversations
  24   that show a consciousness of guilt, these conversations show a
  25   consciousness of "I have nothing to hide" with these people.
                                                                4538
   1   That is the importance of it.
   2            To eliminate these conversations with the government
   3   agents is to eliminate what I believe is a very important part
   4   of our case, is Mr. El Hage's conduct from the time he was
   5   approached by the government in August of 1997 until his
   6   arrest in 1998, including testifying two times in the Grand
   7   Jury, not asking for an attorney.  I think this is consistent
   8   with his consciousness of innocence, and to eliminate these
   9   conversations, your Honor, I obviously very strenuously
  10   object.
  11            (Pause)
  12            MR. SCHMIDT:  If I may just make a brief analogy,
  13   your Honor.
  14            THE COURT:  Let me read them, please.  You go on and
  15   on about irrelevant things about --
  16            MR. SCHMIDT:  Maybe I can make an analogy that
  17   perhaps your Honor may change his mind.  If a police officer
  18   approaches somebody and the person runs away, that is evidence
  19   of consciousness of guilt.
  20            THE COURT:  I understand what --
  21            MR. SCHMIDT:  If he walks towards the police officer
  22   to enter into a conversation with the police officer and not
  23   run away, that shows consciousness of innocence.  That's what
  24   I'm trying to show by the few of these conversations.
  25            THE COURT:  First of all, you don't have a few, you
                                                                4539
   1   have a great many, most of which are plane reservations and
   2   what the time of leaving is and what the route is and so on.
   3            MR. SCHMIDT:  I was trying to skip over some of that,
   4   but informing the government of the exact --
   5            THE COURT:  Give me a moment.
   6            (Pause)
   7            THE COURT:  I proposes the following.  I propose that
   8   you play them, if you wish, and the jury be told as follows by
   9   the Court:  You are about to hear records of conversations had
  10   between El Hage or his wife with a representative of the
  11   United States.  These conversations are not being offered or
  12   received as evidence of the truth of anything said to the
  13   agents or to the El Hages.  They are being offered and are
  14   being received solely to show that the El Hages were in
  15   communication with representatives of the United States while
  16   they were in Kenya, and to reflect the general tone and nature
  17   of the conversations.  They are being offered and received for
  18   no other purpose.
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, and if we are putting
  20   them as they are, which includes some conversations about the
  21   law of bugging etc., there's one conversation being left out
  22   where Mrs. El Hage acknowledges that the U.S. government was
  23   just trying to help them.  I think that shows a completer
  24   picture.  I believe it's August 20.
  25            THE COURT:  You want to reply that?
                                                                4540
   1            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes.
   2            THE COURT:  You may play that.
   3            MR. SCHMIDT:  I have no objection, your Honor.
   4            THE COURT:  Very well.
   5            All right, let's bring in the jury.  That's the next
   6   order of business?
   7            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes.
   8            THE COURT:  Mr. Schmidt, at what point do you think
   9   El Hage will rest?
  10            MR. SCHMIDT:  I'm thinking, your Honor.  It depends
  11   how long the Odeh defense is tomorrow.  I would --
  12            THE COURT:  I don't understand that.
  13            MR. SCHMIDT:  They were going to go tomorrow with
  14   their witnesses.
  15            MR. WILFORD:  Your Honor, that's what we discussed
  16   last week.  We indicated that we would have a witness that
  17   would be available tomorrow.  We would be prepared to put our
  18   entire case on tomorrow.
  19            THE COURT:  How much time, apart from the sequence,
  20   about how many more hours do you anticipate?
  21            MR. SCHMIDT:  I would anticipate, other than today,
  22   probably two and a half to three days.
  23            THE COURT:  What I'm really trying to find out is,
  24   are we going to complete live tomorrow by Thursday on behalf
  25   of all defendants?
                                                                4541
   1            MR. COHN:  It appears not.
   2            THE COURT:  It appears not.
   3            MR. COHN:  If he has two and a half more days --
   4            THE COURT:  Two and a half hours.
   5            MR. SCHMIDT:  No, days.
   6            THE COURT:  Two and a half days?
   7            MR. SCHMIDT:  Days, because I have a lot of documents
   8   we're going to be putting in.
   9            MR. COHN:  I'm listening.
  10            MR. SCHMIDT:  Some of which we are going to read,
  11   some of which we are going to flash, some of them we're not
  12   going to be able to flash.  We may have a couple more
  13   witnesses, also.
  14            THE COURT:  The suggestion is that if we turn down
  15   the microphone, that will improve the quality of the playing.
  16   That will interfere with the interpreters, but there is the
  17   printed text available.
  18            Is that acceptable?
  19            MR. SCHMIDT:  Yes.
  20            THE COURT:  Is that acceptable to all defendants?
  21   All right.  I don't know how that gets done, but if you will
  22   do that.
  23            (Jury present)
  24            THE COURT:  Ladies and gentlemen, I'm advised that we
  25   are about to hear records of conversations had between the
                                                                4542
   1   defendant El Hage or his wife, April, with a representative of
   2   the United States.  These conversations are not being offered
   3   or received in evidence as evidence of the truth of anything
   4   said to the agents or said to either of the El Hages.  They
   5   are being offered and are being received solely to show that
   6   the El Hages were in communication with representatives of the
   7   United States while they were in Kenya, and to reflect the
   8   general tone and nature of the conversations.  They are being
   9   offered and received for no other purpose.
  10            Mr. Schmidt.
  11            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, I also ask that the English
  12   transcriptions be published to the jury as they go.
  13            THE COURT:  Yes.  You may proceed.
  14            Why don't you offer in one fell swoop all of those
  15   that you are going to play, and they are all subject to this
  16   statement to the jury and will all be received in one fell
  17   swoop, subject to the limitations just stated.
  18            What exhibits are they?
  19            MR. SCHMIDT:  Your Honor, it's WEHX-W68E, a telephone
  20   call --
  21            THE COURT:  Just 68.  Do that later before each one
  22   is played, just give the exhibits, 68E, 54 --
  23            MR. SCHMIDT:  Excuse me, it's W68, W54, W55, W56,
  24   W49, W57 and W69, and before each one is WEHX for "Wadih El
  25   Hage exhibit."
                                                                4543
   1            THE COURT:  Yes.  Those two, four, six, seven, they
   2   are received subject to the direction which I just stated to
   3   the jury.
   4            (Defendant El Hage Exhibits WEHX-W68, WEHX-W54,
   5   WEHX-W55, WEHX-W56, WEHX-W49, WEHX-W57 and WEHX-W69 received
   6   in evidence)
   7            MR. SCHMIDT:  The first one is August 23, 1997.
   8            (Tape played)
   9            MR. SCHMIDT:  The next telephone conversation will be
  10   September 11, 1997 at approximately 6:55.
  11            (Tape played)
  12            THE COURT:  All right, ladies and gentlemen, we'll
  13   take up at that point tomorrow.
  14            MR. SCHMIDT:  Can you remind the jury to shut these
  15   off?
  16            THE COURT:  Yes, the jury is reminded to shut them
  17   off.
  18            I have something else to tell you, and that is this:
  19   I have heretofore asked that you not read, watch, listen to or
  20   discuss with anyone anything related to this case, and I know
  21   you understand that and are complying with it.
  22            I would now like to broaden that and ask you, to the
  23   extent to which it is reasonably possible, that you avoid
  24   reading, watching or listening to anything in connection with
  25   the Timothy McVeigh case.  The Timothy McVeigh case is going
                                                                4544
   1   to receive a great deal of publicity in the next several
   2   weeks, and I know it's going to be hard to avoid it, but I ask
   3   that you make every effort just not to read or listen or watch
   4   anything with respect to the Timothy McVeigh case.
   5            Other than that, my only other comment is, have a
   6   good evening.
   7            (Jury excused)
   8            THE COURT:  We'll take a five-minute recess and then
   9   we'll proceed with the charging conference.  Whether or not
  10   the defendants are present is a matter of their choice.
  11            MR. COHN:  We'll ask, your Honor --
  12            THE COURT:  The record should be clear they have a
  13   right to be here if they wish.
  14            MR. RUHNKE:  Judge, my client wishes to be excused at
  15   this charge conference.
  16            MR. COHN:  Mr. Al-'Owhali asks to be excused.
  17            MR. SCHMIDT:  Mr. El Hage is going to stay.
  18            (Recess)
  19            (In open court; jury not present)
  20            THE COURT:  All right.  I have in front of me the
  21   various submissions by the defendants with respect to the
  22   second working draft as of April 19, 2001, 5 p.m. proposed
  23   charge to the jury, which we'll mark as --
  24            MR. COHN:  Excuse me, your Honor, since
  25   Mr. Al-'Owhali, I've just been advised that since
                                                                4545
   1   Mr. Al-'Owhali is not allowed to go back because Mr. El Hage
   2   is still here he wants to come back out, because he can't go
   3   back to the --
   4            THE COURT:  So they all have to come back.
   5            MR. COHN:  I was just told that.  I don't know that
   6   for a fact.
   7            THE COURT:  I maintain the position that for
   8   logistical reasons they all go back or they all stay, and I'm
   9   not going to --
  10            MR. COHN:  I'm not suggesting that you interfere.  I
  11   just said he'd rather come out rather than sit in back and
  12   stair at a brick wall.
  13            THE COURT:  It makes sense.  I have no problem with
  14   that.
  15            We'll mark as Court Exhibit A of April 23rd, and as I
  16   indicated during the course of the day I plan to go over each
  17   objection, page by page, but I'd like to first begin with some
  18   general rulings.
  19            (Court Exhibit A marked)
  20            The motion to dismiss the last count for a lack of
  21   venue is granted for reasons which I will elaborate in an
  22   opinion to follow, the substance of which is I do not find
  23   that to be a continuous offense.  It's an offense completed
  24   when the false statement is uttered regardless of its impact.
