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

This is the transcript of Day 46 of the trial, May 15, 2001.

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


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

   3   UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

   4              v.                           S(7) 98 Cr. 1023

   5   USAMA BIN LADEN, et al.,

   6                  Defendants.

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

   8
                                               New York, N.Y.
   9                                           May 15, 2001
                                               9:40 a.m.
  10

  11

  12   Before:

  13                       HON. LEONARD B. SAND,

  14                                           District Judge

  15

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   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
       ANTHONY L. RICCO
   7   EDWARD D. WILFORD
       CARL J. HERMAN
   8   SANDRA A. BABCOCK
            Attorneys for defendant Mohamed Sadeek Odeh
   9
       FREDRICK H. COHN
  10   DAVID P. BAUGH
       LAURA GASIOROWSKI
  11        Attorneys for defendant Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al-'Owhali

  12   DAVID STERN
       DAVID RUHNKE
  13        Attorneys for defendant Khalfan Khamis Mohamed

  14
       SAM A. SCHMIDT
  15   JOSHUA DRATEL
       KRISTIAN K. LARSEN
  16        Attorneys for defendant Wadih El Hage

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   1            (Trial resumed; counsel for the government,

   2   defendants Odeh and El Hage present; defendants not present)

   3            THE COURT:  Are there any problems that arose with

   4   respect to the jurors' last note?

   5            MR. KARAS:  No, your Honor.  We have the El Hage

   6   exhibits, originals plus 12 copies, and we have the government

   7   exhibits that were requested.  We mentioned to you yesterday

   8   that the one exhibit, 310-74A, had already been provided.

   9            THE COURT:  Yes, and that was included in the note.

  10   As soon as the marshals advise me that the jurors have

  11   arrived, we will send that in.

  12            There are some matters with respect to discovery, the

  13   Brady and the Albright subpoena, which I am prepared to take

  14   up as soon as counsel are here.

  15            MR. KARAS:  I will notify Mr. Garcia and Mr.

  16   Fitzgerald and have them come down.

  17            (Recess)

  18            (All counsel present except counsel for defendant

  19   Mohamed; defendant al-'Owhali present)

  20            THE COURT:  I understand the jurors are arriving and

  21   we will send in the exhibits that were requested yesterday.  I

  22   understand there is no issue with respect to those exhibits.

  23   What I want to take up is the motion to quash the subpoena of

  24   Madeleine Albright, and I would like to address the Brady

  25   issue.  I realize we have scheduled that for argument on



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   1   Wednesday, but I think maybe we can resolve that.

   2            I would like to see a copy of the protective order in

   3   this case.  Does someone have that?

   4            Let me know when counsel for K.K. Mohammed arrives.

   5            (All counsel present)

   6            THE COURT:  Please note that at 10:00 a.m. the jury

   7   arrived and the exhibits requested were sent in to them.

   8            (Pause)

   9            (Continued on next page)

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   1            THE COURT:  Is the matter of the motion to quash the

   2   subpoena for Madeleine Albright fully submitted and ready for

   3   disposition?

   4            MR. BAUGH:  It is, your Honor.

   5            THE COURT:  The declaration by Mr. Mason, the

   6   attorney adviser for the Department of State, states that the

   7   subpoena served upon Madeleine Albright did not have attached

   8   to it the statement which was attached to the subpoena

   9   submitted to the court.  Was that intentional or inadvertent?

  10            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, it must have been

  11   inadvertent, because when we gave you the subpoena it had it

  12   attached and you signed it and it was given to us without the

  13   attached, and we took it to the Marshal Service.  The one that

  14   Mr. Kenneally handed me in the hallway had come back and you

  15   didn't have it on there, so we ran it across the street.  I

  16   don't know why you kept it.  I was told you kept it.

  17            THE COURT:  I kept it?  I don't keep subpoenas.  I

  18   signed the subpoena and I gave it to someone to give to you.

