- Zacarias Moussaoui
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"Moussaoui" redirects here. For other persons, see Moosavi (name).
Zacarias Moussaoui Nickname Abu Khaled al-Sahrawi
Shaqil
Habib Zacarias Moussaoui
ADMAX prison, Federal Bureau of Prisons#: 51427-054.[1]Born May 30, 1968
St Jean de Luz, FranceAllegiance al-Qaeda Years of service 1998-2002 (before sentencing) Zacarias Moussaoui (Arabic: زكريا موسوي, Zakariyyā Mūsawī; born May 30, 1968) is a French citizen who was convicted of conspiring to kill citizens of the US as part of the September 11 attacks. As a result of his conviction, he is serving a life sentence without parole at the Federal ADX Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado, USA.
Contents
Overview
Moussaoui was alleged to have been a replacement for the "first" 20th hijacker, possibly Ramzi bin al-Shibh. Bin al-Shibh and Zakariyah Essabar were denied visas. However, prosecutors in Moussaoui's drawn-out trial in the US had difficulty directly connecting him to the 19 participants.
Moussaoui's trial was seen in some circles as a barometer of the ability and willingness of the United States to give a fair hearing to terrorism suspects. Others objected to the degree to which the court and especially Judge Leonie Brinkema tolerated the bizarre and threatening courtroom behavior of Moussaoui.[2] Moussaoui expressed contempt for the trial and court by introducing legal motions deriding Judge Brinkema, surprised onlookers by electing to represent himself in court, and rankled federal prosecutors by requesting the presence of captured al-Qaeda members as witnesses in his case. During the course of the proceedings, Moussaoui admitted his guilt in various degrees, and to being a member of al-Qaeda.
During the trial, Moussaoui initially stated that he was not involved in the September 11 attacks, but that he was planning an attack of his own. Some al-Qaeda members reportedly corroborated Moussaoui's statement to an extent, saying that he was involved in a plot other than September 11, but prosecutors believed that his story had no merit. On April 3, 2006, Moussaoui was found to be eligible for the death penalty. Before leaving the courtroom, he was reported to have shouted, "You will never get my blood. God curse you all!"[3] Later that month he withdrew his qualifications and again admitted guilt on all charges levied by the prosecution.
On May 3, 2006, a jury decided against the death penalty for Moussaoui. The next day, he was sentenced to life in prison without parole. As he was led out of the courtroom, Moussaoui clapped his hands and said, "America, you lost... I won."[4] Judge Brinkema responded by telling him that he would "die with a whimper" and "never get a chance to speak again."[5] According to the Associated Press, three jurors decided Moussaoui had only limited knowledge of the September 11 plot, and three described his role in the attacks as minor, if he had any role at all.
Following sentencing, Moussaoui recanted his trial testimony stating he was not a member of the September 11, 2001, conspiracy, but "part of another al-Qaeda plot which was to occur after September 11."[6]
Personal history
Childhood
Aicha el-Wafi, Moussaoui's mother, was 14 when she was married to a man that she did not know[7], in Morocco.[8] Five years later, Moussaoui's parents moved to France, where he was born. After enduring domestic violence, his mother left his father Omar while her four children were still young.[9] She raised her children on a cleaner's wages. There was no religious education within the family. Witnesses testified at Moussaui's trial that, as first-generation immigrants from Morocco, the family frequently faced racism in their new country.[4] From 1982 Moussaoui, his brother and sisters, were brought up in a bungalow on the edge of the town of Narbonne. His mother has said that she believes two 'wounding' incidents in his French adolescence contributed to the formation of an extremist sensibility; the first the day that his school careers adviser pushed him towards minor, technical studies, with "the clear implication that he was only an Arab and would need nothing more", and secondly, the day that the father of his teenage sweetheart warned him off because he was an Arab. " "Don't think that you will ever get your feet under my table" the man said. "[10]
According to his brother, Abd Samad Moussaoui, Zacarias loved to play handball:[11]
For Zacarias [his brother wrote in the Guardian], handball quickly became more than a sport—it was his passion. He was brilliant. Everyone recognized it—his trainers, his team-mates, even his opponents. For Zacarias, the future was all mapped out. He would study and play sports.
Militant training
Moussaoui has been known by other names, reportedly including Abu Khaled al Sahrawi and Shaqil while he was in Oklahoma.[12] He holds a master's degree in International Business from South Bank University in London, having enrolled in 1993 and graduated in 1995.[13] He attended, amongst others, the Brixton Mosque,[14] where he may have met Richard Reid, the future shoe bomber.[15][16] He was proselytised by groups such as al-Muhajiroun ("the Emigrants"), who leafleted people attending moderate mosques such as that in Brixton.[14] Moussaoui was expelled from the Brixton mosque after he began wearing combat fatigues and a backpack to the mosque, and pressured the cleric to provide him with information on how to join the jihad.[14][15][17] It is possible that he had connections with members of the Finsbury Park mosque, where the extremist Abu Hamza al-Masri taught.