  25   Indeed, as counsel for El Hage notes in the prior submission
                                                                4546
   1   the jury is specifically told that the impact of the false
   2   statement is irrelevant, and that the cases on which the
   3   government relies in which there is a transmission of a false
   4   statement and which permits venue to be either in the place of
   5   origin or place of impact are distinguishable.
   6            The government has requested that the Court revisit
   7   the Pinkerton issue with respect to Count Five of the
   8   indictment, and with respect to the defendant Odeh on the
   9   grounds that Count Five of the indictment has the specificity
  10   between the nature of the conspiracy and the substantive
  11   offense, the lack of which caused the Court to indicate that
  12   it would not grant the Pinkerton charge with respect to the
  13   other count.
  14            The problem with that is Count Five has three
  15   separate objects and does not in fact contain the degree of
  16   specificity which the government asserts.  Conceivably one
  17   could say if you have found with respect to Count Five -- I'm
  18   using original numbers throughout -- if you have found that an
  19   object of the conspiracy was to bomb the embassy in Nairobi,
  20   then you may find, but that really requires a limitation of
  21   what Count Five is about, or may also raise the question in
  22   the jury's mind why that applies only to that one count and
  23   one defendant.  The Court adheres to its prior ruling not to
  24   give a Pinkerton charge.
  25            While on this subject, you will note the special
                                                                4547
   1   verdict form, which is a critical document, certainly at least
   2   as important as the charge itself, the jury is asked to
   3   indicate where multiple objects to the conspiracy which
   4   objects it has found.  I worried a long time about this.  The
   5   concern that I have of course is the jury, having found one
   6   may spend a great deal of time debating or trying to reach
   7   unanimity with other objects of the of the conspiracy count.
   8   My inclination is, it's worth the time, although in one
   9   instance I think there are five objects of a conspiracy, but
  10   if anyone thinks that's not worth doing, I'm ambivalent on
  11   that point.
  12            I think also it may be helpful with respect to those
  13   defendants who may be subject to a death penalty phase to have
  14   that added insight into the jury's reasoning and finding.
  15            Does anybody think that we should not require the
  16   jury to indicate which objects of a conspiracy it found,
  17   although it has unanimously found one object, then I would
  18   like to be so advised.
  19            Silence.  We'll leave it the way it is.
  20            Let me make one other general observation.  The
  21   structure of the indictment is the conspiracy, the agreement
  22   to do among other things, let's say X, the doing of X, the
  23   attempt to do X, the aiding and abetting in the doing of X,
  24   and the causing of another to do X.  I'd like to focus on the
  25   role of the attempt charge.
                                                                4548
   1            Now, with respect to killing of individuals, I see
   2   that, the testimony is that there is a particular desire to
   3   kill Ambassador Bushnell.  The agenda would make that the
   4   subject of greater attention.  So there is an attempt to kill
   5   her, and not the actual killing of her, and, therefore, I
   6   think with respect to the killing count, it's appropriate to
   7   have both a substantive, the killing, the actual killing and
   8   the count which talks about attempt to kill, making clear to
   9   the jury, as I believe the proposed instructions do, that the
  10   jury cannot consider the same people.  You can't consider an
  11   attempt to murder somebody who in the previous count you have
  12   found to in fact have been murdered.
  13            But I have difficulty understanding what the role of
  14   an attempt is with respect to the other count.  My
  15   understanding of an attempt is when there has not been a
  16   consummation.  An attempt to kill the prison guard is an
  17   attempt, but what is the role of an attempt with use of
  18   weapons of mass destruction --
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, I could save you time.
  20            THE COURT:  Yes.
  21            MR. FITZGERALD:  We have debated it back and forth
  22   and now we're back over the edge.  We'll drop the attempt
  23   counts beyond the attempted murder of Ambassador Bushnell.
  24   Beyond the attempted murder of Ambassador Bushnell we would
  25   drop the other attempt counts.
                                                                4549
   1            THE COURT:  Nine goes out.
   2            MR. FITZGERALD:  Not the counts, I'm sorry.  The
   3   counts that talk about murder and attempted murder in the
   4   conjunctive we will specify that at the break if you want
   5   which counts there are.  We would not proceed on the attempt
   6   language.  We're keeping the count for murder.
   7            THE COURT:  I don't see what you just said.
   8            MR. FITZGERALD:  The use and attempted use count in.
   9   Count Nine we would not proceed on the attempted
  10   use.
  11            THE COURT:  You're keeping the count but you're
  12   striking the attempted use.  Okay.  Use of weapons.  I
  13   understand.  Very good.
  14            Now, the government objects to the requirement that
  15   in the special verdict form the jury has to be unanimous as to
  16   whether they find the defendant guilty as a principal or as an
  17   aider and abettor, and I am not prepared to resolve that
  18   question.  I have not had an opportunity to read these papers.
  19   I don't recall ever requiring a special verdict on whether the
  20   jury has to be unanimous in finding defendant guilty as a
  21   principal or as an aider or abettor, and I am going to defer
  22   on that.
  23            If the defendants are of the view that the Court
  24   should retain the present language requiring a special verdict
  25   as to the alternate theory of aiding and abetting or causing,
                                                                4550
   1   then I would like to be so advised, and I would like to have a
   2   written submission on behalf of the defendants by Thursday
   3   morning.
   4            MR. COHN:  Excuse me, which morning, Thursday?
   5            THE COURT:  Thursday morning.
   6            MR. COHN:  Thank you, your Honor.
   7            THE COURT:  Having said all of which, I am going to
   8   just go page by page and going to rely on counsel to tell me
   9   where there is an issue or a point to be made.  What's the
  10   first page -- I'm going to have a table of contents, but tell
  11   the jury not to pay any attention to the captions.  There are
  12   cases where the parties litigate the meaning of captions, and
  13   simply add, on the top of page 2 on line 2 the phrase, and the
  14   captions are simply as a reference and have no other
  15   significance.
  16            On page 3, middle paragraph line 2, during the trial
  17   you insert, may have heard.  Three lines from the bottom on
  18   page 3, strike the word, struck, and substitute, be stricken.
  19            What's the first page on which somebody has a comment
  20   or objection?
  21            MR. COHN:  I have something on 35 unless somebody has
  22   something else.
  23            THE COURT:  On page 35.
  24            MR. COHN:  May do I this sitting down, your Honor?
  25            THE COURT:  Yes.  You may even take off your jackets
                                                                4551
   1   if you like.  This would normally be down in the robing room.
   2            MR. COHN:  There is a limit to how much I'll burden
   3   the Court with unsightliness.
   4            THE COURT:  Now, with respect to the conduct of
   5   counsel, I put in the bracket and say, if used.  Is there
   6   anybody who does not want that paragraph?  We raised this at
   7   the beginning of the trial and there was not unanimity.  Do
   8   counsel want this in or out?
   9            MR. COHN:  I want it, but I would like it amended to,
  10   in fact, you know the jury has seen a number of us spend the
  11   time talking to the government as well, and so what I really
  12   wanted was conduct of cooperation of all counsel rather than
  13   leave it just with the defendants.  I don't know how my
  14   colleague on the defense side feel about that.
  15            MR. DRATEL:  That's fine with us, your Honor, but we
  16   also request the instruction be given.
  17            THE COURT:  The first sentence, divided the work.
  18   That relates only to the --
  19            MR. COHN:  I'm not sure they know we divided the work
  20   if you really must know.  I mean they've seen us consult.
  21   They've seen us pass notes to each other, but I don't know
  22   that they know on legal issues we've divided the work, but I
  23   don't know that we've done it on factual issues particularly.
  24            THE COURT:  You propose that that language be
  25   retained.
                                                                4552
   1            MR. COHN:  No, I would say, and have divided the
   2   work -- well, I did propose it.  I didn't think of it in that
   3   context.
   4            THE COURT:  You know what, I'd better mark Court
   5   Exhibit B of today's date is Al-'Owhali's proposed changes.
   6   Court Exhibit C is the government's letter of April 20th.
   7   Court Exhibit D is Mr. Dratel's letter of April 20th.  Am I
   8   missing anyone?
   9            (Court Exhibits B through D marked)
  10            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, my letter is on behalf of
  11   both El Hage and Odeh.
  12            THE COURT:  That's Court Exhibit D is on behalf of
  13   those.  Mr. Odeh I think submitted something only with respect
  14   to the Pinkerton charge and I have ruled on that.
  15            I'll strike, and has divided.  I have also noted
  16   throughout the trial counsel for various defendants have
  17   consulted with each other.  Strike, and have divided the work
  18   of the trial, and leave in an effort to facilitate their
  19   presentation and to avoid duplication.
  20            MR. COHN:  You are not going to accept the language
  21   that we've consulted with the government as well?
  22            THE COURT:  No, I am going to put that in.  I can't
  23   put that in the first sentence.  Have consulted with each
  24   other.  I can put that in the first sentence.  Have consulted
  25   with each other and with the government?  Anybody object to my
                                                                4553
   1   saying that?
   2            MR. FITZGERALD:  No, your Honor.  I just think it's
   3   very odd.  It looks like I don't think anyone is going to
   4   think there is something wrong with cooperating.  The fact
   5   that they're coordinating, you may want to instruct the jury,
   6   but I don't see why it look like we're cooperating with the
   7   defense.  I think --
   8            MR. COHN:  It doesn't say you cooperated with us.  It
   9   says we cooperated with you.
  10            THE COURT:  With each other.  We're going too long to
  11   have that type of humor.
  12            MR. FITZGERALD:  It might make sense just to put the
  13   cooperation with the government at the end of paragraph.
  14            THE COURT:  Yes, I'm coming to that conclusion.  How
  15   about share the burdens of defense?  Is that all right?  Last
  16   phrase?
  17            MR. COHN:  Sure.
  18            THE COURT:  And cooperated with the government
  19   without --
  20            MR. FITZGERALD:  I might suggest --
  21            THE COURT:  Without -- when this did not -- where
  22   possible.  Just, where possible.  That it would be unusual and
  23   waste of time and effort if counsel did not share the burden
  24   of the defense and cooperated with the government where
  25   possible.  Is that agreeable to everyone?