  19            MR. BAUGH:  I sent back that morning a statement with

  20   the attachment on it and it was brought out to me, and the

  21   subpoena was brought out, and I was told that the CFR was,

  22   something to the effect that it was kept back there.  But I

  23   prepared it.

  24            THE COURT:  So it was inadvertent.

  25            MR. BAUGH:  It was inadvertent, yes.



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   1            THE COURT:  Because Mr. Mason raises the point that

   2   there has not been compliance with the CFR, and he also states

   3   that former Secretary Albright's staff has informed me that

   4   she will be traveling extensively within and outside the

   5   United States for the next two months for business.

   6            Does the government have any objection to our dealing

   7   with this matter on the assumption that the attachments to the

   8   subpoena as furnished to the court and to the U.S. Attorney's

   9   Office were part of the service upon the ex-secretary?

  10            MR. GARCIA:  Your Honor, the government would suggest

  11   that we go forward, argue the merits of the subpoena, and if

  12   necessary and Miss Albright is required, he can reserve the

  13   right to serve a subpoena with the attachment at a later date.

  14            THE COURT:  Mr. Baugh, is there anything you wish to

  15   add to your previous submissions?

  16            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, your Honor, very briefly.  First, I

  17   apologize for not giving anything back in writing.  The

  18   subpoena was served relatively late.  I understand that the

  19   United States was obviously working on this yesterday.

  20            Would you like me to respond to the assertions of

  21   fact made by the United States in their motion?

  22            THE COURT:  If you would like to, if you feel you

  23   haven't already dealt with them.

  24            MR. BAUGH:  I think I have already dealt with them,

  25   your Honor.  I will say very briefly, one, the United States



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   1   asserts that Miss Albright is not the most appropriate person

   2   to provide the evidence that we indicated in our compliance

   3   with the CFR affidavit.

   4            THE COURT:  Very explicit in your attachment to the

   5   subpoena is that you are seeking her understanding.

   6            MR. BAUGH:  Yes.

   7            THE COURT:  What is the relevance of the

   8   understanding of the former Secretary of State, for example,

   9   with respect to the military actions taken by the United

  10   States which are the subject of another subpoena?

  11            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, your Honor.  In 1996, when

  12   Mrs. Albright, Ambassador Albright gave the interview which we

  13   have the tape of and which we have already given you a

  14   transcript of --

  15            THE COURT:  Yes, and we can deal with the question of

  16   whether that is admissible even in the absence of Madeleine

  17   Albright.

  18            MR. BAUGH:  I can deal with that very quickly.  The

  19   United States in its notice of intention to seek the death

  20   penalty has indicated several reasons why my client should be

  21   executed.  One is that he posed a great risk of death to

  22   others by his actions, that there was a disregard for innocent

  23   people who were standing around, and that he utilized a weapon

  24   of mass destruction, is the charge, and that there is also

  25   absence of remorse.



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   1            It is the defendant's intention to show that

   2   Miss Albright as ambassador to the United Nations from the

   3   United States, and also a person who sat on the sanctions

   4   committee, put into motion certain activities that she knew

   5   would cause the death of innocent people.

   6            THE COURT:  The actions that were taken, those are

   7   matters of public record and are not dependent upon anything

   8   with respect to her state of mind.  If the United States, for

   9   example, sought to bomb or pollute the Iraqi water supply and

  10   that is relevant -- I really want to focus on Madeleine

  11   Albright.

  12            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.

  13            THE COURT:  If that is relevant, that's not something

  14   which requires her presence, right?  And indeed, her state of

  15   mind would really be irrelevant, wouldn't it?  If she did it

  16   for purely humanitarian reasons or whether she did it because

  17   of animus towards the Iraqis wouldn't alter the fact that the

  18   actions were taken.