French authorities began monitoring Moussaoui in 1996 when they observed him with Islamic extremists in London. In 1998, he attended the Khalden training camp in Afghanistan, allegedly returning the next year as well. In September 2000, he visited Malaysia and stayed in a condominium owned by Yazid Sufaat who, in October 2000, signed letters identifying Moussaoui as a representative of his company. Two of the September 11 hijackers lived in the same condominium in January 2000. Jemaah Islamiah leader Riduan Ismauddin sent cohort Yazid Sufaat to provide Moussaoui with $35,000 USD and travel documents in Malaysia in October.
Flight training
From February 26 to May 29, 2001, Moussaoui attended flight training courses at Airman Flight School in Norman, Oklahoma. Despite 57 hours of flying lessons, he failed and left without ever having flown solo. This school was visited by Mohamed Atta and Marwan al-Shehhi, who piloted planes into the north and south towers of the World Trade Center respectively.
During his time in Norman, Moussaoui had a roommate named Hussein al-Attas. On August 11, 2001, Hussein al-Attas drove Moussaoui to Minnesota from Oklahoma.[18] Hussein al-Attas said that he and Moussaoui planned to take a trip to New York City in late August/early September 2001. In 2002, al-Attas admitted that he lied to the FBI to conceal Moussaoui's name, lied to the FBI to conceal Moussaoui's jihadi and anti-American beliefs, lied to conceal his own jihadi tendencies, lied to conceal that Moussaoui had been trying to convince him to become more active in the jihad, and lied to conceal the names of other Middle Easterners who were taking flight lessons in Oklahoma.[12]
Moussaoui allegedly received US$14,000 in wire transfers from bin al-Shibh, originating from Düsseldorf and Hamburg, Germany, in early August. This money could have helped him pay for flight training about two weeks later at Pan-Am International Flight Academy in Eagan, Minnesota. On August 13, Moussaoui paid US$6,800 with US$100 bills to receive training in a 747-400 simulator. The simulator that Pan-Am uses is operated by Northwest Aerospace Training Corporation (NATCO), a training facility affiliated with Northwest Airlines. Moussaoui was reportedly considered as a replacement for Ziad Jarrah, who at one point threatened to withdraw from the scheme because of tensions amongst the plotters.[19] Plans to include Moussaoui were never completed because the al-Qaeda hierarchy allegedly had doubts about his reliability.
Clarence Prevost, the flight instructor assigned to Moussaoui, began to have suspicions about his student. His behavior largely resembled that of other seemingly wealthy men who had come to the center in the past to receive jumbo jet training despite the fact that they'd probably never use it, but some characteristics were unusual. Prevost said later that in pre-simulator instruction, Moussaoui would ask questions that had the right jargon but were otherwise nonsensical. Moussaoui read through the 747 training manuals, but had a lack of understanding of the plane's systems. Prevost was confused as to why Moussaoui would seek simulator time if he lacked basic plane knowledge. After some convincing, his supervisors contacted the FBI, who came to meet with him. (Despite later reports, Moussaoui did not skip the training for takeoff and landing).[20]
Capture
On August 16, 2001, Moussaoui was arrested by Harry Samit of the FBI and INS agents in Minnesota and charged with an immigration violation.[21] Materials itemized when he was arrested included a laptop computer, two knives, flight manuals pertaining to Boeing's 747 aircraft, a flight simulator computer program, fighting gloves and shin guards, and a computer disk with information about crop dusting.[21]
Some agents worried that his flight training had violent intentions, so the Minnesota bureau tried to get permission (sending over 70 emails in a week) to search his laptop, but they were turned down.[22] FBI agent Coleen Rowley made an explicit request for permission to search Moussaoui's personal rooms. This request was first denied by her superior, Deputy General Counsel Marion "Spike" Bowman, and later rejected based upon FISA regulations (amended after 9/11 by the USA Patriot Act). Several further search attempts similarly failed.