                                                                4554
   1            MR. COHN:  Yes.
   2            THE COURT:  Next page after page 5?
   3            MR. COHN:  Next one I have is 10.
   4            THE COURT:  Before we get to that, I'm reminded
   5   Counts Seven and Eight also have attempt language in addition
   6   to counts Nine and Ten.
   7            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes, Judge, we'll treat Counts Seven
   8   Eight and Nine the same, and Ten.
   9            THE COURT:  Now we're on --
  10            MR. COHN:  On page 10 I am requesting a charge of
  11   failure to testify.  I am requesting a charge that the
  12   defendant's right not to testify --
  13            THE COURT:  You want --
  14            MR. COHN:  I am asking for it.  Again, I don't speak
  15   for my colleague.
  16            THE COURT:  Does anybody not want it in?  We don't
  17   have to decide that now.
  18            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, just from page 8, we
  19   skipped.
  20            THE COURT:  Page 8.  Yes.
  21            MR. DRATEL:  Persons not on trial, number 2 in my
  22   letter, second to last line, defendant was not named as a
  23   defendant in this case, or I would just add, whether or not
  24   named as a defendant in the indictment was not tried with the
  25   defendant.
                                                                4555
   1            THE COURT:  Any objection?
   2            MR. FITZGERALD:  No strong objection.
   3            THE COURT:  Whether or not named as a defendant in
   4   the indictment.
   5            With respect to the indictment and the long list of
   6   names and aliases with respect to defendants not on trial, is
   7   there some way we can simplify that or make it clearer to the
   8   defendants?  Delete them entirely?  Delete them entirely, may
   9   have to delete many of them.
  10            MR. FITZGERALD:  You might be able to.  We'll take a
  11   look at that, Judge, and we can certainly bold face.
  12            THE COURT:  Underline or do something so you can more
  13   readily identify who are the defendants in a particular case.
  14            On page 9, second paragraph under publicity, third
  15   line, strike, or the Internet, and substitute, elsewhere.  I
  16   didn't want to suggest to the jury some other place where they
  17   could find out about what's going on here.
  18            Next page?
  19            MR. COHN:  I have something on 12, your Honor, if
  20   nobody has anything before that.
  21            THE COURT:  On page 12.
  22            MR. COHN:  Actually it starts on page 12.  Use of
  23   particular investigative techniques.
  24            THE COURT:  Yes.
  25            MR. COHN:  I object to the use just instructed that
                                                                4556
   1   law enforcement techniques are not their concern.  In fact,
   2   they can be their concern under certain circumstances and I
   3   just don't know that that's necessary language.
   4            MS. BABCOCK:  We join that objection, your Honor, and
   5   that's mentioned in the letter that we jointly submitted with
   6   El Hage.  I think that language what the Court does earlier in
   7   that the jury can consider investigative techniques in
   8   considering whether the government's met further proof.  I
   9   think it reached too broadly.  It is communicated adequately
  10   in the previous sentence which says as a legal requirement
  11   that the government use any specific investigative technique
  12   to prove its case.
  13            THE COURT:  I have no problem striking that sentence,
  14   although it offends tradition, I don't think I have not used
  15   that sentence, but I don't know it really adds anything.
  16            MR. FITZGERALD:  Judge, I would not that we say I
  17   think three times it's whether or not the case has been proved
  18   by whatever techniques and we can just reinforces the issues
  19   not the techniques use, but whether the result gives prove
  20   beyond a reasonable doubt or not.
  21            MR. COHN:  The problem is, your Honor --
  22            THE COURT:  The issue is clearly drawn.  Give me a
  23   moment.  I don't think there is any need.
  24            Change it to read, the use of specific law
  25   enforcement techniques or the failure to use them are not your
                                                                4557
   1   concern.  Your concern is to determine whether or not.
   2            Next.
   3            MR. FITZGERALD:  The government has something on 16.
   4            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, I have something on 13
   5   before that, direct and circumstantial evidence.  We would
   6   prefer something that would give the jury an example of a weak
   7   circumstantial inference.  That was just the virtue of the
   8   example that Judge Leval used and the one that we cited.
   9            THE COURT:  Now, you know, there was one judge who
  10   got tired of the wet umbrella, analogy so he had some other
  11   analogy, and the Court of Appeals reversed, and said, you know
  12   I don't understand why people don't stick to the tried and
  13   true.  I know Judge Leval changes the rain to snow, but --
  14            MR. DRATEL:  Also the subway platform one, that I'm
  15   talking about with that.
  16            THE COURT:  Let's not.  This is classic, well-proved
  17   language, and it's perfectly clear and I see no reason to
  18   change it.
  19            MR. COHN:  In that same charge I have asked for a
  20   charge that where two inferences --
  21            THE COURT:  Yes, and there is law that's
  22   inappropriate.
  23            MR. COHN:  I can still ask.
  24            THE COURT:  Recent case.  The Judge said he was going
  25   to do it.  He then consulted leaving Friday on a subject,
                                                                4558
   1   which I don't identify, then did not give it and the objection
   2   was that he had not charged it in the way he had indicated in
   3   the charging conference that he was going to give it.
   4            MR. DRATEL:  Just in terms of procedurally, your
   5   Honor, could I restate our objection, for example, if we raise
   6   and objection, the Court denies it, should we then restate it
   7   or is it preserved by the denial we restate our objection to
   8   the circumstantial evidence?
   9            THE COURT:  You don't need to say, I object.
  10            MR. DRATEL:  Thank you.
  11            THE COURT:  Next item?
  12            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, before we get to 16, your
  13   Honor, on page 15 where you deal exceedingly briefly with
  14   voluntariness, having collapsed it into near invisibility
  15   and --
  16            THE COURT:  You want the words, if any, after, what
  17   weight?  Yes.
  18            MR. COHN:  Yes.
  19            THE COURT:  I have no problem with that.  The next
  20   thing is page 18.
  21            MR. FITZGERALD:  Page 16.  The fifth line from the
  22   top.  My suggestion is that after we say, nor can any such
  23   false exculpatory statement, put the words, alone establish,
  24   or, alone be sufficient for an inference to be drawn that the
  25   defendant knew of and intentionally joined in the conspiracies
                                                                4559
   1   charged.
   2            THE COURT:  Any objection?  I'll add a line after at
   3   the end of the fourth line on page 16.  I'm up to 18.
   4            MR. FITZGERALD:  Judge, we object to the first two
   5   paragraphs indicating that the government witnesses had anger
   6   toward the defendant, and I don't think that's borne out that
   7   the government witnesses had anger or hostility toward the
   8   defendants and certainly if we're going to talk about anger or
   9   hostility, we should just make it neutral, any witness having
  10   any hostility toward any party.  I think it singles out the
  11   government witnesses for impeachment.
  12            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, that's not true.  With
  13   respect to al Fadl who expressed a resentment of people who
  14   make more money than him which included Mr. El Hage, and he
  15   also had --
  16            THE COURT:  Strike government from the second
  17   sentence, which some witnesses may have toward one or more of
  18   the defendants.
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  Judge, anger, hostility towards
  20   Mr. El Hage in this courtroom over the pay dispute?  I think
  21   there may be people who had anger toward al Qaeda or toward
  22   the bombing, but why are we singling out that no witness had a
  23   hostility toward a party?
  24            THE COURT:  I don't recall.  Was this requested or
  25   did this come from the Court sua sponte?
                                                                4560
   1            Sua sponte.
   2            (Pause)
   3            The change is to read:  In connection with your
   4   evaluation of the credibility of the witnesses you should
   5   specifically consider evidence of resentment or anger on the
   6   part of any witness if you find this to be the case.  Evidence
   7   that a witness is biased, prejudiced or hostile -- strike,
   8   towards the defendant, requires you to view that witness'
   9   testimony.  And then continued.  So it's completely neutral.
  10   Next?
  11            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, in accomplice testimony at the
  12   starting at the bottom of --
  13            THE COURT:  Yes.
  14            MR. COHN:  I think that you have neglected, although
  15   I think it's implied, that they can reject the entire
  16   testimony or accept any part of it.
  17            THE COURT:  I have that someplace.
  18            MR. COHN:  It's not there.
  19            THE COURT:  I don't --
  20            MR. COHN:  I mean imply that by saying you should
  21   reject, and then you go on to say that.
  22            THE COURT:  Next paragraph.  On page 20, as with any
  23   witness let me emphasize that the issue of credibility need
  24   not be decided in and all or nothing fashion.
  25            MR. COHN:  Yes.
                                                                4561
   1            THE COURT:  Even if you find the witness testified
   2   falsely.
   3            MR. COHN:  You never make specific that it's their
   4   right to reject it in its entirety, and it is their right.
   5            MR. FITZGERALD:  Which is said elsewhere.
   6            THE COURT:  I think it's covered on page 20.
   7            MR. FITZGERALD:  The next objection the government
   8   had was on page 20.
   9            THE COURT:  Yes.
  10            MR. FITZGERALD:  At the top of page 20 the standard
  11   language that a jury is told to look at an accomplice and to
  12   determine whether his motive is to testify truthfully or
  13   falsely is for them to determine.  And then at the bottom of
  14   page 20 we have a second charge on cooperating witnesses,
  15   somehow distinguished from accomplice witnesses, where the
  16   jury is instructed that cooperating witnesses have a motive to
  17   testify falsely.
  18            That I believe is on the top of page 21 it says:  A
  19   witness who realizes that he may be able to obtain his own
  20   freedom, et cetera has a motive to testify falsely.  I think
  21   the entire paragraph going from 20 on to 21 and the next two
  22   paragraphs is unnecessary in light of the standard charge of
  23   accomplice witnesses.
  24            THE COURT:  Why isn't that true?  There is no point
  25   in, there are no cooperating witnesses who were called other
                                                                4562
   1   than accomplices.
   2            MR. DRATEL:  There are, your Honor.  There were for
   3   example Ashef Juma.  There are certain, the one that comes to
   4   my mind right now.  There may be others.  I don't remember.