  19            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, can I get one document, and I

  20   will talk while I do that.  Your Honor, during the argument,

  21   Mr. Fitzgerald pointed out in his argument several times that

  22   there was a difference between what Al Qaeda was doing because

  23   it is not a government, and that what it was doing was, what

  24   Al Qaeda was doing was not an act of a government, it was

  25   illegal.



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   1            THE COURT:  That's a different issue.

   2            MR. BAUGH:  This is the lead-up to this issue.

   3            THE COURT:  Lead up quickly, please.

   4            MR. BAUGH:  If Miss Albright -- and she has

   5   acknowledged she did this.  The question is for her, when she

   6   was doing this, when she was sitting on the sanctions

   7   committee, when she was authorizing these enforcements was she

   8   aware of Protocol 1 Geneva Convention '54, starvation of

   9   civilians is prohibited --

  10            THE COURT:  I am familiar with that.

  11            MR. BAUGH:  May I put it in the record?

  12            THE COURT:  My question is, if I may, please, because

  13   you are not addressing my question.


  14            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, sir.

  15            THE COURT:  If action were taken by the United States

  16   which were in violation of Geneva protocols, those are

  17   objective facts.  This is what the United States did.  Is the

  18   state of mind of a former Secretary of State relevant?

  19            MR. BAUGH:  Whether or not these acts were being

  20   committed at the direction of the -- then, in 1996 she was the

  21   ambassador to the United Nations, she wasn't appointed to

  22   Secretary of State until 1997.  If she undertook these actions

  23   in 1996, aware that these actions were illegal, and if they

  24   were illegal, they are in violation of United States Code as

  25   well, concerning the definition of terrorism and genocide, if



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   1   she authorized and directed these actions and in her state of

   2   mind she knew these actions were illegal, then they do not

   3   have the protection that was argued by Mr. Fitzgerald that

   4   there is some difference between what Al Qaeda does and what

   5   the United States does, and we have the effect of minimizing

   6   the impact of the government's aggravator.  It is sort of

   7   saying yes, Al Qaeda did this, but the United States does it

   8   too and the person in charge knows it.

   9            THE COURT:  I find that totally unpersuasive in all

  10   respects.  I find it unpersuasive first of all because it

  11   equates official government action with respect to a hostile

  12   sovereign and actions taken by a nongovernmental body, and

  13   also it is dependent on -- the argument is dependent on the

  14   significance of state of mind of a government official.  I

  15   think if Madeleine Albright were to say I took this action

  16   because I believe that -- this is a hypothetical -- were the

  17   heads of state of Iraq to be acting in an acceptable fashion

  18   these actions would have brought about quick resolution of a

  19   conflict with a consequence of saving lives of countless

  20   children, that would be irrelevant.  All of that would be

  21   irrelevant.

  22            In other words, it seems to me that the question of

  23   what the government did, what knowledge the government may

  24   have had with respect to conditions which existed and things

  25   of that sort are not dependent on Madeleine Albright's state



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   1   of mind.

   2            MR. BAUGH:  No, I understand your concern.

   3            Your Honor, in a death case, the circumstances of the

   4   offense are the subject of aggravation and mitigation.  This

   5   trial for the last four months now has concentrated on one

   6   issue only, and that is what happened.  There has been no

   7   discussion, or limited discussion of the why, and the why of

   8   what happened is a circumstance of the offense that is

   9   admissible under the reduced standard in death penalty cases

  10   to be presented as to why this man shouldn't be executed.

  11            THE COURT:  You know, I think the umbrella of lack of

  12   remorse is a very wide umbrella, and I think that it perhaps

  13   is sufficient to enable you to introduce, by some competent

  14   witness or document, evidence as to what your client knew or

  15   was general knowledge as to why he chose a lack of remorse.

  16            MR. BAUGH:  That is correct.

  17            THE COURT:  So I know you have other arguments for

  18   relevance which are to varying degrees --

  19            MR. BAUGH:  I've got a good one.

  20            THE COURT:  -- lack of remorse.  It's a two-edged

  21   knife, of course, because also the lack of remorse is also a

  22   factor relevant to future dangerousness.