Ahmed Ressam, the captured al-Qaeda Millennium Bomber, was at the time sharing information with the U.S. authorities, in an effort to gain leniency in his sentencing. One person whom he was not asked about until after 9/11, but whom he was able to identify when asked as having trained with him at al-Qaeda's Khalden Camp in Afghanistan, was Moussaoui.[23] The 9/11 Commission Report opined that had Ressam been asked about Moussaoui, he would have broken the FBI's logjam.[23] Had that happened, the Report opined, the U.S. might conceivably have disrupted or derailed the September 11 attacks altogether.[23]
Court proceedings
On December 11, 2001, Moussaoui was indicted by a federal grand jury in United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia on six felony charges: conspiracy to commit acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries, conspiracy to commit aircraft piracy, conspiracy to destroy aircraft, conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction, conspiracy to murder United States employees, and conspiracy to destroy property.[24] The indictment of Zacarias Moussaoui named as unindicted co-conspirators Ramzi Bin al-Shibh and Mustafa al-Hawsawi, among others, for their role in the attack "to murder thousands of innocent people in New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania."
On January 2, 2002, Moussaoui refused to enter any plea to the charges and so Judge Leonie Brinkema entered pleas of not guilty. A hearing was held on April 22, 2002, to determine his right to self-representation, for by then Moussaoui had declined the assistance of his court-appointed attorneys, and asked to defend himself. At another hearing on June 13, 2002, Brinkema deemed him competent to defend himself and allowed the case to move forward. However, Moussaoui later requested the occasional assistance of attorneys to help him with technical issues.
Moussaoui admitted his involvement with al-Qaeda, but claimed he was not involved in the 9/11 attacks. Rather, he claimed that he was preparing for a separate attack. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed had earlier told investigators that Moussaoui met with him prior to September 11, but that he, Mohammed, chose not to use him. No evidence directly linking Moussaoui to the 9/11 attacks has yet been released.
The trial highlighted a tension in the United States between the judiciary and national security. Moussaoui made requests for access to confidential documents and the right to call captive al-Qaeda members as witnesses, notably bin al-Shibh, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, and Mustafa Ahmed al-Hawsawi. Both requests were claimed by prosecutors to be potential threats to national security. Brinkema denied the motion to access confidential documents, although Moussaoui was permitted to use several al-Qaeda prisoners as witnesses.
Brinkema put the death penalty "off limits" on October 2, 2003, in reply to government defiance of her order to provide access to Moussaoui's witnesses. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the Brinkema ruling, holding that the U.S. government could use summaries of interviews/interrogations of these witnesses. On March 21, 2005, the United States Supreme Court, without comment, declined to hear Moussaoui's pre-trial appeal of the Fourth Circuit's decision, returning the case to Brinkema.
On April 22, 2005, in one of the court sessions near the end of that phase of the proceedings, Moussaoui surprised the whole court[citation needed] by pleading guilty to all charges, while at the same time denying having any intention to produce a massacre like 9/11. He said that it was not his conspiracy, and that he intended to free Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman. According to Moussaoui, his master plan was to hijack a Boeing 747-400, since the plane is one of a few that could reach Afghanistan from the U.S. without any intermediate stops.
On February 6, 2006, Moussaoui shouted "I am al-Qaeda. They do not represent me; they are Americans," referring to his attorneys while being escorted from the courtroom in front of 120 potential jurors.[25]
In March 2006, during the Moussaoui trial, several premises made headlines, including FBI agents stating that the bureau was aware, years before the attacks in 2001, that al-Qaeda planned to use planes to destroy important buildings,[26] and Brinkema's decision to consider dismissal of the death penalty. However, days later, under significant media attention, Brinkema decided not to dismiss the case, and instead ruled that witnesses could not testify and the government would be allowed to continue to seek the death penalty.[27]
On March 27, 2006, Moussaoui testified that he and "shoe bomber" Richard Reid had planned to crash a hijacked airplane into the White House in the September 11 attacks. No direct connection between Moussaoui and Reid had ever before been alleged, and this testimony contradicted earlier testimony by Moussaoui that he had been intended for an operation after September 11. When asked why he had previously lied, he stated that "You're allowed to lie for jihad. You're allowed any technique to defeat your enemy."[28][29] There has been commentary in the mainstream media that Moussaoui's preference to die as an identified 9/11 plotter rather than receive a life sentence as a member of an unrealized scheme throws doubt on his self-admitted connection to 9/11.[30][31][32]
Court statements
Moussaoui refused legal representation for years; he entered confusing, insulting, and parallel court pleadings. His pleadings, statements, and behavior included the following:
1/2/2002: Moussaoui stated, "In the name of Allah, I do not have anything to plea, and I enter no plea."[33]
4/22/2002: Moussaoui tried to fire his court-appointed lawyers. Judge Brinkema took the request under advisement, on June 13, 2002, she ordered that he had the right to defend himself, and a search began for a Muslim lawyer.[34] Moussaoui cited several suras of the Qur'an—including Al-i-imran 3:118, Al-anfal 8:36, Al-anfal 8:45, Al-i-Imran 3:175 and Al-An-am 6:162—to the judge as justification for firing his lawyers, proof of the government's and judge's corruption, confirmation of his innocence, and assurance that he was taking the best possible course of defense. He then prayed to Allah for the return of Al-Andalus (Spain and Portugal) and the deliverance of Ceuta, Melilla, India and Kashmir to the Muslims. He also prayed for the destruction of several nations—including Israel (and the Jewish people as a whole), Russia, Canada, UK, Australia, and the U.S.—and for the liberation of Palestine, Chechnya, and Afghanistan. The Court ordered a psychiatric evaluation in response.