   5   But who have protection agreements with the United States
   6   brought them over, brought 17 members of his family over but
   7   he's not an accomplice and a Ashef Juma he's the one I know
   8   just off the top of my head.
   9            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, also it describes a
  10   cooperative witnesses that the agreement not to further
  11   prosecute.  You can merge, if there is a distinction from
  12   accomplice witnesses to witnesses receiving benefits they can
  13   be merged into one section.  I don't think we should single
  14   them out twice and particularly the way the cooperating
  15   witness section reads it indicates that all motives are to
  16   testify falsely.  Cooperative witness section talk about
  17   people pleading guilty with cooperation agreements which does
  18   not employ to either of the Jumas.
  19            THE COURT:  I think that's a valid point.  I think
  20   what I ought to do is to simply say, cooperating witnesses
  21   called by the government, that the previous instruction given
  22   with respect to accomplices and judging their credibility
  23   applies as well to any cooperating witnesses called by the
  24   government who may receive some benefit such as, and then pick
  25   up the bottom of page 20.
                                                                4563
   1            MS. BABCOCK:  Judge, we would object to removing the
   2   cooperating witness instruction because we also, like counsel
   3   for El Hage, believe there is a distinction to be drawn
   4   between accomplices and witnesses who are cooperating.  In
   5   fact --
   6            THE COURT:  I'm keeping it a separate instruction.
   7   The test is really the same with respect to both, and --
   8            MS. BABCOCK:  Well, the test is not really the same
   9   because cooperating witnesses receive a greater incentive and
  10   have a great motive to testify falsely.
  11            THE COURT:  That's right.  That's what we tell them
  12   with respect to in the accomplice provision.
  13            MS. BABCOCK:  My co-counsel reminds me there were at
  14   least two witnesses who were cooperating witnesses, but not
  15   accomplices.
  16            THE COURT:  All right.
  17            MS. BABCOCK:  Ashef Juma and a Ashef Sekander.
  18            THE COURT:  Suppose we said, cooperating witnesses
  19   called by the government on a related note let me say a few
  20   words about the agreements between the government and certain
  21   of its witnesses other than accomplices and then keep what's
  22   at the bottom of page 20.
  23            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, there is no agreement
  24   not to further prosecute for people to plead guilty.  The
  25   second sentence of that does not apply to the Juves, one of
                                                                4564
   1   whom in fact was a defense witness.
   2            THE COURT:  Strike that sentence.
   3            MS. BABCOCK:  Your Honor, that language about the
   4   government bringing the witnesses cooperation --
   5            THE COURT:  Give me a moment, please.
   6            (Pause)
   7            THE COURT:  Suppose we say, on a related note, let me
   8   say a few words about the agreements between the government
   9   and certain of its witnesses other than accomplices.  Strike
  10   the next two sentences.
  11            Some of these witnesses have been placed in federal
  12   protective custody and some have received money in connection
  13   with their protective custodial status, and.  Then go down to
  14   three lines from the bottom.  Strike, therefore, you must
  15   examine the testimony of such a witness with caution and weigh
  16   it with great care if -- and then leave it the way it is.
  17            MS. BABCOCK:  Judge, we would ask the Court to keep
  18   in the sentence that says the government also promised to
  19   bring those witnesses' cooperation to the attention of the
  20   Court that is sentencing them.
  21            THE COURT:  That only applies to the accomplice.
  22   That doesn't apply here.  That's the point.
  23            MS. BABCOCK:  It's not in the accomplice instruction.
  24            THE COURT:  Yes, it is.  It isn't?
  25            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, all the parts that have to
                                                                4565
   1   do with that should be reincorporated back into the prior
   2   structure.  Also, witnesses realize they may be able to --
   3            THE COURT:  I see what the problem is.  Okay.
   4            MR. FITZGERALD:  Judge, should we balance it?  That
   5   there is also a agreement that not only says that the
   6   government will bring the cooperation to the attention of the
   7   government.
   8            THE COURT:  You should ask yourselves whether
   9   so-called accomplices benefit more by lying than by telling
  10   the truth.  What we have to do is we have to take what I've
  11   just stricken from cooperating witnesses called by the
  12   government who are not accomplices and move it into the
  13   preceding paragraph.  We will do that.
  14            MR. FITZGERALD:  And without, Judge, the language
  15   that was stricken on page 21 indicated that such witnesses had
  16   a motive to testify falsely.
  17            THE COURT:  I'm striking that.
  18            MR. FITZGERALD:  Okay, great.  Thank you.
  19            THE COURT:  Let me do it.  Let me take the time.
  20            Page 20, under cooperating witnesses called by the
  21   government, the second and third sentence gets inserted on
  22   page 19 as a second full paragraph.  Otherwise, that remains
  23   the same.
  24            Cooperating witnesses called by the government then
  25   reads:  On a related note, let me say a few words about the
                                                                4566
   1   agreements between certain of the government witnesses other
   2   than accomplices.
   3            We delete the next two sentences because we move them
   4   to page 19, and we strike the first paragraph on page 21 and
   5   the first two sentences of the second paragraph on page 21.
   6   We strike the word, therefore, and begin, examine that
   7   testimony of such a witness with caution and weigh it with
   8   great care.  After scrutinizing such testimony if you decide
   9   to accept it, you may give it what weight, if any, you find it
  10   deserves.  Next.
  11            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, it's not on the page because
  12   you took it out, but I don't know why you took out government
  13   witnesses, took out of the second draft quote government
  14   witness improper to consider guilty plea as it existed in the
  15   first draft, and I think it ought to be put back in.
  16            MR. FITZGERALD:  It's still there.
  17            MR. COHN:  Is it?
  18            MR. FITZGERALD:  Page 21.  In fact, we suggest one
  19   change to it.  The bottom of page 21 in the second draft talks
  20   about how it's improper to consider a guilty plea, with which
  21   we obviously agree.  The only question the government suggests
  22   that the third line from the bottom that we strike in light of
  23   the benefits afforded by the government to a cooperating
  24   witness that the only issue to tell them the plea is not their
  25   concern.
                                                                4567
   1            MR. COHN:  In the words of Emily Latella:  Never
   2   mind.
   3            MS. BABCOCK:  Your Honor, we would like that language
   4   to remain in there.  We think that there is a real danger that
   5   the jury goes to be drawing comparisons between those
   6   witnesses who pled guilty under similar circumstances, and I
   7   think to say that it's simply a personal decision concerning
   8   his dealings is sufficient.
   9            THE COURT:  I'll leave it in.  Next page?
  10            MR. COHN:  26, your Honor.
  11            MR. HERMAN:  Judge, can we go back to page 21?  We're
  12   confused when the Court struck the first paragraph.
  13            THE COURT:  Why the Court struck the first paragraph
  14   on page 21?
  15            MR. HERMAN:  Yes, sir.
  16            THE COURT:  I'm sure the government would object to
  17   being put in.
  18            MR. FITZGERALD:  You can put it back in, that's fine.
  19            THE COURT:  We'll put it back in.
  20            MS. BABCOCK:  Would it be possible just to read the
  21   instruction?
  22            THE COURT:  Yes.  On page 19 I'm going to insert the
  23   second and third sentences under the caption, cooperating
  24   witnesses called by the government on page 20.
  25            The section called cooperating witnesses called by
                                                                4568
   1   the government will then read:  On a related note, let me say
   2   a few words about agreements between the government and
   3   certain of its witnesses other than accomplices.  Then it
   4   should read:  Now the government is permitted to enter into
   5   agreements of this sort.
   6            MR. FITZGERALD:  I think you omitted the prior
   7   sentence, Judge.  I'm sorry, the last sentence on page 20 was
   8   staying.  Some of these witnesses --
   9            THE COURT:  Yes, that's in there.  That's in there.
  10   The government is permitted to enter into agreements of this
  11   sort.  You in turn may accept the testimony of such a witness
  12   and convict each of them on the basis of his testimony alone
  13   if it convinces you a defendant's guilty beyond a reasonable
  14   doubt.  Then we go down to, you must examine the testimony of
  15   such a witness with caution and weigh it with great care.  And
  16   then last sentence remains the same.  Next.
  17            MR. FITZGERALD:  Page 23, Judge.
  18            THE COURT:  Page 23.
  19            MR. WILFORD:  I'm sorry, your Honor, with respect to
  20   witnesses who have entered into cooperation agreements the
  21   language that you have in page 21, while realizing that the
  22   witness may, I think it's important for the jury to consider
  23   that.
  24            THE COURT:  21?
  25            MR. WILFORD:  Second paragraph on 21 which begins
                                                                4569
   1   with, however.  I understand you don't want it included in
   2   this particular section.  However, it's important that the
   3   jury have an opportunity to consider the cooperation agreement
   4   and the motive of the witnesses who have entered the
   5   cooperation agreement.  It's not anywhere else.
   6            THE COURT:  It's in 19.
   7            MR. WILFORD:  It's in 19?
   8            THE COURT:  Yes, the last two lines.
   9            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor is putting it back in the
  10   accomplice testimony part is my understanding, because it
  11   wasn't in the original.
  12            MR. FITZGERALD:  The bottom of 19.
  13            THE COURT:  Enough of this.  We'll give you another
  14   draft.  I think we all know what is intended.  Let's move on.
  15            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, page 23.  The last
  16   paragraph singles out to endorse an attack by defense counsel
  17   and the legitimacy of the law enforcement witness I don't
  18   think that's necessary in light of the prior paragraph.  Quite
  19   legitimate for defense counsel to try to attack the
  20   credibility of a law enforcement witness.
  21            THE COURT:  Also you know the foundations of the
  22   courthouse would shake if that were not included in the
  23   charge.
  24            MR. COHN:  On 24, your Honor, the government objects
  25   to the missing witness charge, and I think that in the second
                                                                4570
   1   paragraph --
   2            THE COURT:  That's a question.  First of all, is
   3   anybody going to argue missing witness?