  23            MR. BAUGH:  However, your Honor, applying even the

  24   McVeigh test, all the events about which we are speaking now

  25   occurred prior to 1998, the day of the offense, so the McVeigh



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   1   standard would not keep it out.

   2            Additionally, if the court will review the

   3   indictment, you will see that the statement given to ABC in

   4   July of 1998 which contains all these representations about

   5   why Al Qaeda is doing this, according to the indictment filed

   6   by the United States, my client was present during the

   7   interview and heard the statements made.  That is contained in

   8   the indictment.  So if he was present when the statement was

   9   made, we have a copy of the statement as provided by ABC.  It

  10   predates the offense.  We don't need lack of remorse.  Even

  11   applying the McVeigh standard it all becomes admissible under

  12   the doctrine of motivation.

  13            THE COURT:  I am focusing now on the very narrow

  14   issue of the appropriateness of Madeleine Albright.  I am not

  15   dealing now with whether you can introduce evidence of events

  16   preceding the bombing, which would be relevant to, among other

  17   things, lack of remorse.

  18            Anything else you want to tell me?

  19            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, your Honor.  I will submit to the

  20   court this, that there is no better witness from a factual and

  21   from an evidentiary standpoint.  Number one, this was being

  22   done, namely, the sanctions were being enforced by the

  23   sanctions committee to whom Madeleine Albright was the

  24   representative at the time.

  25            Number two, she is the power with the power at the



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   1   time to come back and she was allegedly having this done to

   2   enforce the UN sanctions and she was the representative to the

   3   United Nations and would have sat on that committee.

   4            Lastly and most importantly from an evidentiary

   5   standpoint, she is the only witness we have on tape who the

   6   government would have a significant problem trying to

   7   rehabilitate or duck those admissions.  If they bring in

   8   someone else who I do not have on tape, that person is subject

   9   to impeachment or can get around the statements that they

  10   have.  From an evidentiary standpoint to take this

  11   distinguished lady, start with that which we have memorialized

  12   on videotape, start from that point that she cannot retreat

  13   behind, what better witness could there be?  What more control

  14   of a witness on examination could there be?  There is no one

  15   from the perspective of Mr. Al-'Owhali who is better prepared

  16   to take the stand and better for his case than this witness

  17   whose statements have been memorialized.

  18            We would apply the appropriate standard for

  19   admissibility.  We would submit that the why of the offense is

  20   one of the circumstances that is relevant to the hearing and

  21   to the determination of death, and, further, we would apply it

  22   back to the Johnson case, that he has a constitutional right

  23   to develop and present all issues that can either lead to his

  24   death or mitigate his death, and in this instance we believe

  25   we are directly confronting the strength of the aggravators as



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   1   aggravators, and, more importantly, we are explaining the why

   2   of his behavior, and those issues are relevant.

   3            THE COURT:  Somebody from the government?

   4            MR. GARCIA:  Your Honor, we will rely on the

   5   arguments in our papers.  I just think that Mr. Baugh,

   6   continuing in his response to the court, fails to distinguish

   7   between actions that the United States government has taken,

   8   which are a matter of public record, and what the relevance of

   9   Ms. Albright's state of mind is to those actions, and seems to

  10   be looking to hold her personally accountable for the actions

  11   of the government.

  12            One other point.  Mr. Baugh mentions McVeigh and

  13   objective evidence prior to the bombing coming in.  That is

  14   not the McVeigh standard.  The McVeigh standard was state of

  15   mind and what the defendant knew at the time of the bombing,

  16   and indeed some of the evidence that they tried to put in at

  17   the penalty phase had to do with government actions at the

  18   time of the original action at Waco.

  19            THE COURT:  The motion to quash the indictment --

  20   what did I say?