6/7/2002: A court-appointed psychiatrist declared Moussaoui sufficiently competent for trial.[35]
7/11/2002: Moussaoui filed a motion, titled Motion for pre-contempt of Leonie Brinkema order to declare Zacarias Moussaoui crazy, which insisted on his competence to stand trial.[36] In it, he said he had tried "to get the help of the European Court of Justice and Parliaments". He then offered a psychological analysis of Judge Brinkema:
Mental Status Enumeration: Axis 1; Acute symptoms of Islamophobia with complex of gender inferiority.
Diagnostic Impressions: Legal pathological killer instinct with egoboasting dementia to become supreme.
Conclusion and Recommendations: Immediate psychiatric hospitalization to specialist unit (propose unit UBL treatment center...)7/18/2002: Moussaoui entered a guilty plea, stating, "I have knowledge and I participated in Al-Qaeda. I am a member of Al-Qaeda... I pledge bayat to Osama bin Laden."[37] The Court rejected the guilty plea as unconsidered and ordered Moussaoui to rethink his plea.
7/24/2002: Moussaoui's roommate from Oklahoma flight school, 24-year-old Hussein al-Attas, pled guilty to seven counts of making false statements, including the following:
The truth is that on several occasions, during the short time I knew him (Moussaoui) had expressed a general desire to participate in jihad, so my statement to the contrary was false... When the agents asked if I (also) knew his real name, I lied and said I did not.[12]
Al-Attas stated that he told the FBI he was going to Pakistan to seek medical assistance for a sick relative in Saudi Arabia, but admitted, "The real reason was (Moussaoui) had convinced me to go to speak to Islamic scholars and others who hold the belief that Islamic religion favors participation in jihad."[citation needed]
Furthermore, al-Attas admitted to lying about his plans to go with Moussaoui to New York City in late August, 2001. He also confessed that he lied about some of Moussaoui's classmates at an Oklahoma flight school.[38]
7/28/2002: Moussaoui pled guilty to four of six counts of conspiracy. He denied charges of conspiracy to murder United States employees and destroy property.
Today, I truthfully will enter on some of the charges, not all, a plea of guilty... It should not be misunderstood that I endorse the entire indictment. There is enough factual basis for me to plead guilty in a truthful manner.[39]
The Court rejected the guilty plea as too informal and reappointed his counsel. Moussaoui's response to this order to work with court-appointed counsel was, "It is most disgusting."
4/22/2003: Moussaoui filed a pleading with the header shown below. In the pleading, Judge Brinkema is referred to as "Death Judge Leonie".
In the Name of Allah; Censured by the United Sodom of America
4/19/2003; Case No. 01455A; 17 S 1423
Slave of Allah, Zacharias Moussaoui vs.
Slave of Satan, John Ashcroft[40]7/18/2003: Moussaoui filed two pleadings. The first was titled Wanted for WTC Bankruptcy and offered an accounting of "WTC profit and loss" of "Loss: 3000 sons of evil. Profit: 19 slaves of Allah." That document had the following header:
In the Name of Allah; Censured by the United Satan of America
Slave of Allah, Zacharias Moussaoui vs.
Slave of Satan, Bush and Ashcroft[41]The second pleading was titled No Pig Man Role in Moussaoui Deliverance Scenario and stated "To be seen in all God Fearing World Theatre Cinema. Deadline for 3000+ hotseat tickets (please contact United Booking Limited)."