   4            MR. COHN:  I am.
   5            THE COURT:  Who is the missing witness?
   6            MR. COHN:  Missing witnesses are Kenyan police
   7   authorities to testify to the conditions of confinement.
   8            MR. FITZGERALD:  He didn't seek to produce them.  He
   9   didn't seek a letter rogatory to go to Kenya to bring them
  10   over here.
  11            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, we couldn't even get the names
  12   of the Kenyan witnesses when we tried.  The government had
  13   control of these witnesses and their identity.  It's their
  14   obligation to show the conditions of confinement, and the fact
  15   that they didn't can be argued to the jury.
  16            MR. FITZGERALD:  They could have sent a letter
  17   rogatory to Kenya saying please produce whatever witnesses
  18   were present for prison conditions.
  19            THE COURT:  What is your objection to it?
  20            MR. COHN:  In the second paragraph, your Honor, you
  21   restated what you said in the first paragraph, and instead of
  22   the word, could, you used, would, which means makes the jury
  23   project.  And new testimony is not exactly material testimony,
  24   but I would just leave out the word, new.  So I would, on the
  25   second sentence of the second paragraph replace the word,
                                                                4571
   1   would, with, could, which I think is fair, and strike the word
   2   new.
   3            THE COURT:  Strike what word.
   4            MR. COHN:  New like in N-E-W, like in recent or
   5   something different, a different subject matter.  I think it
   6   implies too much.
   7            THE COURT:  Oh, no.  New testimony is just
   8   concatenation of a whole long paragraph which usually says
   9   bear in mind, however, that the government has no obligation
  10   to call any witnesses whose testimony would merely be
  11   duplicative of the prior testimony.  So we cut all that out
  12   and put in new.  You'd rather have --
  13            MR. COHN:  It's hardly a place I'm going to draw a
  14   battle line, your Honor.
  15            THE COURT:  I think you're well advised.  I'm going
  16   to leave it in, and I'm going to put, may, after, you.  You
  17   may have heard.  It shouldn't be evidence.  You may have heard
  18   arguments.
  19            MR. COHN:  Yes, that's right, your Honor.
  20            THE COURT:  You may have heard argument about a
  21   witness who has not -- about witnesses.
  22            MR. COHN:  Yes.
  23            THE COURT:  About witnesses who have not been called.
  24   The defendants argue that these witnesses, and then if you
  25   find that any uncalled witness.
                                                                4572
   1            MR. COHN:  And, could have given, instead of would
   2   have given?  We have no idea what they would have done.  I
   3   mean I think that's fair to everybody.
   4            MR. FITZGERALD:  I think I know Mr. Dratel wants to
   5   speak.  Your Honor, I would ask that this be balanced by an
   6   instruction that the defendants have no burden of proof, but
   7   they have been given subpoena power and they do have the power
   8   to seek letters rogatory.  I think the jury should understand
   9   that it's not just the government that can produce witnesses.
  10            MR. COHN:  In the history of this case, Judge, we
  11   have been asking since last August for identification of
  12   witnesses.  Letters rogatory require that we be able to
  13   identify people.  We have been denied access to that.  It's
  14   clearly the government's --
  15            THE COURT:  You may consider whether witnesses
  16   testimony would have merely repeated other testimony and
  17   evidence already before you.  All right.  To change a, would,
  18   to a, could, that's a nuance that I'll change the, would, to
  19   the, could.
  20            MR. COHN:  The jury may say to themselves that --
  21            THE COURT:  I've granted your request.  Let's move
  22   on.
  23            MR. DRATEL:  With respect to missing witness and
  24   identification, but I just make it clear that we made a formal
  25   request of Ali Mohamed's attorney.
                                                                4573
   1            THE COURT:  I put it in.  I put it in.  Let's not
   2   argue discovery now.  I'm leaving it in.  Next?
   3            MR. DRATEL:  26, 24 from the government.  26, your
   4   Honor, recording and transcripts.
   5            THE COURT:  Exhibit X on top of page 25 contains a
   6   list of all the stipulations which have been entered into in
   7   the case.  I hope there will be such an exhibit.
   8            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes, Judge, we handed out the drafts
   9   last week.  We're just waiting to see.
  10            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, there is one issue that sort
  11   of comes up collaterally with that, and while they're not
  12   charged in the case, there probably will be on summations
  13   things like power point presentations, which obviously will be
  14   previewed to the Court, but I'm not sure they come within
  15   charts and summaries.
  16            In addition to all of it, we're probably going to
  17   present things by way of electronic blackboard and things
  18   which are illustrative on argument, but are not really charts
  19   that have been admitted in the case.
  20            THE COURT:  Page 7, certain materials displayed
  21   during the trial is not evidence.
  22            MR. COHN:  I guess during the trial, summation as
  23   well.  Okay.  Thank you.
  24            THE COURT:  Next.
  25            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, recording of transcripts,
                                                                4574
   1   page 26.  It's also number 6 I believe in my letter.  Yes,
   2   just to add the sentence which the Court has in many other
   3   instances it says quote, like any other evidence the
   4   recordings of transcripts should be given such weight as they
   5   deserve in light of all the facts and circumstances.  I just
   6   ask that that be added and put it on equal footing or not more
   7   equal footing than anything else.
   8            THE COURT:  This is your item 6?
   9            MR. DRATEL:  Yes, your Honor.  The quoted portion at
  10   the end.
  11            MR. FITZGERALD:  It seems to say that already in
  12   paragraph 1 of 26, the last sentence.
  13            THE COURT:  You must therefore regard give this
  14   evidence equal consideration along with all the other evidence
  15   in the case.
  16            MR. DRATEL:  I don't think that's a correct statement
  17   because they don't have to give it equal consideration.  They
  18   should give it whatever weight they think it deserves.  They
  19   don't have to give it equal consideration because you're sort
  20   of putting tapes above everything else.  You say you have
  21   everything else that you give the weight it deserves, but
  22   tapes you have to give equal consideration to everything else
  23   and I think it's over emphasizing the importance of tapes.
  24            THE COURT:  Where do you want this to go, this
  25   language?
                                                                4575
   1            MR. DRATEL:  I think at the end of the first
   2   paragraph or at the end of the third paragraph, either way.
   3            THE COURT:  You want something more than give this
   4   evidence equal consideration along with all the other evidence
   5   in the case?
   6            MR. DRATEL:  To me when I read it the reason I put
   7   that in when I read it, it's to be overemphasized.
   8            THE COURT:  Denied.  Next.
   9            MR. DRATEL:  Next is I think 32 and 33.
  10            MR. COHN:  No, I have something on 28.
  11            THE COURT:  I have something on 28, also.  Talk about
  12   numbers and counts and so on, they are going to change, right?
  13   We've stricken the last count.  You abandoned six so there are
  14   two left.  Whatever it is.
  15            MR. FITZGERALD:  We'll figure out the number, Judge.
  16            THE COURT:  Let's make sure we have the right number
  17   and also your answer to each of these special verdicts will be
  18   yes or no, or, guilty or not guilty because some of the
  19   questions are yes, no.  Some are guilty or not guilty.  What
  20   is on page 28?
  21            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, we would like you to say in
  22   that when you talk about the difference in dates and variance
  23   I'd like you to add the language saying, unless the difference
  24   in date is material.  You seem to give the impression that any
  25   date will do.
                                                                4576
   1            THE COURT:  Where are you?
   2            MR. COHN:  That's on page 28 variance in dates.
   3            MR. FITZGERALD:  That's 29.
   4            THE COURT:  The jury should determine whether any
   5   such difference is material and if you find it is material.
   6   It's right there.
   7            MR. COHN:  Okay, that's fine, I'm sorry I missed it.
   8            THE COURT:  Okay.  Next.
   9            MR. COHN:  Anybody before 31?
  10            MR. DRATEL:  No, 32.
  11            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, I understand that my comments
  12   for page 31, the overview of conspiracy law and the issue of
  13   joining one object of the conspiracy being enough flys in the
  14   face of a long line of cases, but reviewing those cases it
  15   seems to me that all of them deal with conspiracies where the
  16   conduct is of such like nature no matter what the charge that
  17   joining one of the objects really contemplates joining all,
  18   even if they didn't know about all the objects.
  19            For instance, in the Bill Cosby, whatever the name of
  20   the case is, the Cosby thing there were two objects of
  21   conspiracy.  One was a travel act and the other was a Hobbs
  22   Act, but they both were for the same purpose of extorting
  23   money from Bill Cosby, and so they used both of these as
  24   objects of the conspiracy.
  25            Here we have objects which can be viewed as very,
                                                                4577
   1   very limited, which is, for instance, bombing in Nairobi
   2   embassy, as that's an object of the conspiracy, and then there
   3   is killing all Americans essentially everywhere.  That I don't
   4   know that you can draw from that one object that they could
   5   have joined the other.  And what that does is so confuses the
   6   multiple conspiracy issue that I think it is misleading to the
   7   jury in this kind of case.
   8            So, again, I know that all the cases, even the most
   9   recent pronouncement of the circuit have said that proving one
  10   object is sufficient.  I think there has never been a case
  11   where the objects are so different and, therefore, and it sort
  12   of backs into your Pinkerton analysis.
  13            THE COURT:  It also backs into my reasoning in asking
  14   the jury to indicate which object it has found.
  15            MR. COHN:  Just because they tell us doesn't mean
  16   that it satisfies the requirement of law.
  17            THE COURT:  No, but it tells us what they have
  18   considered.  I understand your objection not really to be to
  19   the charge, but a substantive objection to the indictment and
  20   it is denied.
  21            MR. COHN:  In that regard, also, your Honor, I do
  22   suggest a multiple conspiracy charge that is somewhat
  23   different than yours, coming on page --
  24            THE COURT:  Page 4 of your letter.
  25            MR. COHN:  -- page 37 of your draft in which I take
                                                                4578
   1   the language of United States against Berger, and I think
   2   again is less confusing to the jury under these circumstances.