  21            MR. BAUGH:  Do you want to strike that Freudian slip

  22   out?

  23            THE COURT:  The motion to quash the subpoena served

  24   on Madeleine Albright is granted.

  25            MR. BAUGH:  Your Honor, may I have your permission to



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   1   file a written objection letter?

   2            THE COURT:  Yes.  Do I have your permission to state

   3   my reasons?

   4            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, and I sit down.  Feel free.

   5            THE COURT:  Apart from many other potential problems

   6   raised by the subpoena, the court fully agrees with the

   7   position taken by the government in its memorandum of law in

   8   support of the motion to quash that Madeleine Albright is not

   9   a proper witness.  What is significant, arguably, with respect

  10   to such issues as defendant's lack of remorse is what the

  11   United States government has in fact done which has given rise

  12   to a perception on the part of the defendant that the United

  13   States is an enemy of people with whom the defendant

  14   identifies.  What the United States has in fact done are

  15   events that are reflected in government documents.  For

  16   example, with respect to military actions taken, the court is

  17   aware that the defendant has subpoenaed documents from the

  18   military.  I understand that discussions are ongoing with

  19   respect to compliance with that subpoena.

  20            Madeleine Albright's state of mind is not at issue.

  21   Whether the actions were taken under her direction for good or

  22   bad reasons from the defendant's perspective is not the

  23   question.  The question is what actions were taken,

  24   particularly what actions were taken of which the defendant

  25   had knowledge.



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   1            Counsel for Al-'Owhali argues that she is the best

   2   witness because we have her on tape.  Well, if you have her on

   3   tape and you wish to introduce the tape, we can deal at an

   4   appropriate time with whether that tape would be admissible

   5   under the standards for admissibility in a death case, which

   6   are more lenient than those in the penalty phase.

   7            We do not therefore address such questions as the

   8   availability of Madeleine Albright at the time she would be

   9   called or any other technical issues.

  10            So the motion is granted.

  11            You wanted to preserve an objection?

  12            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, your Honor, I would ask permission

  13   to file a written objection so I can cite my constitutional

  14   basis as well.

  15            Next, your Honor, I have received a letter from the

  16   United States Army on May 10.  On May 9 I faxed them a letter

  17   saying please tell me if you can't get the records that you

  18   need because you did or not have them.  They sent me a letter

  19   back explaining --

  20            THE COURT:  What records are we dealing with now?

  21            MR. BAUGH:  The United States military.

  22   Specifically, I asked for the dates of the bombing raised

  23   against Iraq and what type of munitions have been used.  The

  24   military has told me repeatedly they are having trouble

  25   finding the dates, they don't keep track of their bombing



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   1   rates.  I then wrote them a letter back --

   2            THE COURT:  Tell me before we spend a lot of time on

   3   that, what is the significance of the particular dates of the

   4   raids?

   5            MR. BAUGH:  To show the frequency that they occurred.

   6            THE COURT:  Have you made clear to them that you

   7   would like to have some generalized statement as to the

   8   frequency and the particular dates are not of any great

   9   concern?

  10            MR. BAUGH:  Yes, your Honor.  In fact, I have some

  11   dates from another source and I would like to confirm it.

  12   Unfortunately, most of those predate 1998 -- the McVeigh

  13   problem.  The United States wrote me back and said we are not

  14   in a position to say we can't give it to you yet.  We will get

  15   back to you at the close of the next business day.  That

  16   letter was dated the 10th.  The next business day was the

  17   11th, today is the 15th, I have not heard.

  18            So I would ask the court to issue a directive to

  19   Stewart Ally, counsel for the Pentagon, either send a letter

  20   saying you can't give us the information or to give us the

  21   information, please.

  22            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, we will call Mr. Ally

  23   later today.  We are generally not in the loop.  We will call

  24   as soon as this is done.

  25            THE COURT:  Anything else?



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   1            MR. BAUGH:  Not on the issue of subpoenas.