3/21/2006: In response to al-Atta's testimony, Moussaoui commented, "God Bless Mohammed Atta."[18]
5/6/2006: In an affidavit filed by his attorneys after the trial, Moussaoui stated,[6]
10. During the plea colloquy I made it clear to the Court that I did not have knowledge of and was not a member of the plot to hijack and crash planes into buildings in September 11, 2001 but that I was part of another Al-Qaeda plot which was to occur after September 11, 2001. 11. My court appointed attorneys kept telling me that I should not testify and I thought that they would prevent me from testifying, so I decided to ask the government to let me testify as their witness. 12. It is my recollection that when the judge addressed the jury before my trial began, she informed the jury that I was part of the September 11 plot which further confirmed my distrust of the American justice system and further convinced me to testify since I was going to be given death for the September 11 plot anyway. 13. I decided to testify that I had knowledge of and was a member of the plot to hijack planes and crash them into buildings on September 11, 2001, even though I knew that was a complete fabrication. 14. I have never met Mohammed Atta and, while I may have seen a few of the other hijackers at the guesthouse, I never knew them or anything about their operation. 15. As I stated during my plea colloquy, I was in the United States as a member of Al-Qaeda but was involved in a separate operation... 18. Because I now see that it is possible that I can receive a fair trial even with Americans as jurors and that I can have the opportunity to prove that I did not have any knowledge of and was not a member of the plot to hijack planes and crash them into buildings on September 11, 2001, I wish to withdraw my guilty plea and ask the Court for a new trial to prove my innocence of the September 11 plot.
Additional case filings are posted online.[42]
Trial and sentencing
Moussaoui, charged with conspiring to hijack planes and crash them into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, was in jail in Minnesota when the Sept. 11 attacks unfolded. In seeking a death sentence, prosecutors were required to prove that he "intentionally participated in an act... and the victim died as a direct result of the act." Moussaoui admitted he knew about the attacks and did nothing to stop them.
Having entered a guilty plea, Moussaoui was eligible for the death penalty. Germany said it would not release evidence against Moussaoui unless the U.S. promised not to seek death as punishment. On April 27, 2005, French Justice Minister Dominique Perben said, "When France gave elements of information about Mr Moussaoui to the American justice, I obtained a written engagement of the United States not to use these elements to require or execute the death penalty."[43]
On March 14, 2006, Brinkema ruled that the prosecution could continue to seek the death penalty against Moussaoui, but could not use key witnesses coached by Martin. On April 3, 2006, the jury in his case decided that Moussaoui was eligible for the death penalty.
At Moussaoui's sentencing trial, FBI agent Greg Jones testified that prior to the attacks, he urged his supervisor, Michael Maltbie, "to prevent Zacarias Moussaoui from flying a plane into the World Trade Center." Maltbie had refused to act on 70 requests from another agent, Harry Samit, to obtain a warrant to search Moussaoui's computer.[22]
On May 3, 2006, the jury reached a verdict: that Moussaoui be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Moussaoui was sentenced to six consecutive life terms on May 4,[44] as Judge Brinkema expressed her belief that the sentence was an appropriate one, inasmuch as it would deprive Moussaoui of "martyrdom in a great big bang of glory" and of the "chance to speak again", after Moussaoui entered the courtroom proclaiming his victory and asserting that the United States would "never get Osama bin Laden". As he was leaving the courtroom he said, "America, you lost and I won." And he clapped his hands twice. A single juror saved Moussaoui from death. The foreman of the 12-person federal jury told The Washington Post that the panel voted 11-1, 10-2 and 10-2 in favor of the death penalty on the three charges for which Moussaoui was eligible for execution.[45] A unanimous vote on any one of the three terrorism charges was required to return a death sentence.
On May 8, 2006, Moussaoui filed papers with the federal court in Alexandria, Virginia requesting to withdraw his guilty plea, stating that his earlier claim of participation in the September 11 plot was a "complete fabrication." He said that he was "extremely surprised" that he was not sentenced to death. "I now see that it is possible that I can receive a fair trial even with Americans as jurors," he said.[46] However, federal sentencing rules forbid pleas to be withdrawn after a sentence has already been executed, and Moussaoui had already waived his rights to appeal.
On May 13, 2006, a group of U.S. marshals ordered Moussaoui out of his holding cell in Alexandria, Virginia and flew him, via Conair, from Virginia to Colorado to begin serving his sentence at the supermax United States Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility, located near Florence, Colorado.[47] The facility—considered the most secure federal penitentiary—is called the "Alcatraz of the Rockies".[48] He has the Federal Bureau of Prisons number 51427-054.[1]
On July 31, 2006, the 1,202 exhibits presented during the case of United States v. Zacarias Moussaoui were posted online,[49] marking the first time the exhibits of a criminal case in U.S. courts were so published.[49]
On November 20, 2007, Judge Brinkema publicly stated that the US government had provided incorrect information about evidence in the Moussaoui trial and that due to those actions, she was considering ordering a new trial in a related terrorism case, that of Ali al-Timimi, a Virginia Muslim cleric. Brinkema said that she could no longer trust the CIA and other government agencies on how they represent classified evidence in terror cases after Moussaoui case prosecutors admitted that the CIA had assured her that no videotapes or audiotapes existed of interrogations of certain high-profile terrorism detainees, but later, in a letter made public Nov. 13, two such videotapes and one audio tape were made known.[50]
Osama bin Laden response
On May 23, 2006, an audio recording attributed to Osama bin Laden said in translation that Moussaoui "had no connection at all with September 11... I am the one in charge of the 19 brothers and I never assigned brother Zacarias to be with them in that mission... Since Zacarias Moussaoui was still learning to fly, he wasn't number 20 in the group, as your government claimed". The voice alleged to be bin Laden also suggested that Moussaoui's confession was "void" as it was a result of pressures applied during his incarceration.[51][52]
Reward
On January 24, 2008, Clarence Prevost, the flight instructor who led authorities to Moussaoui, received a $5 million reward from the U.S. government. The payment was questioned by agent Coleen Rowley and Senators Amy Klobuchar and Norm Coleman, among others, on the basis that two other flight instructors had made the initial calls to the FBI.[53]
See also
- Nick Berg
- Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, believed to be a principal architect of the September 11 plot
- Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh
- Richard Reid
- Mohamed Atta, supposed executive head of 9/11 terrorists, died in the attacks
- Ramzi bin al-Shibh, roommate of Atta, imprisoned under similar conditions as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (believed to be in Guantanamo Bay)
- Trials related to the September 11 attacks
Notes
- ^ a b "Zacarias Moussaoui." Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved on January 5, 2010.