   3            THE COURT:  This is the language in the case.
   4            MR. COHN:  That is a direct quote, your Honor.
   5            THE COURT:  In which the Court is suggesting what the
   6   charge should say?
   7            MR. COHN:  Yes.  I'm sure your Honor wants to look at
   8   the same case as the case in full, and I just suggested to you
   9   and we can proceed on this after you've read it.
  10            THE COURT:  I am going to reserve on that.  I
  11   reserved now on two things.  I think only two things I'm
  12   reserving on, the government's request that the jury not be
  13   required to be unanimous as to whether a defendant is
  14   convicted as a principal or an aider and abettor, and I'm
  15   reserving on the proposal that the multiple conspiracy charge
  16   language on page 37 tracks that in the United States against
  17   Berger.  My resolution of both of those things will be
  18   reflected in the next day.
  19            Next.
  20            MS. BABCOCK:  Your Honor, page 33, which we object to
  21   the use of the term combination to define a conspiracy, and
  22   this is something that the Court uses in a couple of different
  23   places throughout the charge.  Again, on page 35, I think we
  24   list, do we list the pages in our letter?
  25            MR. DRATEL:  No, just the three places without the
                                                                4579
   1   pagination.
   2            MS. BABCOCK:  Our pagination was a little bit
   3   different than yours, so we didn't list all the specific
   4   pages, but object to that because to me common sense meaning
   5   of the word combination is just a joinder, and it doesn't,
   6   it's not the same as what is required for conspiracy which is
   7   a meeting of the mind or a mutual agreement.  I think the term
   8   is also vague.  I don't think the jury is going to know what
   9   it means.  I think it lowers the government's burden of proof
  10   on that element.
  11            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, the language follows
  12   immediately after combination of two or more persons to join
  13   together to accomplish some illegal objective in violation of
  14   the laws of the United States.
  15            THE COURT:  Denied.  I think this is time honored
  16   standard language, the meaning of which I think is quite
  17   clear.
  18            Next.
  19            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, although I didn't do the pages
  20   I believe as to Mr. Al-'Owhali aiding and abetting is just not
  21   possible under the evidence and no aiding and abetting charge
  22   ought to be given to him.  Either he's a principal, or he's
  23   not.
  24            THE COURT:  Denied.  Typo page 36 next to the last
  25   line should be conspiracy in fact had the unlawful purpose
                                                                4580
   1   specifically alleged in the indictment.
   2            MR. DRATEL:  The proof of multiple conspiracies page
   3   38, that second paragraph with respect to the defendants
   4   intention is item 9 in our letter.  We would ask the Court to
   5   wait to determine what the defendants are going to argue, what
   6   the defendants' intentions are.
   7            THE COURT:  Wait till the arguments?
   8            MR. DRATEL:  I'm sorry, your Honor, I misspoke.  Wait
   9   till there is, that there is articulation of what is going to
  10   be argued.  I don't know that we're going to argue at that
  11   point, but no one else is going --
  12            THE COURT:  You just don't understand the sequence.
  13   The Court is mandated under the rules to advise the defendant
  14   prior to closing argument what it will charge, so apart from
  15   the logistics I don't think I can withhold advising you what
  16   the charge until you've made your argument.
  17            I do, however, and this is as good as time as any, to
  18   alert you to the fact that although there will be a printed
  19   charge which the jury will have, that I reserve the right to
  20   deviate from the printed charge in the event that I conclude
  21   that in closing argument any counsel has deviated improperly
  22   from the record or the law.  This is known by my colleague and
  23   good friend Judge Brieant as the right to spear the red
  24   herring, and as I understand, and counsel should understand,
  25   that that is a right that the Court specifically does reserve.
                                                                4581
   1            Now, you want me to wait with respect to what issue?
   2            MR. DRATEL:  It says here the defendants contend that
   3   the government's proof failed to show under any of the
   4   coconspiracy counts that there existed only one overall
   5   conspiracy.  Rather they claim -- first, if we're going to put
   6   something here that's going to be conclusive I would ask that
   7   it say, some of the defendants.  It's not clear that all the
   8   defendants are going to argue that.
   9            THE COURT:  Is there any doubt that this is an
  10   argument that is going to be advanced by at least some of the
  11   defendants?
  12            MR. COHN:  I'll be making that argument.  I don't
  13   know who else is.
  14            THE COURT:  I'll put in here, some of.
  15            MR. DRATEL:  The only other change I would have then
  16   to that is the last sentence reads:  Rather, they claim that
  17   in each of the four conspiracy counts, before it gets to there
  18   actually just to put in to the extent that the government has
  19   proved the existence of any conspiracy.
  20            THE COURT:  No.  That doesn't really add anything.  I
  21   see what you are saying because this is what the defendants
  22   are saying.  You want to say to the extent?
  23            MR. DRATEL:  The government has proved the existence
  24   of any conspiracy, and then.
  25            THE COURT:  I'll put that in.
                                                                4582
   1            MR. DRATEL:  Thank you, your Honor.
   2            THE COURT:  Let's take a five-minute recess.
   3            (Recess)
   4            (Continued on next page)
   5
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   7
   8
   9
  10
  11
  12
  13
  14
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  16
  17
  18
  19
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                                                                4583
   1            THE COURT:  Let's resume.  Some of the defendants
   2   have taken a prayer break but Mr. El Hage is the only
   3   defendant who wishes to be present, and he is present.
   4            Mr. Dratel, I revisited your concern about recording
   5   the transcripts, and would it alleviate your concern if on
   6   page 6 at the end of the first full paragraph we said, that is
   7   to say, you should give this evidence such weight as you
   8   believe it deserves in light of all the facts and
   9   circumstances?
  10            MR. DRATEL:  Yes, your Honor.
  11            THE COURT:  We will put that in.
  12            MR. DRATEL:  Thank you.
  13            THE COURT:  Where are we?
  14            MR. FITZGERALD:  The government has nothing until 43.
  15            THE COURT:  Does anybody have anything before 43?
  16            MR. COHN:  The only other thing I had, your Honor,
  17   and I raise it just by way of caution for the record, is that
  18   you are not giving me a single act charge.
  19            THE COURT:  What do you mean by single act charge?
  20            MR. COHN:  In other words, I suggested in my request
  21   to charge -- it's a Porelli charge.
  22            THE COURT:  Yes.
  23            MR. COHN:  Single act is not necessarily evidence of
  24   joining a conspiracy but must be considered in the context
  25   that -- it's that charge.
                                                                4584
   1            THE COURT:  We say on 43, in fact, even a single act
   2   may be sufficient to draw the defendant within the ambit of
   3   the conspiracy so long as the defendant has knowingly and
   4   willfully joined the conspiracy.  Tell me the language you
   5   want.
   6            MR. COHN:  I had suggested it in my request to
   7   charge, your Honor, and I don't have it with me.  I will get
   8   it to you again.
   9            THE COURT:  No, no.  I have your requests to charge.
  10            MR. COHN:  Not the objection but the requests.  I
  11   didn't bring that with me, I am sorry.
  12            MS. BABCOCK:  We actually have something on 42.
  13            THE COURT:  42.
  14            MS. BABCOCK:  The first full paragraph, the second
  15   sentence from the end says on the other hand, each defendant
  16   denies that he was a member of any of those conspiracies.  We
  17   have asked that that be stricken and substituted for the
  18   following sentence:  On the other hand, the defendants contend
  19   that while they may have been acquainted and in contact with
  20   others named as coconspirators in the indictment, they did not
  21   have knowledge of the illegal purpose or purposes of the
  22   charged conspiracies.
  23            THE COURT:  We have that.  Look at page 44.
  24            MS. BABCOCK:  The reason we suggest it there, your
  25   Honor, is that the sentence that you have is kind of a non
                                                                4585
   1   sequitur.  What you are saying in the preceding sentence is,
   2   the government contends that these acts and conversations show
   3   beyond a reasonable doubt knowledge on the part of the
   4   defendant, and then you say on the other hand each defendant
   5   denies he was a member.
   6            What we are trying to do there is to make that
   7   consistent with and sort of the opposite of what the
   8   government contends.  On the other hand, each defendant
   9   contends that the acts and conversations, that he was
  10   acquainted with them but that they don't show knowledge of the
  11   illegal purpose.
  12            THE COURT:  I see what you mean.  So it would read,
  13   on the other hand, each defendant denies that these acts and
  14   conversations showed that he had such knowledge.  All right, I
  15   will make that change.  Next?
  16            MR. FITZGERALD:  On page 43, your Honor, as suggested
  17   at the bottom of page 2 of the government's letter, I think
  18   that the first paragraph should be amended to make clear that
  19   having a conversation where you agree to an unlawful agreement
  20   can make you guilty.  So I think the language would be at the
  21   end of the first paragraph, such assembly and discussion does
  22   not by itself insert the word necessarily, establish an
  23   unlawful agreement --
  24            THE COURT:  I have lost you.  Where are we?
  25            MR. FITZGERALD:  Page 43, the end of the first
                                                                4586
   1   sentence of the first full paragraph.  Such assembly and
   2   discussion does not by itself necessarily establish an
   3   unlawful agreement, inserting the word necessarily --
   4            THE COURT:  I am sorry.  We are on page 43?
   5            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes, first full paragraph.
   6            THE COURT:  The one that begins I caution you.
   7            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes, the end of that first sentence.
   8   Sorry.  The phrase and such assembly and discussion does not
   9   by itself, insert the word necessarily, establish an unlawful
  10   agreement, and then adding unless, of course, you find that an
  11   agreement was reached during that conversation.
  12            THE COURT:  I think that is fair.  Unless you find
  13   that -- I question whether we have to modify agreement.
  14   Unlawful agreement?
  15            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes.
  16            THE COURT:  An unlawful agreement was reached at that
  17   time.
  18            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, I just think it somehow has
  19   to be tied to the agreement charged in the indictment.
  20            THE COURT:  Excuse me.  An unlawful agreement charged
  21   in the indictment was reached at that time?
