US hits Osama’s son-in-law with new charges

Published December 24, 2013
An artist sketch shows Sulaiman abu Ghaith, a militant who appeared in videos as a spokesman for Al Qaeda after the Sept 11, 2001 attacks, appearing before Judge Lewis Kaplan at the US District Court in Manhattan, March 8, 2013. — File photo/Reuters
An artist sketch shows Sulaiman abu Ghaith, a militant who appeared in videos as a spokesman for Al Qaeda after the Sept 11, 2001 attacks, appearing before Judge Lewis Kaplan at the US District Court in Manhattan, March 8, 2013. — File photo/Reuters

NEW YORK: US prosecutors on Monday linked Osama bin Laden's son-in-law to the 2001 Al Qaeda shoe bomber plot after adding two extra charges against the Kuwaiti, who faces life behind bars if convicted.

Sulaiman abu Ghaith, 48, whose trial in New York is scheduled to begin on Feb 3, was initially charged with one count of conspiracy to kill Americans after his arrest last February.

But a superceding indictment Friday added charges of conspiracy to provide material support and resources to terrorists, and providing material support and resources to terrorists.

The former Al Qaeda spokesman, who was captured by US agents in Jordan, on Monday entered a not guilty plea to all charges.

He appeared relaxed, greeting his defence team with smiles and wearing a blue T-shirt over an orange standard-issue prison shirt, his salt and pepper curls escaping a white prayer cap.

In court Monday, prosecutors alleged he was complicit in the Dec 2001 shoe bomber plot to bring down an airline flying from Paris to Miami just three months after the 9/11 attacks.

British Al Qaeda recruit Richard Reid is serving a life sentence in the United States for trying to blow up the passenger jet using bombs hidden in his shoes.

The prosecution said that Sulaiman — appearing in a video in “October or November 2001” and warning of “an airplanes storm” — proved that he knew of the plot intercepted just a month later.

Sulaiman's lawyer Stanley Cohen called for a 60-day delay to the start of the trial to prepare for claims that his client was “an active actor, planner and organiser in the Reid conspiracy”.

The defence previously denied that Sulaiman's role as spokesman amounted to direct involvement in any plot to kill Americans.

Cohen also objected to the prosecution's plan to bring a new witness to testify by video link in the case against Sulaiman.

He later identified the witness as Saajid Badat, who was convicted in Britain as a co-conspirator of Reid, and dubbed by British newspaper The Telegraph as a “terrorist supergrass”.

Judge Lewis Kaplan said he would hear the objections on Jan 7 but granted a request from the government for an anonymous jury.

He set aside Jan 22-23 for potential jurors to fill out questionnaires to determine their suitability to hear the case.

Cohen has been charged with failure to file tax returns and wire fraud, and has been indicted by another court in New York State.

Much of Monday's hour-long hearing was devoted to Kaplan grilling Sulaiman on whether he wanted to retain Cohen as his lawyer and risk any potential conflict of interest in his defence.

The defendant said he understood the risks but wanted to keep Cohen, who has defended a series of Al Qaeda suspects.

Sulaiman is best-known for his incendiary threats alongside Osama and Ayman al-Zawahiri in the immediate aftermath of 9/11.

The US government accuses him of appearing in a video with them on Sept 12, 2001 calling on the “nation of Islam to do battle against the Jews, the Christians and the Americans”.

He allegedly defended the 9/11 attacks and warned Americans the “storms shall not stop, especially the airplanes storm”.

The indictment also accuses him of praising an April 2002 suicide bombing of a synagogue in Tunisia and “planning and perpetrating federal crimes of terrorism against the United States”.

In July, his defence had asked the court to throw out the charges against him, partly on the grounds he had been tortured on the flight that brought him to the United States.

The defence has argued Sulaiman has effectively been declared guilty — on the basis of his “mere association” with Osama.

Sulaiman left Afghanistan for Iran around the end of 2002 and was held there until travelling to Turkey in early 2013.

After being detained there, he was put on a plane to Kuwait but was arrested during a stopover in Jordan.

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