   2            MR. COHN:  I have something else, your Honor.  I have

   3   talked to the government about it.  Recent discovery about FBI

   4   files about McVeigh leave from a timeliness point of view --

   5   what seems to have happened in McVeigh is that they didn't

   6   discover documents until they ordered an end search and that

   7   the computer system is antiquated.  Not making any allegations

   8   of government misconduct here, but I am making a demand that

   9   if any special search has to be instituted, it should be

  10   instituted now for any documents that may have been not turned

  11   over to us.

  12            MR. FITZGERALD:  Your Honor, we have already made a

  13   request and will continue to pursue it, to make sure that

  14   whatever occurred in the McVeigh case, if there are any

  15   technological glitches that it doesn't affect the discovery

  16   obligations that we believe we have met here.

  17            THE COURT:  Very well.  Then we are adjourned to

  18   await further communication from the jury.

  19            With respect to the Brady issue, I think we had

  20   scheduled that for argument on Wednesday, tomorrow at 3:00.  I

  21   had an ex parte conference with the government, and there is a

  22   possibility that that issue may be resolved, so that that

  23   argument may not be necessary.  We will keep it on the

  24   calendar but I wouldn't spend all night working on preparing

  25   that oral argument.



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   1            We are adjourned then until word from the jury.

   2            (Recess)

   3            (Continued on next page)

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   1                         AFTERNOON SESSION

   2            (Time noted: 4:00 p.m.)

   3            THE COURT:  The note from the jury reads:  "The jury

   4   with like to request the following additional exhibits:

   5   GX350A, GX350, 357-T, 358-T, 359-T, 361-T, which we believe

   6   were obtained from Ali Mohamed's home.  Thank you for your

   7   assistance.  Juror No. 1."

   8            Any problems?

   9            MR. KARAS:  There were some questions on some of

  10   these, your Honor.  There is no problem with 350 or 350A.

  11   With respect to 357-T, 357 was the address book from Ali

  12   Mohamed, most of which is, or much of which is in English,

  13   which there is the translation which was requested, 357-T.

  14   There may be an entry that has some English and some Arabic.

  15   So 357-T would give the English portion of the entry.

  16            THE COURT:  Any objection to sending both 357 and

  17   357-T?

  18            MR. SCHMIDT:  No objection.

  19            THE COURT:  Let's do that.

  20            Then with respect to 358, 358 is a letter that is

  21   mostly in English, and there is a small Arabic portion.  The

  22   request again was just for 3589T, but there is only a small

  23   portion in Arabic.  Send them both again?  Same issue.

  24            Silence is acquiescence.

  25            MR. KARAS:  And then 361 is the Egyptian passport of



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   1   Ali Mohamed, and again they have only asked for 361-T.  There

   2   are some entries in the passport that are in English and of

   3   course the translation only is of the non-English entries.

   4            THE COURT:  All right.  My note will say:  "Here are

   5   the exhibits you have requested.  You have asked for Exhibits

   6   357-T and 358-T and 361-T.  We have also enclosed Exhibits

   7   357, 358 and 361, portions of which are in English."

   8            MR. KARAS:  We would propose to send in the

   9   originals, and so as not to delay matters we can make copies

  10   and send in the copies later.

  11            THE COURT:  Yes.  And they say nothing about when

  12   they want to go home, so we will await further word from them

  13   and we will send the exhibits and this note in and we will

  14   await further guidance as to their wishes.

  15            (Court's Exhibits I and II duly marked)

  16            (Recess)

  17            THE COURT:  The jury has requested of the marshal

  18   that they go home at 4:30.  So if there is no objection, I

  19   will just tell them that they may leave at 4:30, and then at

  20   4:30 we will be adjourned until tomorrow morning.

  21            (Recess)

  22            (Proceedings adjourned until 9:30 a.m., Wednesday,

  23   May 16, 2001)

  24

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