  22            MR. DRATEL:  Yes.
  23            MR. FITZGERALD:  But the discussion of the law here
  24   generally discusses free discussion of ideas generally.  It is
  25   not illegal unless you have reached an illegal agreement.  It
                                                                4587
   1   is not limited to the context of the indictment.
   2            THE COURT:  Yes, you can't put everything in one
   3   sentence.  I think the government's point is well taken.
   4            Next?
   5            MR. FITZGERALD:  The government has nothing until
   6   102, reserving its right on page 84.
   7            THE COURT:  Anything between 42 and 102?
   8            MS. BABCOCK:  Yes.  On 46, I believe it is, regarding
   9   the acts and declarations of coconspirators.  It is actually
  10   on page 47.  We move to strike that entire paragraph, starting
  11   with what does this mean, and the reason we move to strike it
  12   is because we believe that there is a risk that when the jury
  13   reads this they are going to be misled regarding the
  14   government's burden of proof on the substantive crimes charged
  15   in the indictment and might be tempted to convict on the
  16   substantive crimes based on the Pinkerton theory.
  17            THE COURT:  But, you see, this deals with statements
  18   made, which is very much relevant to the existence of the
  19   conspiracy and its objects.
  20            MS. BABCOCK:  Your Honor, I misspoke.  The paragraph
  21   that we wanted stricken is the one that begins with
  22   accordingly.
  23            THE COURT:  OK.  No.  I understand what your concern
  24   is and I am not going to charge Pinkerton, and I don't think
  25   Pinkerton will occur to a lay jury absent a specific
                                                                4588
   1   instruction to that effect.  Next.  The government has nothing
   2   until 102.  Anybody have anything until 102?
   3            MR. DRATEL:  Yes, page 50.  This is number 12 and to
   4   a certain extent 13 as well, because it is the same section,
   5   Count 1 and Count 3.  The overt act committed in furtherance
   6   of a conspiracy, the last sentence on page 50.  In other
   7   words, the fact that they already found an overt act was
   8   omitted, and we would just add the portion underlined at 12.
   9   Where it says your obligation to find unanimously, I would
  10   just add there beyond a reasonable doubt, and then at the end
  11   of the entire sentence, considering, and then a comma and then
  12   before finding that element has been proved.  Just as a
  13   reference point, on 62 --
  14            THE COURT:  Just a moment.  I will put in beyond a
  15   reasonable doubt, and before finding that element has been
  16   proved just repeats what is at the beginning of the paragraph.
  17            MR. DRATEL:  That last language, the reasonable doubt
  18   language is already in 62, the second-to-last paragraph.
  19            THE COURT:  I am going to change the last sentence on
  20   page 50 by putting after the word unanimously, and beyond a
  21   reasonable doubt.
  22            MR. DRATEL:  Right.
  23            THE COURT:  Otherwise I will leave it the way it is.
  24            MR. DRATEL:  Thank you very much.
  25            THE COURT:  Next?
                                                                4589
   1            MR. DRATEL:  I just wanted to say at 62 I had the
   2   same addition at the end but it is the same as the one your
   3   Honor just put in.  We can move on to 71, which is, we would
   4   not request a withdrawal charge.
   5            THE COURT:  And you said something about page 62 the
   6   same --
   7            MR. DRATEL:  Just at the end, I would ask for it to
   8   say before you find that element.
   9            THE COURT:  Page 62?
  10            MR. DRATEL:  Yes, second to last paragraph.
  11            THE COURT:  Yes.
  12            MR. DRATEL:  Which is essentially the same
  13   instruction as the one we looked at at page 50.  I am just
  14   asking you to add the language that your Honor didn't want to
  15   add to page 50.
  16            THE COURT:  Reasonable doubt is already in there, OK.
  17            Now, you are telling me you do not want a withdrawal
  18   charge.  Next thing that somebody wants.  That's it?
  19            On page 109 I am going to add the sentence this is
  20   because the offense of attempted murder does not apply to
  21   victims who were actually killed.  And at page 120, after
  22   Counts 280 and 281, whatever the correct numbers will be, I
  23   think I will say that is Julian Bartley, Sr. or Prabhi Gutpara
  24   Kavaler, who were actually killed.
  25            MR. FITZGERALD:  Judge, I am lost on the page
                                                                4590
   1   numbers.  I think we may be on different pages.  121?
   2            THE COURT:  This is the attempt to kill
   3   internationally protected persons.
   4            Is there any evidence of an attempt to kill
   5   internationally protected persons other than those who were
   6   killed?
   7            MR. FITZGERALD:  I am still --
   8            THE COURT:  You are still lost.
   9            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes.
  10            THE COURT:  I am still on 120.
  11            MR. FITZGERALD:  My 120 says --
  12            MR. COHN:  Mine says using explosives.
  13            MR. WILFORD:  Mine says please note.
  14            THE COURT:  Does any government attorney have a page
  15   120 that says please note?
  16            MR. FITZGERALD:  No, but we have it on 118.  Please
  17   note, however, that to satisfy this element --
  18            THE COURT:  Yes.
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  Thank you.
  20            THE COURT:  My question is -- I make the same point
  21   made on 109.  You can't intend to kill somebody actually
  22   killed, so this is somebody other than Bartley and Kavaler who
  23   were actually killed.
  24            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes.
  25            THE COURT:  My question to the government is, is
                                                                4591
   1   there any evidence --
   2            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes.
   3            THE COURT:  This is both Kenya and Dar es Salaam.  So
   4   the ambassadors.
   5            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes.
   6            MR. COHN:  I don't know that they ever proved that
   7   the ambassador is an internationally protected person.  They
   8   asked for a stipulation as to the two people who did die, but
   9   I have no recollection that there was any evidence that the
  10   ambassador was such a person.
  11            THE COURT:  How about the definition of
  12   internationally protected person?
  13            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, the statute defines
  14   internationally protected person to include ambassadors.
  15            THE COURT:  I have some problem -- 282, attempted
  16   murder of the ambassador and other employees.  Yes?
  17            MR. FITZGERALD:  Yes, Judge.
  18            THE COURT:  283 is what?
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  The same with regard to Tanzania,
  20   the ambassador employees of the U.S. Embassy in Tanzania.  282
  21   is the count with regard to the embassy in Nairobi.
  22            THE COURT:  And 283, the acting ambassador was not in
  23   fact killed.  He testified -- never mind, I withdraw the
  24   question.
  25            Next.
                                                                4592
   1            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, 102 on my pages, which I
   2   will tell you is Counts 235 to 275 and 277 to 278, under the
   3   elements, second element, victim status, we just wanted to
   4   change your Honor's instruction, the last sentence on the
   5   partial paragraph of page 102 that says individuals employed
   6   in United States Embassies are officers and employees.  We
   7   wanted to change that to by, employed by United States
   8   Embassies.  That comes up twice.
   9            THE COURT:  Where is it?
  10            MR. FITZGERALD:  It is the second element of Counts
  11   235 to 275.
  12            THE COURT:  In should be by, OK.
  13            MR. FITZGERALD:  The same thing happens roughly six
  14   pages later under the second element of Counts 276 and 279 at
  15   the end of the first paragraph.
  16            THE COURT:  Yes.  What is the next point?
  17            MR. HERMAN:  Judge, I am sorry.  On page 116 where
  18   the discussion is Count 282, it is my understanding that Mr.
  19   Odeh is no longer charged in Count --
  20            THE COURT:  282 is Kenya.
  21            MR. HERMAN:  The red-lined copy I got took him out of
  22   283.
  23            MR. FITZGERALD:  He should be charged in 282.
  24            THE COURT:  Count 283 charges K.K. Mohamed.  I am
  25   looking at page 116.  The caption is Counts 282 and 283.
                                                                4593
   1            Next.
   2            MR. FITZGERALD:  On page 139, unless there is
   3   something before then.
   4            MR. DRATEL:  138.
   5            THE COURT:  What does your page 138 begin with?
   6            MR. DRATEL:  Second element, falsity.
   7            THE COURT:  Good.
   8            MR. DRATEL:  End of the second line.  To satisfy this
   9   element the government must prove, I would just add beyond a
  10   reasonable doubt.
  11            THE COURT:  It's in the previous sentence.
  12            MR. DRATEL:  When I see the government must prove --
  13            THE COURT:  Yes, I know, but read the sentence
  14   before -- OK.
  15            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, I think the government is on
  16   140.
  17            MR. FITZGERALD:  Under the fourth element knowingly.
  18   It might be 138.
  19            THE COURT:  I have it 140.
  20            MR. FITZGERALD:  Then it says the defendant may have
  21   given incorrect testimony because of --
  22            THE COURT:  Yes, last line, page 140.  May have given
  23   incorrect testimony because --
  24            MR. FITZGERALD:  And I you go either that the
  25   defendant contends he may have given or a person may have.
                                                                4594
   1   Otherwise it may sound to the jury that the court is giving --
   2            THE COURT:  If a defendant, change the to a.
   3            MR. FITZGERALD:  He is the only defendant charged
   4   with perjury.  A witness can give, as long as it is generic
   5   and doesn't look like the court is endorsing a view.
   6            THE COURT:  Let's change the defendant to a witness.
   7            MR. DRATEL:  If a witness may have given.
   8            THE COURT:  May have given.
   9            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, on the same page,
  10   materiality, the last paragraph, the last sentence, need only
  11   find beyond a reasonable doubt.
  12            THE COURT:  Change a witness to someone, someone may
  13   give incorrect testimony because of.
  14            What is next?
  15            MR. FITZGERALD:  Nothing from the government.
  16            THE COURT:  Is there a request for recantation?
  17            MR. DRATEL:  Yes, your Honor.
  18            THE COURT:  And the government agrees that the
  19   defendant is entitled to a recantation instruction?
  20            MR. FITZGERALD:  I don't believe so, Judge.  I
  21   believe a recantation is supposed to be a statement that what
  22   you said earlier is false.  We oppose the recantation because
  23   there was no testimony from El Hage that he gave false
  24   testimony earlier.  He merely tripped over that testimony.