- ^ Stout, David. Moussaoui Is Banned from Courtroom. The New York Times (2006-02-14)
- ^ Hirschkorn, Phil. Moussaoui eligible for death penalty. CNN (2006-04-05)
- ^ a b Sniffen, Michael J. 'America, you lost -- I won': Moussaoui sentenced to life in prison. Chicago Sun Times (2006-05-04). Available at findarticles.com. Retrieved on 2007-01-03
- ^ Judge hits back in Moussaoui spat. BBC News (2006-04-04).
- ^ a b The United States of America v. Zacarias Moussaoui: Defendant's Motion to Withdraw Guilty Plea (PDF). The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, May 2006, available at FindLaw.com. Also available at uscourts.gov (PDF). Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- ^ The Independent, 8 September 2011, 'I Love My Son More Than Ever..' The 9/11 Terrorist's Mother Who Won't Give Up p, 26-27 [1]
- ^ Kennedy, Helen. Terrorist's mom gets hug. New York Daily News (2006-03-14).
- ^ Dominus, Susan. Everybody Has a Mother. The New York Times Magazine (2003-02-09).
- ^ The Independent, 8 September 2011
- ^ My Brother Zac. The Guardian Unlimited (2003-04-19).
- ^ a b c Hirschkorn, Phil and Deborah Feyerick. Friend of Moussaoui pleads guilty to making false statements. CNN (2002-07-22).
- ^ Woodward, Will. Hijack suspect was South Bank student. The Guardian (2001-10-06).
- ^ a b c "The Religious Trajectories of the Moussaoui Family", Katherine Donahue, ISIM Review 21 (Spring 2008), p. 18, accessed 11 January 2001
- ^ a b "Who is Richard Reid?". BBC News. 28 December 2001. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/1731568.stm. Retrieved 2010-01-16.
- ^ Hoge, Warren (December 27, 2001). "A Nation challenged-the convert; Shoe-Bomb Suspect Fell in With Extremists". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/27/world/a-nation-challenged-the-convert-shoe-bomb-suspect-fell-in-with-extremists.html?pagewanted=all. Retrieved 2010-01-16.
- ^ Al-Qaeda: in search of the terror network that threatens the world, p. 276, Jane Corbin, Nation Books, 2003, ISBN 1560255234, 9781560255239, accessed 11 January 2010
- ^ a b Hirschkorn, Phil. Roommate: Moussaoui saw jihad as way to paradise. CNN (2006-03-21).
- ^ Eggen, Dan (2005-04-23). "Questions Linger on Moussaoui's Role in 9/11". The Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A10300-2005Apr22.html. Retrieved 2008-05-03.
- ^ Flight instructor gets $5 million for catching terror suspect CNN (2008-01-25)
- ^ a b "UNITED STATES OF AMERICA vs ZACARIAS MOUSSAOUI — Criminal No. 01-455-A" (PDF). CNN News. 2007. http://i.a.cnn.net/cnn/2005/images/04/22/moussaoui.statement.pdf. Retrieved 2007-09-09.
- ^ a b Markon, Jerry and Timothy Dwyer. Damning evidence highlights FBI bungles. The Sydney Morning Herald (March 22, 2006).
- ^ a b c National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States (2004). The 9/11 Commission report: final report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0393060411. http://books.google.com/books?id=fNqdmUnqTJUC&pg=PA501&dq=Hannachi+ressam&client=firefox-a&cd=1#v=onepage&q=ressam&f=false. Retrieved February 28, 2010.