  25            THE COURT:  I am just looking at the bottom of 142.
                                                                4595
   1   You must find that the defendant El Hage admitted that a prior
   2   declaration was false -- what is the evidence that he admitted
   3   a prior declaration was false?  My understanding of the
   4   recantation is that it's got to be a very explicit statement.
   5   You can't deduce recantation by inference.
   6            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, our position is that it
   7   would be a question for the jury.
   8            THE COURT:  I am going to require briefing on that,
   9   and that is the reason why I put recantation in brackets.  Let
  10   me have a memorandum on behalf of El Hage by Thursday,
  11   indicating why defendant believes the evidence supports a
  12   recantation charge and the response from the government on
  13   Tuesday.  Is that it on the charge?
  14            Have people gone over the special verdict form?
  15            MR. COHN:  I have not.
  16            THE COURT:  Let's take up the special verdict form on
  17   Wednesday together with the motion to quash.  There is a
  18   motion to quash --
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  Department of Defense subpoenas.
  20            THE COURT:  Will Mr. Baugh be here?
  21            MR. COHN:  I think he will.  I know that he submitted
  22   something.  I will check.  He should be here tomorrow.
  23            THE COURT:  If he is not here tomorrow, ask him
  24   whether he wants to withdraw the subpoena, and that might
  25   resolve the whole matter.
                                                                4596
   1            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, I can do this in writing.
   2   This is to give the government an opportunity.  The most
   3   recent redacted indictment that the government provided, there
   4   are still a couple of things that I think should be redacted.
   5            THE COURT:  Do it in writing so the government will
   6   have an opportunity to reply in writing.  I see I was unable
   7   to convince the defendants to omit the initials for the
   8   multiple acts.
   9            MR. FITZGERALD:  Third alphabet we throw in the
  10   towel.
  11            THE COURT:  Anything else?
  12            MR. FITZGERALD:  With regard to tomorrow, there is an
  13   issue with regard to two witnesses that the defendant Odeh
  14   seeks to recall.  Defendant Odeh wishes to recall Kherchtou as
  15   a witness with respect to what his knowledge was in the 1994
  16   time frame when Ali Mohamed was coming through Nairobi.
  17   Because they were provided materials with respect to Kherchtou
  18   relevant to that point, we do not object.  However, I
  19   understand there may be an intention to cross-examine him on
  20   his cooperation agreement, which I think was amply covered in
  21   his prior appearance.  So there is no objection to Kherchtou
  22   being produced but there is in going beyond the scope of the
  23   surveillance in the 1993 and 1994 time frame.
  24            THE COURT:  Any quarrel with that?
  25            MR. RICCO:  Yes.
                                                                4597
   1            THE COURT:  Why?
   2            MR. RICCO:  We don't believe that our defense case is
   3   limited by the scope that the government presents in its
   4   direct case and our cross-examination.  We initially were
   5   going to call Mr. Kherchtou with respect to the Somalia issue.
   6   That was not resolved until this morning.  We put the
   7   government on notice with respect to that.  But in our
   8   preparation for that Somalia issue, we saw an outstanding
   9   issue that we had not fully explored with respect to his
  10   knowledge about the decision to kill Americans wherever they
  11   could be found, worldwide, and his decision to enter a plea.
  12   So our question to Mr. Kherchtou is really a very simple
  13   question:  At what point did he join the conspiracy to kill
  14   Americans wherever they are found.  I don't see any prejudice
  15   to the government at all by asking that question.
  16            THE COURT:  I don't think a defendant is precluded
  17   from calling a witness in the defendant's case simply because
  18   the witness was a government witness on the government's case.
  19            MR. FITZGERALD:  No, Judge, but if it is
  20   cross-examination on issues previously covered, I do not think
  21   that you can call someone back in the defense case and have a
  22   second run at cross-examination.  I understand if new ground
  23   is covered, but we have gone down the road of the cooperation
  24   agreement and, one, I don't know what else the Odeh team is
  25   going to do, I don't know what other defense teams might do,
                                                                4598
   1   but I don't think we should have another round of
   2   cross-examination of Mr. Kherchtou.  That is why we did not
   3   object to further questioning on the surveillance.
   4            THE COURT:  Thank you for alerting me to the issue,
   5   but I think I have to hear the questions before I can make a
   6   ruling.
   7            MR. FITZGERALD:  The second and last issue is with
   8   regard to Special Agent Dohrn, who was sort of a summary
   9   witness, who was aware of some money that Mr. Odeh had, which
  10   was not offered in evidence.  It was taken from Mr. Odeh in
  11   Nairobi.  Evidently it was placed with, I believe, the Kenyan
  12   authorities.  It was taken by the FBI, given back for
  13   safekeeping.  The FBI lost track of it but recovered it later
  14   and later gave it to Michael Young when he needed funds.  My
  15   understanding is that she will be called to testify as to the
  16   tracking of the funds and I don't understand questioning with
  17   respect to chain of custody with respect to something not in
  18   evidence.
  19            MR. WILFORD:  First, there was testimony with respect
  20   to other items seized from Mr. Odeh.  Additionally, there is
  21   evidence with respect to the chain of custody.  These items
  22   were seized from Mr. Odeh and they were together at one point
  23   and then they were separated.  I think it is appropriate for
  24   the jury to determine the weight to give that evidence.
  25            THE COURT:  When you say chain of custody, was this
                                                                4599
   1   money kept together with other things as to which the chain of
   2   custody is relevant?
   3            MR. WILFORD:  For a period of time, and then all of a
   4   sudden the money goes someplace, we don't know, and reappears
   5   after a full-blown search, and not only do they find the
   6   money, they find his glasses and other property which was
   7   separated from the other property.  I think it goes to chain
   8   of custody.  The government presented evidence to show that
   9   when the FBI came into the picture it was a very tight chain
  10   of custody.  That was presented to the jury.  The jury should
  11   have the opportunity, your Honor, to have the ability to
  12   examine that chain of custody.  Part of the examination of the
  13   chain of custody is the disappearance and reappearance of the
  14   currency and his glasses and other items, which were all
  15   seized from him at the same time.
  16            THE COURT:  Were seized at the same time as the Nike
  17   bag?
  18            MR. WILFORD:  Everything was seized at the same time,
  19   Judge.
  20            THE COURT:  I will allow it.
  21            Is Odeh going to present its entire case tomorrow?
  22            MR. RICCO:  Entire case tomorrow, God willing.
  23            THE COURT:  To coin a phrase.
  24            Where are you with respect to the hearsay in the
  25   Gaudin matter?
                                                                4600
   1            MR. RICCO:  We are not going to call Gaudin but we
   2   don't believe his testimony should be stricken.  We can do
   3   that at any time before closing arguments.
   4            THE COURT:  This Somalia thing with the stipulation
   5   wasn't enough of a stipulation, with today as a result.  I am
   6   not going to push counsel any harder.
   7            So Odeh will rest tomorrow and Mr. Odeh has already
   8   allocuted on his not testifying.
   9            MR. RICCO:  That is correct.  Your Honor, Mr. Cohn
  10   has always said that he has an objection to a witness that we
  11   are calling tomorrow and I think he wants to put that
  12   objection on the record.
  13            MR. COHN:  Your Honor, I started to apologize because
  14   I know that Mr. Ricco sent an e-mail this weekend.
  15   Unfortunately because I have moved and Verizon does not seem
  16   to be on line --
  17            THE COURT:  Maybe you can find a good friend whose
  18   house you can use for telephone and faxes.
  19            MR. COHN:  In any event, I don't know precisely what
  20   this witness is going to opine about but I believe that he is
  21   a religious expert who will testify about proper
  22   interpretation of the Koran and who may issue fatwahs and how
  23   they are followed.  If that is the case, I fail to see the
  24   relevance to this trial, and I regard the potential testimony
  25   most prejudicial, particularly if he interprets the Koran in
                                                                4601
   1   ways that are at odds with actions of some of the defendants
   2   here.
   3            THE COURT:  I don't think I can preclude the
   4   defendant from offering that.
   5            Odeh is going to be tomorrow.  How long tomorrow?
   6            MR. RICCO:  If we get started on time, Judge, we may
   7   finish before the lunch hour.
   8            THE COURT:  And then go back to El Hage, two and a
   9   half days?
  10            MR. COHN:  Is that subjective or objective time?
  11            MR. DRATEL:  Mr. Schmidt has a better sense of it.  I
  12   am going by his estimate.
  13            THE COURT:  Is Mr. El Hage going to testify?
  14            MR. DRATEL:  Not at this time, your Honor, no.
  15            THE COURT:  Not at this time.  What does that mean?
  16   Not at 10 minutes of 7?
  17            MR. DRATEL:  Your Honor, we will have to defer that
  18   question.  I understand your Honor's previous point.
  19            THE COURT:  I think if you recall my previous remarks
  20   in chambers I don't need to reiterate.
  21            Wednesday we will have a motion to quash with respect
  22   to the military.
  23            MR. COHN:  Is that the morning or the end of the day?
  24            THE COURT:  4:30.  And we will deal with the special
  25   verdict form, which really requires a great deal of thought
                                                                4602
   1   and a great deal of attention, certainly equal to that given
   2   to the charge.  Thank you all.
   3            (Adjourned until 10:00 a.m., Tuesday, April 24, 2001)
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                                                                4603
   1
   2                        INDEX OF EXAMINATION
   3   Witness                    D      X      RD     RX
   4   JAMES FRANCIS YACONE....4381   4403    4454    4459
   5   ABDI ISMAEL SAMATAR.....4479   4523    4526    4527
   6                         DEFENDANT EXHIBITS
   7   Exhibit No.                                    
   8    A5  .......................................4440 
   9    E2 .........................................4479
  10    E3 .........................................4485
  11    WEHX-W68, WEHX-W54, WEHX-W55, WEHX-W56,
  12   WEHX-W49, WEHX-W57 and WEHX-W69............. 4543
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