- ^ UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. ZACARIAS MOUSSAOUI - Indictment. United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia Alexandria Division, United States Department of Justice, December 2001. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- ^ Moussaoui: 'I am al Qaeda'. CNN (2006-02-06).
- ^ Barakat, Matthew. Moussaoui Jury Watches Video Testimony. Associated Press (2006-03-08).
- ^ Government Can Seek Death Penalty In 9/11 Case. TheBostonChannel.com (2006-03-14).
- ^ Moussaoui lies 'let 9/11 happen'. BBC News (2006-03-27.)
- ^ Hirschkorn, Phil. Moussaoui: White House was my 9/11 target. CNN (2006-03-27.)
- ^ Lithwick, Dahlia. When You Wish Upon a Scar; Zacarias Moussai finally makes his dream come true. Slate (2006-04-03.)
- ^ Serrano, Richard A. In Court, Two 20th Hijackers Stand Up. Los Angeles Times (2006-04-03.)
- ^ Moussaoui Says He Was to Hijack 5th Plane. Associated Press (2006-03-27.)
- ^ United States of America v. Zacarias Moussaoui, Memorandum of Law Regarding Defendant's Motion to Proceed pro se and Status of Counsel. The Smoking Gun. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- ^ Court transcript. The Smoking Gun. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- ^ Government's response to Standby Counsel at FindLaw.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-17.
- ^ Court notes. The Smoking Gun. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- ^ Court transcript. The Smoking Gun. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- ^ Moussaoui Roommate Pleads Guilty. CBS News (2002-07-22).
- ^ Moussaoui tries to plead guilty to four charges; then withdraws. Court TV News (2002-07-25).
- ^ Court notes. The Smoking Gun. Retrieved on 2007-06-17.
- ^ Court notes. The Smoking Gun. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- ^ Convicted al Qaeda Terrorist Facing Death Penalty Sentencing Trial. FindLaw Legal News: Special Coverage: War on Terror: Cases. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- ^ (French) Kacem, Abdel. Le deal de la France avec Washington. Fidès Journal (Nov 29, 2002)
- ^ Moussaoui formally sentenced, still defiant. MSNBC (May 4, 2006).
- ^ One Juror Between Terrorist And Death. Washington Post (May 12, 2006).
- ^ Asseo, Laurie. Moussaoui Seeks to Withdraw Guilty Plea in Sept. 11 Attacks. Bloomberg (May 8, 2006).
- ^ "U.S. Marshals Deliver Zacarias Moussaoui to "ADMAX" Prison". U.S. Marshals. May 13, 2006. http://www.usmarshals.gov/news/chron/2006/051306a.htm. Retrieved Feb 4, 2009.[dead link]
- ^ "Moussaoui headed for ‘Alcatraz of the Rockies’", MSNBC.com (May 5, 2006)
- ^ a b "United States v. Zacarias Moussaoui Criminal, No. 01-455-A Trial Exhibits". United States District Court Eastern District of Virginia. http://www.vaed.uscourts.gov/notablecases/moussaoui/exhibits/. Retrieved 2010-04-17.
- ^ Moussaoui judge questions government
- ^ Youssef, Maamoun. Bin Laden: Moussaoui Not Linked to 9/11. Associated Press (2006-05-24)
- ^ Bin Laden: Moussaoui Wasn't Sept. 11 Conspirator. Fox News (2006-05-24).
- ^ Dialing For Dollars, Newsweek, Jan 30, 2008
References
- Lynne Diana. FBI rewarding incompetence? WorldNetDaily (January 10, 2003).
- Moussaoui, Abd Samad. Zacarias My Brother (ISBN 1-58322-585-4).
- Moussaoui pleads guilty to role in 9/11 attacks. Guardian Unlimited/Associated Press (April 22, 2005).
- "Moussaoui formally sentenced, still defiant". Associated Press, MSNBC.com.
- "Moussaoui scorns 9/11 victims" Al Jazeera (April 14, 2006)]
- Novak, Viveca. "How the Moussaoui Case Crumbled" TIME (October 27, 2003) .
- Special Verdict Form for Phase II Official jury ballot (PDF)
- Timeline: The Zacarias Moussaoui Case. CNN.com.
- Donahue, Katherine C. 2007. Slave of Allah: Zacarias Moussaoui vs. The USA. London: Pluto Press. (ISBN 978-0-7453-2619-1)
External links
- Case documents on FindLaw
- Trial of Zacarias Moussaoui
- documents from The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
- Court TV complete coverage of Zacarias Moussaoui case
- What the Moussaoui Verdict Teaches Us, JURIST
- Looking for Trouble (Time Magazine)
- Mosque leader warns over extremist converts (Guardian-UK)
Hijackers in the September 11 attacks American Airlines Flight 11 United Airlines Flight 175 American Airlines Flight 77 United Airlines Flight 93 20th hijacker suspects Ramzi bin al-Shibh · Mohammed al-Qahtani · Zacarias Moussaoui · Mushabib al-Hamlan · Zakariya Essabar
Ammar al-Baluchi · Walid bin Attash · Khalid al-Zahrani · Fawaz al-NashimiWrongly accused Lotfi Raissi · Amer Kamfar · Ameer Bukhari · Adnan Bukhari · Abdul Rahman al-Omari · Mohammed Jaweed Azmath · Ayub Ali KhanAlleged militants in the War on Terror who have lived in France Alleged associates of al-Qaeda Alleged associates of GIA Alleged associates of GICM Karim el-MejjatiHeld in Guantanamo Bay Mourad Benchellali · Imad Kanouni · Nizar Sassi · Brahim Yadel · Mustaq Ali Patel · Ridouane Khalid · Khaled Ben MustafaOthers Karim Bourti · Jerôme Courtailler · Djamel Beghal · Nizar Trabelsi · Hassan Jandoubi · Lionel Dumont · Kamel Daoudi · Rabah Kadre · Slimane KhalfaouiAlleged militants in the War on Terror who have lived in the United States September 11 attacks Khalid Sheikh Mohammed · Mohamed Atta · Satam al-Suqami · Waleed al-Shehri · Wail al-Shehri · Abdulaziz al-Omari · Marwan al-Shehhi · Fayez Banihammad · Mohand al-Shehri · Hamza al-Ghamdi · Ahmed al-Ghamdi · Hani Hanjour · Khalid al-Mihdhar · Majed Moqed · Nawaf al-Hazmi · Salem al-Hazmi · Ziad Jarrah · Ahmed al-Nami · Saeed al-Ghamdi · Ahmed al-Haznawi
Buffalo Six Sahim Alwan · Mukhtar al-Bakri · Faysal Galab · Yahya Goba · Shafal Mosed · Yaseinn Taher
al-Qaeda / Islamic Jihad /
al-JihadSami Al-Arian · Anwar al-Awlaki · Khaled Abu el-Dahab · Adam Yahiye Gadahn · Wadih el-Hage · Ziyad Khaleel · Sharif Mobley · Ali Mohamed · Zacarias Moussaoui · Aafia Siddiqui · Bryant Neal Vinas · Najibullah Zazi
Boston cab drivers Mohamad Elzahabi · Raed Hijazi · Bassam Kanj
Portland Seven Arrested in 2005
and convictedAbdulrahman Farhane · Mahmud al-Mutazzim · Rafiq Abdus Sabir · Tarik Shah
Liberty City Seven convictedPatrick Abraham · Burson Augustin · Rotschild Augustine · Narseal Batiste · Stanley PhanoracquittedNaudimar Herrera · Lyglenson Lemorin2007 Fort Dix plot Agron Abdullahu · Dritan Duka · Eljvir Duka · Shain Duka · Mohamad Ibrahim Shnewer · Serdar Tatar
2009 Bronx plot James Cromitie · David Williams · Onta Williams
2010 Vilks assassination plot Colleen LaRose · Jamie Paulin-Ramirez
D.C. Five Umer Farooq · Waqar Khan · Ahmed Abdullah Minni · Aman Hassan Yasir · Ramy Zamzam
Others Nuradin Abdi · Ahmed Omar Abu Ali · Farooque Ahmed · Shirwa Ahmed · Mohamed Mahmood Alessa · Carlos Eduardo Almonte · Daniel Patrick Boyd / Raleigh jihad group · Iyman Faris · Rezwan Ferdaus · Michael Finton · Nidal Malik Hasan · David Headley · Majid Khan · John Walker Lindh · Daniel Maldonado · Sayed Malike · Mohamed Osman Mohamud · Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad · José Padilla · Michael Curtis Reynolds · Faisal Shahzad · Adnan Gulshair el Shukrijumah · Hosam Maher Husein Smadi · Ali al-Tamimi · Detroit Sleeper Cell · Virginia Jihad Network · 2011 Manhattan terrorism plot · 2005 Los Angeles bomb plot
Held in Guantanamo Bay Majid KhanCategories:- 1968 births
- Living people
- People from Saint-Jean-de-Luz
- French Islamists
- French people of Moroccan descent
- Alumni of London South Bank University
- Prisoners at ADX Florence
- Moroccan al-Qaeda members
- People imprisoned on charges of terrorism
- French prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment
- Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by the United States federal government
- French people imprisoned abroad
- People associated with the September 11 attacks
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